(a) Damages: Jordaan J rightly observed that ‘at least some of the respondents are liable in an action for damages’. But there are
two problems with this. The first is: damages for what? The scraps of building and waste materials the occupiers used to construct
their dwellings have a minimal market value, and the damages they may recover, even for their destroyed domestic effects, will probably
be pitifully small. Some may be able to sue for iniuria (for the invasion of their privacy and the indignity suffered in the eviction).
and claim more substantial damages, but only after trial proceedings that could stretch long years into the future – which
is the second problem.
(b) Criminal charges: Jordaan J also noted that the respondents’ conduct contravened s 8(1) of PIE, which is a criminal offence. A prosecution could have both instructional and inhibitory effect, but it would provide no material
benefit to the occupiers. And will it happen? Tswelopele on a previous occasion of harassment (by a private security company) took
the trouble to lodge criminal charges at the Garsfontein police station. Although eight months had passed when the respondents’
affidavits were filed, the acting station commander had no knowledge of the matter or of its progress. This is no good portent.
(c) Interdict: Tswelopele conceded that a suitably crafted interdict could put a stop to what could be argued to be a pattern of unlawful conduct,
particularly by the Garsfontein community police forum; but an interdict is future-directed: it does not meet the occupiers’
salvage claim, which would address their present wants by remedying a past injustice.
(d) Joining the Grootboom emergency relief and housing queue: In Government of the Republic of South Africa v Grootboom, the Constitutional Court held that the Constitution requires the State to devise and implement within its available resources a comprehensive
and co-ordinated program progressively to realise the right of access to adequate housing in s 26(2) of the Bill of Rights –
and that the program must include reasonable measures ‘to provide relief for people who have no access to land, no roof over
their heads, and who are living in intolerable conditions or crisis situations’. The respondents contended that we should issue
an order – such as that Bertelsmann J issued – that embodies this entitlement. Those occupiers entitled to emergency
relief (or ‘Grootboom relief’) and thereafter to a housing subsidy will no doubt be grateful for the activation of this aid. But countrywide the
need is enormous; and the queues are long; and it was common cause during argument that unlawful demolition of one’s home gives
no claim to priority. The occupiers want relief in relation to their destroyed shelters now, as well as the promise of further aid
in due course.
[19]
As counsel for the appellants pointed out, effective relief must be speedy, and it must address the consequences of the breach of
their rights. The only way to achieve these aims is to vindicate the occupiers’ salvage claim, and to require the respondents
to re-create their shelters. The remaining question is the best route to that result.
Mandament van spolie?
[20]
Though the appellants did not abandon their contention that the mandament van spolie should be constitutionally adapted to afford
them this relief, their primary submission was that a broader remedy should be developed under the Constitution. In this case, their
approach to the common law is correct. The Constitution preserves the common law, but requires the courts to synchronise it with the Bill of Rights. This entails that common law provisions at odds with the Constitution must either be developed or put at nought; but it does not mean that every common law mechanism, institution or doctrine needs constitutional overhaul; nor does it mean that
where a remedy for a constitutional infraction is required, a common law figure with an analogous operation must necessarily be seized
upon for its development. On the contrary: it may sometimes be best to leave a common law institution untouched, and to craft a new
constitutional remedy entirely.
[21]
It is true that the mandament offered the occupiers an alluring template for the relief they crave. The remedy originated in the canon
law, and found its way thence into Roman Dutch law and modern South African law. Under it, anyone illicitly deprived of property is entitled to be restored to possession before anything else is debated or decided
(spoliatus ante omnia restituendus est). Even an unlawful possessor – a fraud, a thief or a robber – is entitled to the mandament’s protection. The principle
is that illicit deprivation must be remedied before the courts will decide competing claims to the object or property.
[22]
The mandament’s obvious rule of law dimension gave rise to a debate between academic experts as to whether its primary rationale
was to protect possession, or to preserve order (and thus to discourage self-help). The practical focus of the debate was the question
that presented itself here: is the mandament available when the spoliator (or someone else) has destroyed the property sought to
be restored? Some pre-constitutional authority supported using the mandament to make the spoliator reconstruct what he had destroyed.
In Jones v Claremont Municipality, the court ordered a public authority to restore (ie, reconstruct) a fence it had illegally destroyed: Buchanan ACJ regarded the municipality’s
conduct as ‘very high-handed’, and said that ‘by ordering them to restore this fence I wish to mark my sense of
the impropriety of a public body taking the law into its own hands’. And in Fredericks and another v Stellenbosch Divisional Council, where the council demolished squatters’ corrugated-iron homes ‘in flagrant contempt of the law’, Diemont J issued an order requiring it to ‘re-erect’ the applicants’ homes immediately. This entailed ‘recreating shelters of approximately similar size and efficacy’. He considered that the order ‘should create no practical problems’:
‘If the original sheets of corrugated iron cannot be found or if they have been so damaged by the bulldozer that they cannot now be
used there is no reason why other sheets of iron of similar size and quality should not be used.’
[23]
But the heavy, albeit not universal, preponderance of academic commentators disfavoured the way the mandament was extended in Fredericks, and in Rikhotso v Northcliff Ceramics (Pty) Ltd Nugent J held that a spoliation order cannot be granted if the property at issue has ceased to exist: the mandament has been received
into our law as a possessory remedy, and not as a general remedy against unlawfulness. He observed that the issue of the mandament
is a preliminary and provisional order, so that the assumption that underlies it is that the property in fact exists and may be awarded
in due course to the properly entitled party. Since possession can not be restored by substitution, the mandament could not be granted. Nugent J concluded:
‘It was submitted that the conclusion to which I have come would encourage the destruction of property in the course of spoliation.
I do not think that is correct. I do not suggest that the law countenances wanton destruction, nor that it does not afford a remedy.
Remedies to discourage such conduct exist in both the civil and the criminal law. My conclusion is only that the mandament van spolie
is not that remedy.’
[24]
The doctrinal analysis in Rikhotso is in my view undoubtedly correct. While the mandament clearly enjoins breaches of the rule of law and serves as a disincentive to
self-help, its object is the interim restoration of physical control and enjoyment of specified property – not its reconstituted
equivalent. To insist that the mandament be extended to mandatory substitution of the property in dispute would be to create a different
and wider remedy than that received into South African law, one that would lose its possessory focus in favour of different objectives
(including a peace-keeping function).
[25]
It is correct, as Mr Budlender for the appellants emphasised, that the rule of law is a founding value of the Constitution. This would suggest that constitutional development of the common law might make it appropriate to adapt the mandament to include
reconstituted restoration in cases of destruction. And counsel is certainly correct in submitting that the absence of a remedy mandating
substitution of unlawfully destroyed property could create a perverse incentive for those taking the law into their own hands to
destroy the disputed property, rather than leaving it substantially intact.