How to lawfully evict your defaulting tenant

In the current difficult economic conditions many tenants in the residential property market are not able to keep up with their monthly rental. Here's what landlords can and can't do.

The PIE Act protects tenants and landlords

With the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from Unlawful Occupation of Land Act, No. 19 of 1998, also known as the PIE Act, tenants cannot simply be evicted.

The act applies to the occupation of a residential property in an urban area.

The purpose of the act is to ensure that tenants are protected from being unlawfully evicted from a property. While the act aims to prevent wrongful eviction, it does not mean that a tenant cannot be evicted, merely that the correct procedure needs to be followed.

Any homeowner or investors who wish to let out a property should familiarise themselves with the PIE Act as well as the procedures required to lawfully deal with a defaulting tenant.

The legal process

 

Ensure that lease agreements meet legal requirements and include the necessary clauses that protect the landlord and make sure that the lease agreement complies with the Consumer Protection Act (CPA).

Once a tenant defaults on the agreed rental, the rental contract has been breached.

The landlord must:

2 options if the notice period has expired:

Time and money

Time – money. Business concept. Analog hours on a heap of paper dollars

It takes 8 to 12 weeks

The application must be made to either a Magistrate’s Court or the High Court. If the application is unopposed it can take eight to ten weeks for the eviction order to be granted. In addition it is common practice to give the tenant at least another 14 days to find other accommodation before the eviction order is executed. Only once this notice and grace period has passed will the sheriff be lawfully entitled to evict the tenant.

Unopposed it will cost between R12 000 and R20 000

The cost of the process may vary depending on the sheriff’s fees and whether the matter is opposed or not. An unopposed eviction will cost between R12 000 and R20 000 in legal costs plus disbursements. The cost of an opposed matter will be substantially more.

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