Subrayadn and Another v Catwalk Investments 200 (Pty) Ltd and Another (AR 408/2024) [2026] ZAKZPHC 7 (30 January 2026)

78 Reportability
Land and Property Law

Brief Summary

Eviction — Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act — Appeal against eviction order — Appellants contending that first respondent lacked locus standi and failed to serve requisite notices — Court finding that the notice of motion did not comply with procedural requirements of PIE, constituting a fundamental irregularity — Eviction order set aside and costs awarded to appellants.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an appeal to the High Court of South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal Division, Pietermaritzburg, against an eviction order granted in the Scottburgh Magistrates’ Court. The appeal was heard by Mathenjwa J (with Olsen J concurring).


The appellants were five individuals (Denny Subrayadn, Ricky Pillay, Kuben Pillay, James Moodley, and Bongani Myeza) who were occupying a residential property described as Unit 1, Erf 6[…], K[…], Scottburgh, KwaZulu-Natal. The first respondent was Catwalk Investments 200 (Pty) Ltd (duly represented by Thayne Meyer), cited as the owner seeking eviction, and the second respondent was the Umdoni Municipality, cited because the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998 requires notice to the municipality in eviction proceedings.


The procedural history, as set out in the judgment, was that the first respondent instituted eviction proceedings in the magistrates’ court by notice of motion. The magistrate (A Gopal) granted an eviction order (the judgment records it as having been handed down on 21 May 2021) directing the appellants’ eviction from the property. The appellants appealed against that eviction order, raising (amongst other complaints) a challenge to the procedural compliance with the statutory notice regime in eviction proceedings under PIE.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was therefore an eviction of alleged unlawful occupiers, and specifically whether the eviction order could stand in light of the statutory and procedural requirements governing PIE applications in the magistrates’ court.


2. Material Facts


The first respondent’s case in the court a quo was that it purchased the property from a previous owner on 7 March 2017 and that the appellants had been in occupation even before transfer to the first respondent. After taking transfer, the first respondent invited the appellants to pay rent for occupation, but they did not respond to that correspondence. The first respondent thereafter requested the appellants to vacate, but they refused to do so.


From the answering affidavits, it appeared that the appellants resisted eviction on grounds that included an allegation that the director who instituted the proceedings lacked authority (and thus that the first respondent lacked locus standi as presented), and that the appellants contended they had a right of habitation and had acquired acquisitive ownership. However, the appeal as determined ultimately turned on procedural compliance with PIE rather than those substantive defences.


The notice of motion initiating proceedings included a request for authorisation for service by the sheriff of a notice in terms of section 4(2) read with section 4(5) of PIE, and for service on the municipality. The initial hearing date reflected in the notice of motion was 12 September 2023, which was altered by hand to 16 January 2024, bearing an initial and the stamp of the civil court at Scottburgh. The appeal record did not contain a record of what occurred on either date.


A central set of facts relied upon by the appeal court concerned what the record did not contain. The High Court raised queries with the parties before the hearing of the appeal, including that the magistrate’s judgment referred to an order authorising service of a section 4(2) notice allegedly granted on 23 October 2023, but the record contained no copy of such an order and no indication that the matter had been enrolled on that date. The record also contained no returns of service reflecting service of a section 4(2) notice on the appellants or on the municipality.


In response to those queries, the first respondent’s attorneys stated that the section 4(2) application was heard in chambers on 23 October 2023 and that there was therefore no record of the proceedings. They also confirmed that the eviction application was before an open court on 16 January 2024, but could not explain the change of dates in the notice of motion. The first respondent maintained that the section 4(2) notice had been served by the sheriff even though such service was not reflected on the return of service.


The first respondent also provided, as part of its written response to the High Court’s queries, a copy of what it described as a draft section 4(2) order bearing the stamp of the clerk of the court dated 23 October 2023, and a copy of a section 4(2) notice dated 28 July 2023 with a clerk of the court stamp dated 1 August 2023. The appeal court relied on the state of these documents, including that a version of the section 4(2) notice/directions provided by the first respondent bore a stamp dated 21 August 2023 and left the hearing date blank.


The court also relied on the fact that the notice of motion asserted that a section 4(2) read with section 4(5) notice was attached as “annexure TM1”, but in the record “TM1” was not a section 4(2) notice and was instead a resolution of directors.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions on appeal were directed to whether the PIE eviction procedure had been lawfully followed, and whether any non-compliance was sufficiently serious to vitiate the proceedings.


The appeal court identified the primary issues as whether the magistrates’ court had granted an order authorising service of the section 4(2) notice on the appellants and the municipality; whether such notice was in fact served on both the occupiers and the municipality; and whether the absence of an authorising court order or failure of service amounted to a fundamental irregularity requiring the eviction order to be set aside.


Although the appellants also advanced grounds concerning locus standi, an alleged right of habitation, and acquisitive ownership, the court’s determination in this judgment was principally an application of established legal requirements under PIE to the procedural facts presented in the record. The dispute therefore concerned predominantly the application of law to fact (compliance with statutory and procedural prerequisites) and the legal consequence of non-compliance (whether it invalidated the eviction order).


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter by setting out the governing statutory framework and the jurisprudence on the mandatory character of PIE procedure. It emphasised that PIE governs the eviction of unlawful occupiers and that the requirements of section 4 have been treated by the courts as peremptory, particularly the obligation to give proper notice to both the unlawful occupier and the municipality.


Relying on Cape Killarney Property Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mahamba and Others 2001 (4) SA 1222 (SCA), the court summarised the key propositions that the section 4(2) notice must be served at least 14 days before the hearing; must contain the information required by section 4(5); must be served in accordance with the rules of court; and that the contents and manner of service must be authorised and directed by a court order. The court also noted that the notice of motion required by the rules is distinct from, and required in addition to, the section 4(2) notice.


The court further relied on the Full Court decision in Ubunye Co-operative Housing (Association Incorporated under Section 21) v Mbele and 31 Others (2) [2005] ZAKZHC 13, which framed PIE applications as involving two distinct procedural steps: first, the ordinary initiating notice of motion under the applicable rules; and second, the court-authorised section 4(2) notice which sets out, among other things, the date of the hearing. The court highlighted the understanding that the section 4(2) notice is not merely issued administratively but is the product of judicial direction embodied in a court order.


The court then referred to Occupiers of OMPAD Farm v Green Horizon Farm (Pty) Ltd and Others [2014] ZAKZPHC 29, which clarified that the Ubunye practice is applicable equally in the magistrates’ court and that failure to follow the prescribed approach can constitute a fundamental irregularity. The court quoted the emphasis in that authority that it is the court order (rather than the notice of motion) that alerts a respondent to the consequences of inaction and frames the procedural protection PIE is designed to secure. It also noted the modification in Occupiers of OMPAD Farm that PIE applications in the magistrates’ court must be commenced by notice of motion in long form (as contemplated by rule 6(5)(a), as adapted), informing respondents that if they do not oppose, an application will be made on a given date for section 4(2) directions, with those proposed directions annexed. The judgment recorded that commencing PIE proceedings by rule nisi was no longer permitted, and stated that the approach employed follows the procedure in rule 55 of the Magistrates’ Courts rules regarding applications.


Applying these principles, the court found that the initiating notice of motion in this matter did not reflect the proper two-stage structure. Instead, it purported to be a single notice seeking authorisation for service of a section 4(2) notice, without itself containing key information required by PIE such as the grounds for eviction and information about the occupiers’ entitlement to appear, defend, and seek legal aid. It also did not inform the appellants in the manner described in Occupiers of OMPAD Farm that, absent opposition, an application would be made on a given date for section 4(2) directions. On this basis, the court characterised the application as procedurally irregular.


The court also reasoned that the first respondent’s own account—that the section 4(2) authorisation was obtained ex parte and heard in chambers—was inconsistent with the approach articulated in Occupiers of OMPAD Farm, where PIE applications were not to be commenced ex parte and were not to be heard in chambers in the manner described. Beyond that, the court considered the state of the record and the documents. It found the first respondent’s initial contention that a section 4(2) notice was issued on 1 August 2023 could not be correct as a matter of the structure of PIE procedure, because a section 4(2) notice is the product of a court order made after proceedings are properly commenced.


The court attached significance to the absence from the appeal record of both the alleged court order authorising service of the section 4(2) notice and proof of service of that notice on the occupiers and the municipality. It also relied on the mismatch between what the notice of motion described as annexure “TM1” and what annexure TM1 in fact was. When the first respondent later produced a stamped notice/directions, the fact that the hearing date was left blank led the court to conclude that this was not indicative of directions issued by a court, because the court would not issue section 4(2) directions without endorsing a hearing date. This supported the appellants’ contention that the section 4(2) notice and directions were not issued by the court. The absence of proof of service further reinforced non-compliance.


On the totality of these procedural defects, the court held that the irregularities, both individually and cumulatively, were so fundamental that they vitiated the proceedings in the magistrates’ court. That conclusion disposed of the appeal, and the court considered there to be no reason to deviate from the ordinary rule that costs follow the result.


5. Outcome and Relief


The High Court upheld the appeal and set aside the eviction order of the magistrates’ court. It substituted the magistrates’ court order with an order dismissing the eviction application with costs in the court a quo.


The first respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the appeal, with counsel’s fees taxable on Scale B. The order also reflected that the first respondent was to pay the costs of the proceedings before the court a quo.


Cases Cited


Cape Killarney Property Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mahamba and Others 2001 (4) SA 1222 (SCA).


Ubunye Co-operative Housing (Association Incorporated under Section 21) v Mbele and 31 Others (2) [2005] ZAKZHC 13.


Occupiers of OMPAD Farm v Green Horizon Farm (Pty) Ltd and Others [2014] ZAKZPHC 29.


Legislation Cited


Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998.


Rules of Court Cited


Rule 6(5)(a) of the Uniform Rules of Court.


Rule 55 of the Rules Regulating the Conduct of the Proceedings of the Magistrates’ Courts of South Africa.


Held


The High Court held that compliance with the procedural requirements of section 4 of PIE is mandatory and that the eviction procedure entails distinct procedural steps, including a court-authorised section 4(2) notice served on both the unlawful occupier and the municipality.


It held that the eviction proceedings in the magistrates’ court were fundamentally irregular because the initiating process did not conform to the required PIE procedure; the alleged section 4(2) authorisation and directions were not properly demonstrated on the record; the documentation relied upon was internally inconsistent (including incorrect annexures); the section 4(2) directions produced were deficient (including absence of a hearing date); and there was no proof that the section 4(2) notice was duly served on the occupiers and municipality.


It held that these procedural irregularities vitiated the proceedings, requiring the eviction order to be set aside and the eviction application to be dismissed with costs, with the first respondent also liable for the costs of appeal (taxable on Scale B).


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


PIE eviction proceedings require strict adherence to the peremptory procedural protections in section 4, including that a section 4(2) notice must be authorised and directed by a court order, must contain the information stipulated in section 4(5), and must be served at least 14 days prior to the hearing on both the unlawful occupier and the municipality with jurisdiction.


PIE procedure involves two distinct forms of notification: the ordinary initiating notice of motion under the rules of court and a separate, court-directed section 4(2) notice that provides the statutory information and identifies the hearing date.


In the magistrates’ court, PIE applications must be commenced by properly formulated notice of motion consistent with the approach endorsed in the authorities cited, and non-compliance with the prescribed procedure—particularly failures relating to the court authorisation of section 4(2) notice and proof of service on the occupiers and municipality—may constitute a fundamental irregularity that vitiates the proceedings and justifies setting aside an eviction order.

SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this document
in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL DIVISION, PIETERMARITZBURG

APPEAL CASE NO: AR 408/2024
CASE NO: 1038/2023

In the matter between:

DENNY SUBRAYADN FIRST APPELLANT
RICKY PILLAY SECOND APPELLANT
KUBEN PILLAY THIRD APPELLANT
JAMES MOODLEY FOURTH APPELLANT
BONGANI MYEZA FIFTH APPELLANT

and

CATWALK INVESTIMENTS 200 (PTY) LTD
(DULY REPRESENTED BY THAYNE MEYER) FIRST RESPONDENT
UMDONI MUNICIPALITY SECOND RESPONDENT

ORDER

On appeal from: the Scottburgh Magistrates’ Court (sitting as court of first instance):
1. The appeal is upheld and the order of the court a quo is set aside.
2. The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the proceedings before the
court a quo and the costs of appeal on Scale B.

JUDGMENT

Mathenjwa J (Olsen J concurring)

2



Introduction
[1] This is an appeal against the judgment and order of the learned magistrate A
Gopal handed down in the Scottburgh Magistrates’ Court on 21 May 2021 in which
the learned magistrate ordered the eviction of the appellants from the premises
described as Unit 1, Erf 6[… ], K[…] , Scottburgh KwaZulu-Natal (the property).

[2] The proceedings in the court a quo commenced by way of notice of motion
which read as follows:

‘KINDLY TAKE NOTICE THAT an application will be made at the Scottburgh District
Magistrate’s Court, Scottburgh on 12 -09- 2023 at 08h30 or as soon thereafter as the matter
may be heard for an order in the following term:
1 Authorising service by the Sheriff of the notice in terms of section 4 (2) read with
section 4 (5) of the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation
of Land Act ( annexture “TM1” hereto), on the first, third, and fifth respondents
and or any one occupying the premises from or through them at the physical
addresses 638 Kelso, Scottburgh, KwaZulu-Natal.
2 Authorising service of the notice in terms of section 4 (2) read with section 4 (5) of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act
(Annexure “TM1” hereto), on the sixth respondent, at its legal services division
situated at Cnr. Bram Fischer& Williamson Street, Scottburgh.
3 That services shall be affected at least fourteen (14) calendar days prior to the date
of hearing of the eviction application.
4 That the matter be adjourned to------------------ for the hearing of the eviction
application
5 …. ’
The original hearing date of 12-09-2023 which was inserted by hand, was further
altered and replaced by the date 16- 01-2024. The later date was also inserted by
hand, initialled and bore the stamp of the Civil Court, Scottburgh Magistrates’ Court.
AR
[3] In its founding affidavit the first respondent stated that it purchased the
property from the previous owner on 7 March 2017. The appellants were in

property from the previous owner on 7 March 2017. The appellants were in
occupation of the property before it was transferred to the first respondent. After the
first respondent had taken transfer of the property, it invited the appellants to pay

3


rent for living on the property, but the appellants did not respond to that
correspondence. Subsequently, the first respondent requested the appellants to
vacate the property but they refused. It appears from the appellants answering
affidavits that they had resisted the eviction mainly on the grounds that the director of
the first respondent who instituted the application was not authorised by the first
respondent to do so, and that the appellants had a right of habitation to the property.

Issues before this court
[4] The appellants main grounds of appeal are that the first respondent did not
have locus standi to launch the application; the magistrate failed to recognise that
the appellants had a right of habitation to the property and had acquired acquisitive
ownership to the property. In their amended notice of appeal the appellants
contended that the court a quo erred in not having regard to the fact that the first
respondent’s notice of motion did not include a s 4(2) notice read with s 4( 5) of the
Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act 19 of 1998
(PIE) and that the court erred in hearing the eviction application in the absence of an
order authorising the service of the notice in terms of s 4(2).

[5] In their heads of argument and oral argument before court the first
respondents’ counsel submitted that the s 4(2) notice was issued at Scottburgh
Magistrates’ Court on 1 August 2023 and was attached to the notice of motion; and
that a court order authorising the service of the s 4(2) notice was granted by the
court on 23 October 2023. It was further contended on behalf of the first respondent
that the s 4(2) notice was served on the appellants and the municipality concerned.

[6] Therefore, the primary issues to be determined in this appeal are:

(a) whether the court a quo granted an order authorising the service of the s 4(2)
notice on the appellants and the municipality.

notice on the appellants and the municipality.
(b) whether the s 4(2) notice was served on the appellants and the municipality.
(c) whether the absence of a court order authorising service of the s 4(2) notice
or the failure by the first respondent to serve the notice on the appellants and
the municipality constitutes a fundamental irregularity that would necessitate
the setting aside of the eviction order.

4



[7] Prior to the hearing of this appeal, we wrote to the parties and raised the
following queries about the record:

‘1. Prior to its amendment the notice of motion gave notice that an application would be
made on 12 September 2023. That was changed to 16 January 2024 and there are a stamp
and initial which purports to be that of the clerk of the civil court confirming that amendment.
There is no record of what occurred on either of those days.
2. According to the magistrate’s judgment an order authorising the service of a notice in
terms of section 4 (2) was made on 23 October 2023. There is no document indicating that
the matter would be heard on that day, and no copy of that order in the record.
3. There are no returns of service reflecting service of the notice in terms of section 4 (2) on
any of the respondents.’

[8] In r esponse the first respondents’ attorneys confirmed that the s 4(2)
application was heard in chambers on 23 October 2023 and therefore there is no
record of those proceedings. Regarding the amendment of dates of the hearing in
the notice of motion from 12 September 2023 to 16 January 20224 the first
respondent confirmed that the eviction application was before an open court on 16
January 2024, however, it could not explain the change of dates because the
messenger who was attending to the obtaining of dates was no longer in its
employment. The first respondent confirmed that the s 4(2) notice was served by the
sheriff on the appellants even though the service thereof was not reflected on the
return of service.

[9] Furthermore, the first respondent attached to its written response to the
queries a copy of a draft order in terms of s 4(2) of PIE. That draft order bore the
stamp of the clerk of the court , civil section, Scottburgh dated 23 October 2023.
Furthermore, the first respondent attached a copy of a notice in terms of s 4(2) read
with s 4(5) of PIE dated 28 July 2023 which purported to inform the appellants that

with s 4(5) of PIE dated 28 July 2023 which purported to inform the appellants that
the first respondent had launched an application to evict them from the property and
that such application will be heard at Scottburgh Magistrates ’ Court. That notice had
a date stamp from the clerk of the court dated 1 August 2023.

5


Analysis and applicable legal principles
[10] PIE governs the eviction of unlawful occupiers of land. The eviction of
unlawful occupiers under PIE has received judicial attention in our courts. In Cape
Killarney Property Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mahamba and Others ,1 the Supreme
Court of Appeal in interpreting s 4 of PIE held that the provisions thereof are
peremptory; the notice of the proceedings in terms of s 4(2) must be effected on the
unlawful occupier and the municipality having jurisdiction at least 14 days before the
hearing of those proceedings; the notice must contain the information stipulated in ss
(5) and the contents and the manner of service of the notice must be authorised and
directed by an order of the court; the notice of the proceedings must be served in
accordance with the rules of court and the notice of motion in terms of the rules of
court is required in addition to the s 4(2) notice.

[11] In Ubunye Co-operative Housing (Association Incorporated under Section 21)
v Mbele and 31 Others (2)
2 the full court of this Division, citing with approval from the
Cape Killarney judgment, laid down the practice to be followed in PIE applications in
the high court. Levinsohn J stated that Cape Killarney set out two separate and
distinct elements in the procedure set out in ss 4(1) to 4(5) of PIE as follows:3

‘Firstly, there is the notice of motion which institutes the application in terms of the High
Court Rules and secondly, there is the section 4(2) notice which inter alia sets forth the date
when the proceedings for eviction are to take place’.

The notice is not merely issued by the registrar; it is an order of the court directing
that such service take place. 4 The application would have to be served on the
respondent (or his/her attorneys) as with all interlocutory applications.5

[12] It is evident from section 4(2) that prior to the hearing of the proceedings, "a

[12] It is evident from section 4(2) that prior to the hearing of the proceedings, "a
notice of these proceedings" must be delivered to both the unlawful occupier and the

1 Cape Killarney Property Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mahamba and Others 2001 (4) SA 1222 (SCA )
paras11-13.
2 Ubunye Co-operative Housing (Association Incorporated under Section 21) v Mbele and 31 Others
(2) [2005] ZAKZHC 13.
3 Ibid at 9.
4 Ibid at 7.
5 Ibid at 10.

6


municipality.6 Sub-section (2) specifies that this notice must include the information
outlined in s 4(5)(a), (b), (c), and (d). These subsections require that the notice
inform the respondent about the initiation of eviction proceedings, specify the date
and time for the court hearing, outline the reasons for the intended eviction, and
indicate that the respondent has the right to appear in court to contest the case, as
well as their entitlement to seek legal aid if necessary. Here again the proposed s
4(2) directions should be annexed to the notice of motion.
7

[13] The judgment in Occupiers of OMPAD Farm v Green Horizon Farm (Pty) Ltd
and Others 8 dispelled any doubt about whether the practice and procedures laid
down in Ubunye for applications under PIE we re equally applicable in the
magistrates’ court. In Occupiers of OMPAD a full bench of this Division reviewed a
judgment and order of t he magistrates’ court wherein the court had ordered eviction
of the respondents who were unlawful occupiers of a farm . The court found that the
failure by the applicants to follow the procedure laid down in Ubunye, more
particularly pertaining to the service of the notice of motion together with the
founding affidavit and the order to be sought reflecting the proposed directives in
terms of s 4 (2) of PIE , constituted a fundamental irregularity that justif ied the
reviewing and setting aside of the court judgment and order. 9 In emphasi sing the
importance of serving the s 4(2) court order on the respondents, Olsen AJ stated as
follows:10

‘…It is the court order, and not the notice of motion, which alerts a respondent to the fact that
a final order against the respondent will be granted without further ado if the respondent
does not take steps to show cause on or before the appointed date why that should not be
done’.


6 Ibid at 7.
7 Ibid at 12.
8 Occupiers of OMPAD Farm v Green Horizon Farm (Pty) Ltd and Others [2014] ZAKZPHC 29
(Occupiers of OMPAD).

(Occupiers of OMPAD).
9 Ibid paras 22-26.
10 Ibid para 24.

7


[14] Furthermore, the Occupiers of O MPAD judgment clarified and modified the
approach outlined in Ubunye regarding the commencement of applications under
PIE in the Magistrates’ Courts:11

‘…It is now necessary that applications under PIE be commenced by way of an application
on notice of motion, the form being the long form contemplated by rule 6(5)(a). The form
must be modified so that it informs the respondent that if notice to oppose is not delivered,
an application will be made on a given date for directions in terms of section 4(2) of PIE.
Those proposed directions must be annexed to the notice of motion. Commencing the
application proceedings by way of a rule nisi is no longer permitted.’

The procedure laid down in Occupiers of OMPAD regarding the commencement of
applications under PIE employs or follows the procedure provided for in rule 55 of
the Rules Regulating the Conduct of the Proceedings of the Magistrates ’ Courts of
South Africa, regarding applications in the magistrates’ court.

[15] Contrary to the principle that applications under PIE consist of two distinct
notifications to be served on the respondent , (that is firstly the notice of motion
commencing the application and seeking the directions and authority of the court as
to the notice in terms of s 4(2) , and secondly the notice authorised by the court
advising the respondent that the court will hear the eviction application on the
stipulated date), the notice of motion herein consisted of one notice that purported
to inform the appellants that an application will be made for an order authorising the
service by the Sheriff of the notice in terms of s 4(2). The notice did not contain the
grounds for the proposed eviction, nor did it inform the appellants that they were
entitled to appear in court to defend the case and that if necessary, they had the right
to apply for legal aid. Furthermore, the notice of motion failed to inform the

to apply for legal aid. Furthermore, the notice of motion failed to inform the
appellants that ‘if notice to oppose is not delivered, an application will be made on a
given date for directions in terms of s 4(2) of PIE’.
12 In this regard the application is
irregular.


11 Ibid para 28.
12 Occupiers of OMPAD para 28.

8


[16] According to the first respondent the application for authorisation of the
service of the s 4(2) notice was heard and the or der issued ex parte in chambers on
23 October 2023. It is clear from the first respondent’s own version that the
procedure followed in commencing the application and the hearing of the application
was irregular. In accordance with the principle set out in the Occupiers of O MPAD,
applications under PIE should not be commenced ex parte and should not be heard
in chambers. Furthermore, it is clear from the initial respondent's account and the
appeal documentation that the s 4 (2) order was either never issued or not delivered
to the appellants. Firstly, the first respondent’s initial submission that the s 4(2 )
notice was issued at Scottburgh Magistrates’ Court on 1 August 2023 cannot be
correct. A section 4(2) notice is the product of an order issued by a court after the
application has commenced by way of motion. Neither the alleged court order
authorising the service of the s 4(2) notice, nor the s 4(2) directions, were contained
in the appeal record. Furthermore, the first respondent had stated in it’s notice of
motion that the notice in terms of s 4(2 ) read with s 4(5) was attached as per
annexure “TMI”. However, the annexure “TMI” referred to in the notice of motion was
not a s 4(2) notice. It was resolution of the directors of the first respondent.

[17] In response to our queries the first respondent’s lawyers provided a copy of
the so-called s 4(2) notice together with directions which was stamped by the clerk of
the court , Scottburgh, on 21 August 2023. However, the date on which the
application would be heard in court was left blank. That clearly shows that the
direction was not ordered by the court because the court would not have issued s
4(2) directions without endorsing a date when the eviction application would be
heard in court. That reinforces the appellants’ contention that the s 4(2) notice and

heard in court. That reinforces the appellants’ contention that the s 4(2) notice and
directions were not issued by the court . There was no proof of service of the s 4(2)
notice in the record, or otherwise provided by the first respondent.

[18] These irregularities, individually and cumulatively, are so fundamental that
they vitiate the proceedings in the magistrates’ court. For these reasons the appeal
should succeed, and the decision of the court a quo be set aside. There is no reason
why costs should not follow the result.

Order

9


[19] In the premises the following order is made.
1. The appeal is upheld and the order of the court a quo is set aside, and
substituted with an order dismissing the application with costs.
2. The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of appeal. Counsel’s fees
may be taxed on scale B.



_______________
Mathenjwa J


I agree.


_______________
Olsen J

Date of hearing: 31 October 2025
Date of judgment: 30 January 2026


Appearances:
Appellants counsel: K J Chetty
Instructed by: S Parshotam and Company
Pietermaritzburg


First respondent’s counsel: ME Mathibela
Instructed by: Robinson Manzi & Company Attorneys
Scottburgh