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South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
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The Occupiers of Saratoga Avenue v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality

Citation(CCT 12/12) [2012] ZACC 9
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Constitutional Law
Housing Law
Eviction Law
Civil Procedure

Facts of the Case

This was an urgent application brought by the Occupiers of a property at 7 Saratoga Avenue, Johannesburg, seeking compliance with or variation of an order previously granted by the Constitutional Court in Blue Moonlight I [2011] ZACC 33. In the original Blue Moonlight I case, the Constitutional Court had ordered the City of Johannesburg to provide temporary accommodation to specific occupiers listed in a survey filed on 30 April 2008, on or before 1 April 2012, and ordered the occupiers to vacate by 15 April 2012. The present application was launched on 8 March 2012, some 23 days before the deadline for accommodation. The Occupiers sought: (1) a variation of the original order to include persons occupying through them (their close relations); (2) an extension of the dates for provision of accommodation and eviction; and (3) an order compelling the City to engage meaningfully with them regarding the nature, location and process of relocation. Shortly before the hearing, the Occupiers and the City entered into a settlement agreement regarding postponement of the eviction date, without consulting the building owner (Blue Moonlight Properties). The application was heard on 30 March 2012, two days before the accommodation deadline.

Legal Issues

  • Whether the Constitutional Court was the appropriate forum for an application seeking compliance with or variation of its order made on appeal
  • Whether orders made by the Constitutional Court on appeal become orders of the court of first instance for purposes of enforcement and variation
  • Whether the Constitutional Court retains jurisdiction to vary its own orders made on appeal based on changed circumstances
  • Whether a case of non-compliance or grounds for variation had been established on the facts
  • Whether meaningful engagement is required as a legal obligation in tripartite eviction cases involving private property owners
  • Whether all persons occupying through named occupiers are entitled to temporary accommodation under the original order

Judicial Outcome

The urgent application was dismissed on 30 March 2012, with no order as to costs.

Ratio Decidendi

When the Constitutional Court hears a matter on appeal and makes a 'set aside and replace' order, that order becomes an order of the court of first instance for purposes of enforcement and variation. Applications for compliance with or variation of such orders should ordinarily be brought in the court of first instance, not in the Constitutional Court. The Constitutional Court retains jurisdiction to vary its own orders only where it has made a section 172(1)(b) just and equitable order with explicit supervisory mechanisms, or where the order itself clearly indicates continued oversight by the Constitutional Court. In the absence of such clear indication, enforcement and variation applications must be pursued in the original court, which is best equipped to deal with such matters. Additionally, meaningful engagement in eviction matters cannot be effective without the participation of all essential parties to the dispute.

Obiter Dicta

The Court made several non-binding observations: (1) Any eviction process must take place with due regard to the dignity of persons being evicted. (2) Whether the requirement of dignity entails a more substantive requirement of 'meaningful engagement' that would entitle evictees to contest the quality of temporary accommodation need not be decided in this case. (3) Meaningful engagement as a legal requirement has thus far been ordered by the Constitutional Court only in cases where the state was the party seeking eviction and was ordered to provide alternative accommodation. (4) Whether meaningful engagement should be the norm in tripartite cases involving private property owners is a matter on which it was not necessary to make any finding. The Court's comments suggest some hesitation about extending the meaningful engagement doctrine beyond state-initiated evictions, particularly where private property owners' rights are implicated, but expressly left this question open for future determination.

Legal Significance

This case clarifies important procedural principles regarding the Constitutional Court's jurisdiction and the enforcement of its orders made on appeal. It establishes that the Constitutional Court does not generally retain supervisory jurisdiction over orders made on appeal unless this is explicitly indicated in the order itself. The judgment distinguishes between cases where the Constitutional Court makes just and equitable orders under section 172(1)(b) with explicit supervisory mechanisms, and ordinary appellate orders that become orders of the court of first instance. The case also provides important guidance on meaningful engagement in eviction cases, indicating that while this may be required in certain contexts, it cannot occur without the participation of all essential parties, including private property owners in tripartite disputes. The judgment reinforces the principle that appellate courts should not become courts of first instance for enforcement matters, preserving proper court hierarchy and jurisdictional boundaries.

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Cites

  • Residents of Joe Slovo Community, Western Cape v Thubelisha Homes(CCT 22/08) [2011] ZACC 8
  • Occupiers of 51 Olivia Road, Berea Township, and 197 Main Street, Johannesburg v City of Johannesburg(CCT 24/07) [2008] ZACC 1

Referenced by

Cited By

  • Schubart Park Residents' Association and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Another

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(CCT 23/12) [2012] ZACC 26

Followed By

  • Schubart Park Residents' Association and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Another(CCT 23/12) [2012] ZACC 26