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[2022] ZAKZPHC 18
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Msunduzi Municipality v Gwala and Others (6620/2020) [2022] ZAKZPHC 18 (18 May 2022)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION, PIETERMARITZBURG
Case
no: 6620/2020
In
the matter between:
MSUNDUZI
MUNICIPALITY
APPLICANT
and
NGCWETI
SAKHEPHI GWALA
FIRST RESPONDENT
ALL
PERSONS UNLAWFULLY INVADING
AND/OR
UNLAWFULLY DISRUPTING
AND/OR
UNLAWFULLY BUILDING ON
APPLICANT’S
PROJECT SITE/PROPERTY
SECOND RESPONDENT
Coram:
Koen J
Heard:
16 May 2022
Delivered:
18 May 2022
ORDER
The
rule
nisi
issued on 25 September 2020 is, subject to certain
amendments, confirmed in the terms set out in paragraph 12 below.
JUDGMENT
Koen
J
[1] On 25 September 2020,
Van Zyl J granted the following order:
‘
(1)
A Rule
Nisi
hereby issues calling upon the Respondents to show cause on or before
9h30 on the 10
th
of November 2020 why Orders in the following terms should not be made
final:
(a) The First and Second
Respondents are hereby interdicted and restrained from congregating
at and/or loitering at, invading, occupying,
accessing, damaging,
digging up, building on, dealing with and/or blockading the
Applicant’s immovable property more fully
described as Portion
1 of Erf [….], Pietermaritzburg and as reflected in annexures
“MK1”, “MK2”
and “MK3” to
Applicant’s Founding Affidavit (hereinafter “the
property”).
(b)
The First and Second Respondents are hereby interdicted and
restrained from threatening, intimidating, attacking, harming,
harassing and/or in any manner whatsoever assaulting, attempting to
assault, killing and/or attempting to kill any of Applicant’s
functionaries and employees.
(c)
The First and Second Respondents are hereby interdicted and
restrained from perpetuating or causing or inciting any violence,
public or otherwise, at the property.
(d)
The First and Second Respondents are hereby directed to immediately
demolish and remove all unoccupied structures built by the
respondents on the property.
(e)
Failing First and Second Respondent’s compliance with these
Orders within five (5) days of grant of, the Applicant and/or
the
Sheriff exercising jurisdiction over the area of the property is
hereby granted authority to demolish and remove all unoccupied
structures built or erected by the First and/or Second Respondents on
the property.
(f)
The First and Second Respondents are directed to pay the Applicant’s
costs of suit jointly and severally on the attorney–client
scale, such costs to include the costs of demolition and removal
incurred by the Applicant and/or by the Sheriff pursuant to prayer
(1)(e) above, save that any party making unsuccessful opposition to
this Application shall also be liable jointly and severally
with the
First and Second Respondents for Applicant’s costs of suit on
the attorney–client scale.
(2)
The above Prayers (1)(a) to (1)(c)
inclusive
shall operate as
interim interdicts and relief pending the final determination of this
Application.
(3)
The costs of the Application on 25
th
September 2020 for
interim relief are reserved.
(4)
The Applicants are given leave to effect service by:
4.1
Serving a copy of this order and the application papers on the First
Respondent in terms of the High Court Rules of Court;
4.2
Serving a copy of this order and the application papers on the Second
Respondent by affixing same on the main gate to the property
as well
as by affixing same at prominent points along the fence surrounding
the property.’
[2]
Service of the order was duly effected. An application was brought
for various parties to intervene, but that application was
not
proceeded with. The applicant now seeks confirmation of the aforesaid
rule, which was opposed by the first respondent only.
[3]
It is not in dispute that the applicant is the registered owner of
the property more correctly described as the Remainder of
Portion 1
of Erf [….], Pietermaritzburg (and not simply ‘Portion 1
of Erf [….]’) in terms of deed of
grant number 81 of
1945.
[4]
It is the applicant’s case that the respondents invaded/moved
onto the property unlawfully during July 2020, and that
they have
subsequently erected structures thereon. The property consisted of a
large tract of vacant land allocated, and earmarked,
for human
settlement development in terms of the applicant’s Municipal
Integrated Development Plan, and reserved for development
through the
erection and provision of Reconstruction and Development Program
housing. The applicant maintains that the structures
are all
unoccupied, whereas the first respondent contends that his son, Mr
Ndumiso Mkhize, resides on a stand, which he says was
allocated to
him, the first respondent. At the time that the rule
nisi
was
sought, the original relief claimed in subparagraph (d) was amended
to confine the structures to be demolished, to ‘unoccupied’
structures only. It also appears from photographs annexed to the
founding papers that the first respondent has erected a permanent
concrete block structure with windows and doors, completed up to roof
level, on the property
[5]
The relief claimed by the
applicant is vindicatory relief. Because possession of an owner’s
property by another is prima facie
wrongful, it is not necessary for
the applicant to allege or prove that the respondents’
possession is wrongful or against
the wishes of the applicant. Even
if the allegation is made that the first respondent’s presence
on the property is unlawful,
it does not draw any onus.
[1]
Should the respondents wish to rely on a right to possession, then
they must allege and prove that right.
[2]
[6]
The first respondent
claims that he is entitled to the property and does not dispute that
he is in possession thereof. In his answering
affidavit, he details
how promises were made to him relating to the property, allegedly by
officials from the applicant, or by
councillors of the council of the
applicant. I do not intend summarising these contentions, as they are
best read in their full
context in the answering affidavit. Briefly,
however, the first respondent claims to have been allocated a
municipal service stand;
that this site was identified or pointed out
by officials of the applicant, particularly a ‘senior person’
named Ms
Madiba (who the applicant in reply contends is not an
employee of the applicant but is in fact an occupant from an informal
settlement
on the property); that the first respondent waited in vain
for the stand to be formally allocated to him; that he was referred
to the then deputy municipal manager who advised him to apply for an
alternative service site but that he was in the meantime to
‘hold
onto the service stand’; that he put a fence around his stand;
that following the advice of municipal officials,
he erected a
corrugated iron structure on the property; and thereafter, from
February 2020, commenced building a brick structure
on the property.
He does not, however, allege that any person gave him permission to
erect any such structure, but that the persons
mentioned by him were
well aware of his actions and did not protest. These allegations are
in many instances denied in reply. However,
even assuming these
allegations to be established in relation to the first respondent, on
the test in
Plascon-Evans
Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints,
[3]
the applicant’s reply that any such promises would not be
legally binding on the applicant, could not be disputed. Neither
did
Ms Ngcobo, appearing for the first respondent, contend to the
contrary in argument.
[7]
The legal position is
that a municipality may only transfer or otherwise dispose of its
assets in terms of section 14(2) of the
Local Government: Municipal
Finance Management Act (‘the MFMA’).
[4]
No such transfer or disposition is permissible, unless it has been
decided by the council that the asset in question is not required
‘to
provide the minimum level of basic municipal services’. The
granting of a right to use a municipal asset is furthermore
regulated
in terms of the Asset Transfer Regulations,
[5]
promulgated under the MFMA, specifically regulations 34 to 36, which
require
inter
alia
approval
by the council or, if there has been a delegation in terms of
regulation 34(4), by the accounting officer, being the municipal
manager. The relevant municipal manager at the time denies that there
was any such approval. Indeed, an extract from WhatsApp messages
annexed to the first respondent’s answering affidavit indicates
that such negotiations, as there were in regard to the property,
were
still subject to the contingent ‘if EXCO approves’.
EXCO’s approval was thus still outstanding.
[8]
Not only was no such
disposition approved by the council of the applicant, but no deed of
alienation, as required in terms of the
Alienation of Land Act,
[6]
was ever concluded.
[9]
Ms Ngcobo sought to rely
on the decision in
Modderfontein
Squatters v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty) Ltd
.
[7]
That judgement, however, dealt with a claim for damages by a
landowner where a municipality had failed to act against unlawful
invaders. It does not find application in the context of the relief
presently being claimed.
[10]
Negotiations which fell
short of an enforceable right being agreed to for the transfer of
ownership of a portion of the property
to the first respondent, even
if a
pactum
de contrahendo
to
enter into a sale, cannot, unless there is compliance with the
formalities prescribed by the Alienation of Land Act,
[8]
defeat the applicant’s rights of ownership in and to the
property. This would also be so having regard to the first
respondent’s
constitutional right of access to housing, when
balanced against the constitutional imperative pursued by the
applicant to give
effect to its obligations in respect of housing,
which it seeks to implement in respect of the property.
[11]
The rule
nisi
accordingly falls to be confirmed but subject to
some amendments. These include, firstly, an amendment of the property
description
in subparagraph (a); secondly, pruning the width of the
restrictions in subparagraph (b) in so far as they go beyond the
allegations
in the founding affidavit; amending the time allowed in
subparagraph (e) to permit a reasonable time for the demolition and
removal
of any unoccupied structures; and amending the ambit of
paragraph (f) to restrict the costs order to party and party costs
but
including the costs reserved on 25 September 2020. An appropriate
costs order is that the costs, including the reserved costs of
25
September 2020, be paid by the first and second respondents, jointly
and severally, and that the further costs of opposition
thereafter be
paid by the first respondent, as he had been unsuccessful in his
opposition.
[12]
The rule
nisi
issued on 25 September 2020 is accordingly
confirmed in the following amended terms, to take account of the
above:
(a)
The first and second respondents are hereby interdicted and
restrained from congregating at and/or loitering at, invading,
occupying, accessing, damaging, digging up, building on, dealing with
and/or blockading the applicant’s immovable property
more fully
described as Remainder of Portion 1 of Erf [….],
Pietermaritzburg and as reflected in an annexures “MK1”,
“MK2” and “MK3” to the applicants founding
affidavit (‘the property’).
(b)
The first and second respondents are hereby interdicted and
restrained from threatening, intimidating, attacking, harming,
harassing and/or in any manner whatsoever assaulting, and/or
attempting to assault any of the applicant’s functionaries and
employees.
(c)
The first and second respondents are hereby interdicted and
restrained from perpetuating or causing or inciting any violence,
public or otherwise, at the property.
(d)
The first and second respondents are hereby directed to demolish and
remove all unoccupied structures built by the respondents
on the
property.
(e)
Failing the first and second respondents’ compliance with these
orders within one month of the grant of this order, the
applicant
and/or the sheriff exercising jurisdiction over the area of the
property are hereby granted authority to demolish and
remove all
unoccupied structures built or erected by the first and/or second
respondents on the property.
(f)
The first and second respondents are directed to pay the applicant’s
costs up to and including the costs reserved on 25
September 2020,
jointly and severally, and the first respondent is directed to pay
the applicant’s costs after 25 September
2020, such costs to
include the costs of demolition and removal incurred by the applicant
and/or by the sheriff pursuant to prayer
(1)(e) above in respect of
any structure of the first respondent.
________________________
KOEN
J
APPEARANCES
For
the applicant:
Mr
V. Moodley
Instructed
by:
Matthew
Francis Inc
Pietermaritzburg
For
the first respondent:
Ms
T Ngcobo
Instructed
by:
Tenza
Zondi Inc
Pietermaritzburg
[1]
Singh v
Santam Insurance Limited
1997
(1) SA 291 (A); [1997] 1 All SA 525 (A).
[2]
Woerman
NO and Schutte NNO v Masondo and others
2002
(1) SA 811 (SCA); [2002] 2 All SA 53 (A).
[3]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984
(3) SA 623 (A).
[4]
Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003
.
[5]
Municipal
Asset
Transfer Regulations, GN R878,
GG
31346,
22 August 2008.
[6]
Alienation of Land Act 68 of 1981
.
[7]
Modderfontein
Squatters, Greater Benoni City Council v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty)
Ltd (Agri SA and Legal Resources Centre, amici
curiae);
President of the Republic of South Africa and others v Modderklip
Boerdery (Pty) Ltd (Agri SA And Legal Resources Centre, amici
curiae)
2004
(6) SA 40 (SCA).
[8]
Docrat
v Willemse and others
1989
(1) SA 487
(N).