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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2022/046914
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED. NO
DATE 5 November 2025
In the matter between:
RIEDWAN MOHAMMED Applicant
and
OWEN THULANI NDLOVU First Respondent
THE JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
This judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for
hand down is deemed to be 5 November 2025.
MAHON AJ:
INTRODUCTION
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[1] This matter concerns an application for the eviction of the first respondent and
all persons occupying the immovable property situated at 4[…] N[…] Street,
W[…] H[…] Extension 2, Johannesburg (“the property”), under or through him.
The applicant is the registered owner of the property, having purchased it at a
sale in execution following foreclosure proceedings brought by Absa Bank
against the first respondent.
[2] The application is brought in terms of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from
and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 (“PIE”). The City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (“the City”) was cited as the second
respondent and has filed the required report addressing the availability of
temporary emergency accommodation and the personal circumstances of the
occupiers.
[3] The first respondent initially opposed the application but has since vacated the
property. His wife, Ms Portia Ndlovu, their three children, an elderly relative
(Ms Susan Ledema, aged 74), and a domestic worker remain in occupation.
The central questions for determination are therefore:
[3.1] whether an eviction order may properly be granted against the first
respondent notwithstanding that he no longer resides at the
property;
[3.2] whether the remaining occupiers fall within the description “persons
occupying under or through the first respondent”, and if so, whether
they have been properly served and afforded an opportunity to be
heard; and
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[3.3] what order, if any, is just and equitable in the circumstances,
including the appropriate date of vacation and costs.
[4] The hearing of the matter was preceded by a procedural issue concerning a
late-filed affidavit by the first respondent, asserting that he had vacated the
property. The Court permitted the matter to stand down to allow the applicant
to consider that affidavit, which was later withdrawn by agreement, and the
matter then proceeded on the basis that the first respondent had vacated the
property.
BACKGROUND
[5] The property in question, Erf 1[ …], Winchester Hills Extension 2,
Johannesburg, was previously owned by the first respondent. Following his
default under a mortgage bond in favour of Absa Bank Limited, the property
was sold in execution and transferred to the applicant, Mr Riedwan
Mohammed, on 18 March 2022. The applicant is the registered owner, as
reflected in the Deeds Office records annexed to the founding papers.
[6] Despite the change in ownership, the first respondent and his family continued
to reside at the property. Repeated attempts by the applicant to secure vacant
occupation proved unsuccessful. In May 2023, after written demands and
correspondence, the applicant instituted eviction proceedings in this Court
under case number 2022/046914, citing as respondents:
[6.1] the first respondent, as the former owner and principal occupier; and
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[6.2] the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (“the City”) as
the second respondent, in compliance with the requirements of
section 4(2) of PIE.
[7] The notice of motion sought two forms of relief:
[7.1] first, a declarator that the first respondent and all persons occupying
under or through him were in unlawful occupation of the property;
and
[7.2] second, an order evicting the first respondent and all such persons
from the property within a period to be determined by the Court.
[8] The first respondent opposed the application and filed an answering affidavit
in which he did not dispute that ownership had passed to the applicant but
contended that he and his family were still lawfully entitled to remain in
occupation pending the resolution of a dispute with Absa Bank. He also
referred to a rescission application previously launched in the Gauteng
Division, Pretoria, under case number 50666/2017, seeking to set aside the
default judgment and sale in execution.
[9] The City of Johannesburg was duly served and, in accordance with its
constitutional and statutory obligations, filed a report dated 3 September
2024 assessing the circumstances of the occupiers. The report confirmed that
the property was being occupied by the first respondent’s wife, Ms Portia
Ndlovu, their three children, and an elderly relative, Ms Susan Ledema, aged
74. The report recorded that the first respondent no longer resided at the
property, that his wife was employed as a manager in a business owned by
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him, earning approximately R25 000 per month, and that the family had
sufficient means to obtain alternative accommodation if required. The City
concluded that none of the occupiers would be rendered homeless upon
eviction, and that they did not qualify for temporary emergency
accommodation (“TEA”) under the City’s policy.
[10] Prior to the hearing, and despite the City’s report having been filed some
months earlier, the first respondent filed, on 11 August 2025, a further affidavit
asserting that he had vacated the property in May 2024 and that the only
remaining occupiers were his wife, children and aunt. The applicant objected
to the late filing and sought costs occasioned by the resulting delay.
[11] During the hearing on 12 August 2025, the Court raised with counsel whether
the late affidavit should be received, and whether, if it were admitted, a further
replying affidavit would be required. After discussion, the parties agreed that
the affidavit be treated as withdrawn and that the matter proceed on the
common cause footing that the first respondent had indeed vacated the
property.
[12] At that stage, therefore, the remaining factual questions concerned:
[12.1] the identity and legal status of those still residing on the property;
[12.2] whether they occupied “through or under” the first respondent within
the meaning of section 4(1) of PIE; and
[12.3] whether they had been properly served with the section 4(2) notice
and made aware of the proceedings.
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[13] The evidence before the Court showed that a section 4(2) notice authorised
by this Court had been served at the property by the sheriff on 25 July 2025,
on a son of the first respondent, being the same individual who had accepted
service of the main application. A copy of the notice was also affixed to the
front gate of the premises. This was in addition to an earlier section 4(2) notice
authorised and served in the preceding year.
[14] In the course of argument, the first respondent’s counsel contended, despite
his confirmation that he did not act for the first respondent’s wife and other
family members, that they had not been joined as parties and were therefore
deprived of an opportunity to be heard. The applicant’s counsel, in response,
relied on the established practice in eviction matters that an order may
properly be sought against “the respondent and all persons occupying through
or under him”, particularly where it is impracticable for an owner to identify
every individual occupant of the premises.
ISSUES FOR DETERMINATION
[15] Three principal issues arise for determination:-
[15.1] Whether an eviction order remains competent notwithstanding that
the first respondent has vacated the property:-
[15.1.1] It is common cause that the first respondent no longer
resides at the property. He vacated the premises during
May 2024 but remains the person under or through whom
the current occupiers originally derived their right of
occupation. The first question, therefore, is whether the
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applicant retains a legal interest in securing an eviction
order against him in these circumstances, or whether his
vacating renders the application moot insofar as he is
concerned.
[15.1.2] The applicant contends that an order remains necessary
to regularise the position and to prevent any future re-
occupation by the first respondent, who, as former owner,
retains an ongoing association with the premises and
could easily return or cause others to do so. The first
respondent, on the other hand, submits that once he
vacated, there was nothing left to evict and that the order
sought has become academic. The issue, in essence,
concerns the continuing legal effect of the declaratory
and eviction relief when the cited respondent has already
vacated.
[15.2] Whether the remaining occupiers fall within the description “persons
occupying under or through the first respondent”, and whether they
were properly served and afforded an opportunity to be heard:-
[15.2.1] The second issue is procedural and constitutional in
character. The applicant’s papers describe the intended
scope of the order as extending to “the first respondent
and all persons occupying under or through him”. The
City’s report confirms that the remaining occupiers are
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the first respondent’s wife, three children, an elderly
relative and a domestic worker.
[15.2.2] The question is whether these persons can, on the
evidence, properly be regarded as occupying “under or
through” the first respondent, or whether they occupy
independently of him and must therefore be separately
cited as respondents. If the latter, the further question
arises whether the proceedings are procedurally
defective for want of joinder or service, or whether the
service of the section 4(2) notice at the property and the
clear awareness of the occupiers suffices to meet the
requirements of audi alteram partem and section 4(2) of
the PIE Act.
[15.3] What order is just and equitable in the circumstances:-
[15.3.1] Finally, if it is found that the proceedings are procedurally
sound and that the remaining occupiers have no
independent right to remain, the Court must determine
whether it is just and equitable to grant an eviction order,
and on what terms. This requires consideration of:
[15.3.1.1] the personal circumstances of the occupiers
as reported by the City;
[15.3.1.2] the availability of alternative accommodation;
and
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[15.3.1.3] a fair and reasonable period within which they
must vacate the property.
ANALYSIS AND DISCUSSION
(1) Whether the eviction order remains competent notwithstanding that the
first respondent has vacated
[16] It is undisputed that the first respondent vacated the property in or about May
2024. He confirmed this both in correspondence and in open court through his
counsel. His belated affidavit of 11 August 2025 merely restated this fact and
was, by agreement, withdrawn once it was accepted by all parties that he was
no longer in residence.
[17] The applicant nevertheless seeks both a declarator and an eviction
order against the first respondent. Counsel for the applicant submitted that the
declarator is necessary to record that the first respondent’s occupation until
the date of vacating was unlawful, and that an eviction order remains
appropriate to prevent the first respondent from resuming occupation or
facilitating re-occupation by others under his authority.
[18] The Court accepts that the declaratory relief serves a legitimate purpose. The
applicant, as the registered owner, is entitled to a formal pronouncement that
the first respondent’s occupation after transfer of ownership was unlawful.
Such an order clarifies the legal position and preserves the applicant’s ability
to enforce his ownership rights against any subsequent acts of re-occupation.
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[19] As regards the eviction relief, the position is different as between the first
respondent and the remaining occupiers. Insofar as the first respondent is
concerned, the relief has been rendered academic. It is common cause that
he has vacated the property, and there is accordingly no subsisting
occupation to be terminated. The coercive remedy of eviction under PIE is
directed at persons in actual occupation, and once possession has been
relinquished, an eviction order serves no further purpose in relation to that
person.
[20] It remains necessary, however, to record that the first respondent’s occupation
of the property after transfer to the applicant was unlawful. The declaratory
relief sought by the applicant is therefore warranted. That declaration
regularises the legal position and makes clear that any subsequent re-
occupation by the first respondent , in the absence of new facts or lawful
authority permitting such occupation, would be a contemptuous act in breach
of this order and may be dealt with as such.
[21] Having made that finding, it is unnecessary, and would in any event be
redundant, to grant an eviction order against the first respondent merely to
pre-empt the possibility of his return. The declaratory relief provides adequate
protection of the applicant’s ownership rights and a clear legal foundation for
the enforcement of this judgment should the first respondent, without lawful
cause, attempt to re- occupy the premises. The eviction relief accordingly
remains to be considered only in respect of the other occupiers still residing at
the property.
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(2) Whether the remaining occupiers occupy “under or through” the first
respondent and whether they were properly served and heard
[22] The evidence identifies the current occupiers as the first respondent’s wife, Ms
Portia Ndlovu, their three children, and an aunt, Ms Susan Ledema. None of
these persons has filed an affidavit asserting an independent right of
occupation. The first respondent’s counsel suggested that the wife occupies in
her own right and that the other family members reside with her rather than
through him. That submission, however, is unsupported by any factual or
documentary foundation.
[23] The general principle, consistently recognised in eviction jurisprudence, is that
where a property was previously occupied by a single household or family,
and the owner is unable to identify each individual, it is sufficient to cite the
principal occupier (typically the former owner or tenant ) and to frame the relief
as extending to “all persons occupying through or under” that person. The
presumption is that family members and dependants occupy through the
principal occupier unless they establish an independent right to remain. A
perfunctory consideration of the many judgments given in this court, the
Supreme Court of Appeal and the Constitutional Court reveal the use of this
nomenclature.
[24] The present case fits squarely within that principle. The property was
purchased by the applicant at a sale in execution. The first respondent
remained in occupation thereafter with his family. His wife’s continued
presence, and that of their dependants, stems directly from that original
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occupation. No lease, right of habitation, or other juridical basis has been
asserted that would render their occupation independent of his. Accordingly,
they are properly described as occupying “through or under” the first
respondent within the meaning of section 4(1) of PIE.
[25] It would moreover be inimical to the purpose of PIE, and an abuse of process,
if a respondent could avoid the eviction of those who continue to occupy under
or through him simply by vacating the property shortly before the hearing. To
permit that stratagem would enable a former owner or principal occupier to
frustrate the enforcement of an owner’s rights by a tactical withdrawal, leaving
others in occupation under the umbrella of his prior possession. PIE was not
designed to allow such manoeuvres to defeat lawful proceedings, and the
Court will not lend its process to that kind of artifice.
[26] As to service and notice, the record shows that the section 4(2) notice was
duly authorised by this Court and served at the property on 25 July 2025.
Service was effected by the sheriff on the first respondent’s son, a person
apparently over the age of sixteen years, and a copy was affixed to the main
entrance. This mode of service complies with Rule 4(1)(a) of the Uniform
Rules and section 4(2) of PIE. The City’s inspection further confirmed that the
wife and other occupants were aware of the pending eviction proceedings,
having discussed them with municipal officials during their site visit.
[27] The audi alteram partem principle requires not perfection but fairness. In
context, the combination of personal service at the property, visible notice,
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prior municipal engagement, and the first respondent’s participation in
opposition suffices to satisfy the procedural safeguards of PIE.
[28] The Court therefore finds that the occupiers were both properly served and
adequately aware of the proceedings, and that no procedural unfairness
arises from their not having been separately cited.
(3) Whether it is just and equitable to grant the order, and on what terms
[29] Section 4(7) of PIE obliges the Court to consider all relevant circumstances
before ordering eviction, including the rights and needs of the elderly, children,
disabled persons and female-headed households. The City’s report provides a
comprehensive assessment of the occupiers’ situation. It records that:
[29.1] the first respondent and his wife are both economically active;
[29.2] their combined household income is sufficient to enable them to
procure alternative accomodation;
[29.3] they employ a domestic worker and reside in a well -maintained
double-storey dwelling;
[29.4] the wife acknowledged that she could obtain alternative
accommodation if required; and
[29.5] the family would not be rendered homeless by an eviction.
[30] These findings were not challenged by the respondents. There is accordingly
no basis for the Court to conclude that the eviction would infringe the
occupiers’ constitutional rights to housing or dignity. The property is privately
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owned, and the applicant has been deprived of its use for more than three
years since transfer.
[31] Balancing the applicant’s right to enjoy his property and the occupiers’ interest
in a reasonable period to relocate, the Court considers it just and equitable
that they be afforded thirty (30) days from the date of service of this order to
vacate the premises.
[32] In the result, the following order is made:
1. It is declared that the first respondent’s occupation of the property
situated at 4[…] N[…] Street, W[…] H[…] Extension 2, Johannesburg,
after transfer thereof to the applicant, was unlawful.
2. The persons presently in occupation of the property, being those
occupying under or through the first respondent, are ordered to vacate
the property within thirty (30) days of service of this order upon them.
3. In the event that the occupiers have not vacated the property upon the
expiry of the period referred to in 2 above, the Sheriff of this Court, or
his or her lawful deputy, is authorised and directed to evict the said
occupiers and to give vacant possession of the property to the
applicant.
4. The first respondent shall pay the costs of this application, including the
costs consequent upon the employment of counsel, on a party-and-
party scale (Scale B).
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_________________________
D MAHON
Acting Judge of the High Court
Johannesburg
Date of hearing: 11 August 2025
Date of judgment: 5 November 2025
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant: Adv W Naude
Instructed by: Arilia du Plessis Attorneys
For the First Respondent: Mr T P Phalane
Instructed by: TP Phalane Attorneys
For the Second Respondent: Mr B Slatter
Instructed by: Nchupetsang Inc. Attorneys