ConCourt rules residents cannot be evicted without court order

The Constitutional Court has given judgment in a case concerning the constraints placed on municipalities when entering land on which people’s homes are situated.

The applicants’ homes are situated on land owned by the Rustenburg Local Municipality. These homes were dilapidated and the municipality employed a contractor to carry out work on the land as part of a housing development project. The contractor entered the property and excavated the outer wall of the home of one of the applicants with a bulldozer, exposing its foundations.

The applicants applied to the North West High Court in Mafikeng for an interdict restraining the municipality and the contractor from performing this construction work. The high court refused the application because the applicants were not being ejected from their homes and their privacy was not disturbed.

The applicants challenged the high court judgment and order.

In a unanimous judgment, written by Yacoob J, the Constitutional Court held that the applicants’ constitutional right not to be evicted from their homes without a court order guarantees their peaceful and undisturbed occupation of their homes. Having found that the work of the municipality interfered substantially with the applicants’ peaceful and undisturbed occupation of their homes, the court concluded that the municipality could not undertake the work without a court order. Finally, the court concluded that the municipality should have secured the eviction of the applicants beforehand.

The Constitutional Court therefore ordered that any construction work on the land on which the applicants’ homes are situated should not be executed without the consent of the applicants or a court order.