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By Peter Rogers 1 FORFEITURE OF IMMOVABLE PROPERTY -- CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES --
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By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

Jan 04, 2016

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Page 1: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

By Peter Rogers

1

FORFEITURE OF IMMOVABLE PROPERTY -- CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES --

Page 2: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

The Issue:

The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for rights in immovable property to be abrogated by statute?

Page 3: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

STRUCTURE OF MY THESIS

I: INTRODUCTION

II: CASE STUDY: CITY OF CAPE TOWN DRAFT PROBLEM BUILDING BYLAW 2009

III: PREVENTION OF ORGANISED CRIME ACT [POCA]

IV: CONSTITUTIONALITY

V: APPLICATION TO THE BYLAW

Page 4: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

THE BYLAW

“problem building” includes any building or land that shows elements of thefollowing:(a) appears to have been abandoned by the owner…(b) is derelict in appearance, overcrowded or is showing signs of becomingunhealthy, unsanitary, unsightly or objectionable;(c) is the subject of numerous complaints from the public…(d) is illegally occupied;(e) refuse or waste material is accumulated, dumped, stored or depositedon such building; or(f) any building partially completed, abandoned or structurally unsound andposing any risk contemplated in paragraphs (a) to (e).

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Page 5: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

S 5 (2) The City may…clean, repair, renovate, repaint, alter, close, demolish orsecure any problem building at the cost of the owner.

S 5(5) (a) order the owner of any problem building to remove…any person occupying or working [sic], or who for any other purpose is in such problem building…(b) order any person occupying or working, or who for any other purpose isin any problem building, to vacate such building.

S 8(2) A person who is guilty of an offence in terms of this By-law is uponconviction liable to a fine of R20 000.00 or imprisonment for a period not

exceeding two years or to both.

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Page 6: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

The Three Constitutional Issues

1. Is the forfeiture arbitrary?

2. Does the forfeiture amount to an expropriation?

3. Procedural – does the bylaw amount to an eviction?

Page 7: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

S 25 (1) & (2)

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DEPRIVATION

EXPROPRIATION

Page 8: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

FNB CASE: THE CC APPROACH

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S 25(1)

•Unlawful deprivation?

•If yes

S 36

•Can it be saved under s 36?

•If yes

S 25(2)

•Unlawful expropriation?

•If yes

S 36

•Can it be saved under s 36?

Page 9: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

PROBLEMS

• Uncertainty

• Inconsistency – an unlawful deprivation might nonetheless be a lawful expropriation.

!!??!!??

Page 10: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

De Waal Argument:

• You can never use s 36 iro s 25• Suppose unlawful ito s25 (1) because not a

law of general application.• Says s 36 “the rights in the BoR may only be

limited ito a law of general application…”• Thus to justify must show that a law not of

general application is of general application.

!!??!!??

Page 11: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

Michelman

• Rejects De Waal argument

• A law that is arbitrary can be reasonable and justifiable

Page 12: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

• The starting point is always ‘deprivations’

• Therefore every case begins with arbitrariness

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Page 13: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

FNB: Sufficient Reason

• Deprivation is arbitrary when the law does not provide sufficient reason for the deprivation or is procedurally unfair

• Sufficient reason is a flexible concept that spans from mere rationality to full proportionality

Page 14: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

The Next Step

• The POCA cases suggest that forfeiture of immovable property requires proportionality [ie highly reviewable]

• Therefore the bylaw could be arbitrary

• But can it be saved by s 36?•

Page 15: By Peter Rogers 1. The Issue: The constitutionality of forfeiture of immovable property. Particularly, to what extent does the Constitution allow for.

Bibliography

CasesFirst National Bank of SA Ltd t/a Wesbank v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service 2002 (4) SA 768 (CC)Mohunram and Another v National Director Public Prosecutions and Another (Law Review Project as Amicus Curiae)

2007 4 SA 222 (CC)Prophet v National Director Public Prosecutions [2006] JOL 18376 (CC)

StatutesConstitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996City of Cape Town Problem Building Bylaw (draft) 2009

OtherIan Currie & Johan de Waal The Bill of Rights Handbook 5ed 2005Frank Michelman “Against regulatory taking: in defence of the two-stage inquiry: a reply to Theunis Roux” in Michael

Bishop & Stu Woolman (eds) Constitutional Conversations 2008