Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 769South Africa
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v New Star Technology CC and Another (18162/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 769; 2023 (3) SA 579 (GJ) (23 September 2022)
Headnotes
the law regarding granting final interdicts was settled. Once an applicant had proved the three elements that
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v New Star Technology CC and Another (18162/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 769; 2023 (3) SA 579 (GJ) (23 September 2022)
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v New Star Technology CC and Another (18162/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 769; 2023 (3) SA 579 (GJ) (23 September 2022)
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FLYNOTES:
MUNICIPALITY AND ENVIRONMENT
Environment
– Contravention of environmental legislation – Plastic
recycling business – No waste or emission
licences –
Standing of municipality – Seeking interdict to stop the
activities – National Environmental
Management Act 107 of
1998, 32.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 18162/2021
REPORTABLE: YES
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
23
September 2022
In the
matter between:
CITY OF EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
And
NEW
STAR TECHNOLOGY
CC
First
Respondent
ZHIBING
YUAN
Second
Respondent
(This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by email and uploading to
the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
23 September 2022.)
JUDGMENT
MIA,
J
[1]
The applicant seeks a final interdict against the respondents for
conduct it alleges
contravenes various environmental legislation
including the National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998
(NEMA), read with
section 5
of the
National Environmental Management
Act: Waste
Act 59 of 2008 (the Waste Act); and Chapter 4 of the
National Environmental Management Act: Air
Quality Act 39 of 2004
(Air Quality Act); National Norms and Standards for the storage of
Waste; and National Norms and Standards
for the Sorting, Shredding,
Grinding, Crushing, Screening or Bailing of general waste. The first
and the second respondents opposed
the application.
The
first respondent does not deny that the company commenced operations
without authorisation. Instead, the respondents contend
that the
application is inappropriate and raise points
in
limine
as have raised substantive defenses on the merits as well.
BACKGROUND
FACTS
[2]
It is helpful to understand the context in which this litigation
commenced in order
to appreciate the relief requested. A brief
background follows. The applicant is a metropolitan municipality
established in terms
of the law
[1]
,
serving the East Rand community, and is responsible for the promotion
of a safe and healthy environment
[2]
.
The first respondent is a close corporation situated at 4 Robex Road,
Activia in Germiston. The second respondent is a member
of the first
respondent and has his work address at the same address as the first
respondent in Germiston. The respondents conduct
business recycling
plastic and commenced its operation in 2009. The first respondent
does not have an atmospheric emission license(AEL)
as required by the
Air Quality Act. In addition, the first respondent has no application
pending for an AEL before the applicant.
The first respondent does
not have a waste management license (WML) as required by NEMA either.
The first respondent has applied
for rectification of its
unauthorised activities in terms of section 24G of NEMA. The first
respondent’s application has
been suspended, pending the
finalisation of a criminal matter which is pending.
[3]
On 26 August 2020, an environmental compliance monitoring officer
(ECMO) conducted
a site inspection. It revealed that the first
respondent was conducting thermal treatment of general hazardous
waste without an
AEL. The first respondent was required to obtain an
atmospheric emission license (AEL) prior to engaging in thermal
treatment of
hazardous waste. On 20 September 2020, the Environmental
Management Inspector (EMI) issued a notice of the applicant’s
intention
to issue a compliance notice in terms of NEMA, read with
the Waste Act and the Air Quality Act. The EMI based his decision on
the
findings that:
“
4.1.
New Star Technology had commenced with section 9 NEMWA waste
management listed under category A and C GNR 332 of 2014 onsite.
4.2 New
Star Technology has commenced with NEMQA section 21 Air Quality
activities listed under category eight,
subcategory 8.1 on-site.
4.3 Sorting, shredding,
and recycling of general waste(Plastic) are undertaken on site.
4.4 Process wastewater is
channelled into the municipal sewer system
4.5
Wet waste from the process is stored outside in an uncovered area.”
[4]
The applicant’s notice afforded the respondents an opportunity
to make written
representations within 14 calendar days of receipt of
the notice. The respondents were required to indicate whether there
are compelling
and substantial reasons for the environmental
management inspector not to exercise his powers in terms of section
31L, to issue
a compliance notice that would require the respondents
to cease all activities listed in s19 of the Waste Act and s21 of the
Air
Quality Act. According to the applicant, the inspection of the
premises revealed that the respondents were recycling general waste
without a waste management license. The first respondent had not
registered and was not compliant with the waste norms and standards
for 2013 and 2017.
[5]
The first respondent was also storing waste materials, sorting and
shredding waste
plastic without a waste management license, and was
not complying with waste norms or standards and or sorting and
bailing norms.
The Environmental Compliance Management Officer(ECMO)
observed that the respondent stored bales of used plastics on the
property.
These were cut into pieces and fed into a washing machine.
Thereafter the plastic was dried and fed into heated plastic
processing
machines to convert them into pallets.
[6]
The ECMO observed that there was an emission as a result of the
thermal heat processing
of plastic without any abatement equipment
installed, whilst the plastics were being processed and converted
into pallets. The
processing produced an odour and emissions at
levels that created a nuisance and this was not managed by the first
respondent.
The first respondent failed to produce a provisional AEL
or an AEL when called upon to do so.
[7]
The first respondent responded to the pre-compliance notice and
furnished the applicant
with written representations. The response
indicated that the first respondent did not have a professional AEL
or WML. However,
they appointed a service provider to assist in
applying for a WML, and that an application for an AEL will be lodged
with the applicant.
They also indicated that they will apply for
permission for storage, sorting, shredding, grinding, crushing and
bailing of general
waste to the
Gauteng
Department of Agriculture and Rural Development
(GDRAD). Notwithstanding the response, the applicants contend that
the respondents failed to provide substantial and compelling
reasons
not to issue a compliance notice in terms of s 31L of NEMA.
[8]
Consequently, on 13 October 2020, and in view of the respondents’
alleged contraventions
the applicant issued a compliance notice to
the respondents which required them to:
8.1
cease all activities within 24 hours of receipt of the notice.
8.2 to
appoint a suitably qualified specialist within 30 days of the receipt
of the compliance notice to remove
all process waste in the
wastewater pits on-site to a registered and approved landfill site
and remove all sludge waste stored
on-site to a registered and
approved landfill site.
8.3
to submit to the applicant within 45 working days a report regarding
all waste disposal manifest and safe
disposal certificate.
[9]
The applicant states that the respondents failed to seize conducting
their business
in contravention of the environmental laws and have
not complied with the compliance notice. The EMI conducted a further
inspection
on 16 February 2021. The inspection according to the
applicant shows the respondents’ conspicuous disregard of the
law in
that they continue unabated with unauthorised activities in
contravention of the environmental laws. This the applicant contends
is a clear infringement of a right that affords the applicant the
ground for an interdict.
ISSUES
TO BE DETERMINED
[10]
The issues this court is required to be determine are the following:
10.1 whether the
applicant has the standing to apply for an interdict?
10.2 whether the
applicant cited the relevant parties?
10.3
whether it is competent to grant a final interdict?
LAW
[11]
The law regarding the granting of a final interdict is trite and is
guided by the decision in
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
[3]
where the requirements were set out namely i) a clear right, ii) an
injury actually committed or reasonably apprehended and the
absence
of a satisfactory alternative remedy. In
Hotz
and Others v University of Cape Town
[4]
,
the
court held that the law regarding granting final interdicts was
settled. Once an applicant had proved the three elements that
permitted the grant of an interdict, the latitude for refusing the
relief if any is limited.
[12]
Section 36(1) of the Waste Act provides that:
“
Metropolitan
and district municipalities are charged with implementing the
atmospheric emission licensing system referred to in
section 22, and
must for this purpose perform functions of licensing authority as set
out in this Chapter and other provisions
of the Act.”
[13]
Section 24G of NEMA makes provision for the consequences of
commencing an unlawful activity without
a license. Sub section (2)
thereof permits the Minister, Minister responsible for mineral
resources, or MEC concerned to consider
any report or information
submitted in terms of subsection
(1)
and
to refuse to issue an environmental authorisation or to issue same
subject to conditions.
POINTS
IN LIMINE
[14]
The first point
in limine
raised is whether the applicant was
competent to obtain the interdict against the first respondent. The
first respondent contends
that the applicant is not empowered to
launch the application and that the Member of the Executive Council
for Environmental Affairs
(MEC), has a direct and substantial
interest in the matter, ought to be joined, and should pursue the
relief sought instead of
the applicant. The MEC is the relevant
authority that issues the license, thus it is the MEC who must
enforce the legislation and
lodge the application herein. The first
respondent maintains that the applicant is not competent to do so.
[15]
The second point
in limine
is that the second respondent is
not properly joined. The second respondent contends he has no
interest in the matter. He has been
incorrectly cited as a party to
the proceedings as the first respondent is a closed corporation. The
second respondent continues
to state further that there is no
application before the court to pierce the corporate veil and
therefore the actions of the first
respondent cannot be attributed
him and the relief sought is not appropriate against him.
[16]
The first respondent points out that the conduct which the applicant
seeks to interdict is already
underway. It highlights furthermore,
that the first respondent does not contribute to pollution, but
rather assists in recycling
waste and in doing so contributes to a
clean and safe environment by receiving plastic-related waste and
processing it, and converting
it into exportable material for
international markets. The first respondent also notes that it
contributes to the creation of employment
and to cleaning the
environment by removing waste plastic from the environment.
[17]
Furthermore, the respondents contend that the relief sought by the
applicant is unwarranted as
there are alternative remedies that
indicate an interdict should not be granted. This position is based
on their view that the
applicant has not established that the harm
apprehended has taken place as the first respondent is operational
only for a while.
They also submit that the stoppage of operations
will place the livelihood of over one hundred employees in jeopardy.
Moreover,
they state that an interdict will harm the environment
because the plastic would remain on the streets creating pollution.
They
point out that an interdict is not required as the applicants
have not satisfied the court that they have pursued alternative
measures
and that these are not effective. The respondents contend
that the applicant has not prosecuted the criminal case against them
to finality.
They indicate they have applied for an exemption
in terms of NEMA on behalf of the first respondent which would permit
the latter
to operate the processing plant subject to certain
conditions pending the finalisation of the application for licenses.
APPLICANT’S
LOCUS STANDI
[18]
The
applicant relied on section 32
[5]
of NEMA to pursue the application in its own interest and in the
public interest so as to protect the environment for present and
future generations. Where an applicant has shown a direct and
substantial interest the court must permit an applicant the
opportunity
to pursue the relief. In
Sustaining
the Wildcoast NPC and Others v Minister of Resources and Energy and
Others
3491/21 delivered on 1 September 2022, a decision of the Full Court
of the Eastern Cape Division Makhanda, the Court stated at
paragraphs
44 and 45
“
[44]
Where a party has shown a direct and substantial interest in the
subject matter of a case, the court has no discretion
to exercise. It
must grant the intervention.
[6]
[45]
The generous approach to standing adopted under section 38 of
the Constitution is the overriding factor. That section
grants
locus
standi
to any party alleging the infringement of a right in the Bill of
Rights acting in its own interest,
[7]
on behalf of another person who cannot act in their own interest,
[8]
in the interest of a group or class of persons,
[9]
in the interest of the public
[10]
or as an association acting in the interest of its members.
[11]
Therefore
so far as the standing of the applicant is concerned I can see no bar
to it lodging the application to pursue a group
interest namely a
community interest or its own obligation provided in terms of the
Waste Act
[12]
the Air Quality
Act or NEMA to ensure it protects the environment.
[19]
The EMI’s enforcing NEMA and compliance with environmental
legislation have been delegated
[13]
to ensure compliance and to take certain steps. The applicant has
proven that the EMI’s were designated in the matter and
there
is nothing to gainsay such evidence. The MEC has no legal interest
that may be affected by the relief sought, rather the
MEC has an
interest in ensuring compliance with the legislation. I am satisfied
that the applicant has the requisite standing to
launch these
proceedings in terms of s 32 of NEMA.
[20]
The second respondent is a member of the first respondent which is a
closed corporation and is
the human intellectual personality
galvanising the activity that the applicant complains about that
causes degradation to the environment.
I am satisfied that the
applicant has the necessary standing to launch the proceedings and
has cited the relevant parties. In the
result, the respondents fail
on both points
in limine
.
COMPETENCE
TO GRANT AN INTERDICT
(a)
INJURY
REASONABLY APPREHENDED
[21]
There is a duty in terms of s 24 and s 152(1)(ii) of the Constitution
to protect the environment
for the benefit of present and future
generations. In circumstances where the designated EMI’s are
not permitted or able
to enforce compliance with environmental laws
in terms of ss 31D, 31G, and 31N of NEMA, the applicant will not
comply with its
obligation to protect the environment. The
appointment of EMIs is an innovation by the MEC’s office to
ensure the steady
realisation required to ensure environmental
preservation for the present and future generations. The EMI in the
present instance
investigated a complaint lodged by a member of the
public.
[22]
The applicant investigated the complaint received from Mrs. Angelique
regarding air pollution at the
premises of the respondents. The
complainant referred to the burning of plastic which causes a
malodourous smell; flies present
in the vicinity and the leaking of
water on the premises. Upon attending the premises and investigating
the complaint the EMI found
the respondents were clearly in
contravention of various environmental legislation because they do
not have an AEL or a WML permitting
them to burn plastic. The
activity causes injury and harm which impacts the health and
well-being of residents and extends to the
environment and
surroundings that will suffer as a result of the respondents’
conduct.
[23]
The applicant contends that the respondents’ conduct has an
immense impact on the environmental
well-being and the health of
residents in the area. This also impacts on the right to human
dignity and life of the residents in
the area. Whilst the respondents
maintain that their conduct contributes to cleaning the environment
by removing plastic, this
ignores that the thermal treatment of
plastic applied to the collected waste is by the respondent’s
own admission in contravention
of the Air Quality Act as well as the
Waste Act. The respondents, after receiving the notice, have
continued to conduct the activities,
in clear contravention of the
law. Upon receiving a notice to cease activities the respondents have
continued their activity without
producing a license.
(b)
AVAILABILITY
OF ALTERNATIVE REMEDIES
[24]
The applicant contends that an interdict is necessary to stop the
respondents from operating
in violation of the Waste Act and Air
Quality Act. The interdict will ensure that the respondents follow
the required process and
apply for a license before commencing any
listed activity in the face of their demonstrated proclivity to
disobey and disregard
the law by operating in contravention of the
law.
[25]
The applicant does not favour the alternative remedy of issuing a
fine and submits that criminal
proceeding are not an effective
remedy, as no positive results have been derived from pursuit of the
criminal case whilst the respondents
continue to pollute the
environment in clear contravention of the law. This is comprehensible
in the circumstances where criminal
proceedings are drawn out and may
take years before they are finalised and the respondents continue to
contravene environmental
legislation while the criminal prosecutions
unfold. The respondents’ conduct continues to impact on the
environment and is
in contravention of the law whilst a license has
not been issued and it is not clear what measures are in place to
abate the ensuing
pollution. Essentially the thermal treatment and
recycling of plastic requires a license as it requires regulation and
requires
monitoring and to be conducted in accordance with norms and
standards that the respondents failed to comply with.
[26]
The respondents concede that the first respondent commenced
operations without being granted
the relevant authorisation by the
applicant. Whilst they indicate that steps were taken toward
compliance with the environmental
legislation as well as the
provincial and municipal compliance notices, it is not evident that
the activities the first respondent
is conducting is in compliance
with the norms and standards required. The respondents have appointed
an environmental consulting
company and submitted applications for
authorisation to the applicant, the authorised entity in respect of
those authorisations;
such authorisation has not been forthcoming.
The public participation hearings which the respondents conducted do
not indicate
that they have complied with the norms and standards in
respect of the applications and authorisations which they submitted
to
the applicant with regard to the activities of the first
respondent.
[27]
It is evident that there is a clear breach of the environmental
legislation by the first respondent.
The first respondent conceded
the breach but minimises its conduct by stating that it is clearing
the environment of plastic. This
however does not address the problem
of the emissions arising from the burning of plastics. The odour that
the EMI’s point
out resulting from the heating process is not
abated. Whilst the respondents’ state they engaged with the
applicant’s
employees, however there is no evidence indicating
that there is compliance with the norms and standards or that the
pollution
caused by the heating process is abated satisfactorily and
in accordance with the norms and standards. The applicant has
approached
this court for relief amidst the respondent’s
reluctance to abide by the applicant’s application and
implementation
of the applicable environmental legislation.
[28]
The respondent’s view as reflected in the answering affidavit
indicate they are intent
on continuing with the activities of the
first respondent who despite the compliance notice sent on 13 October
2020 notifying the
first respondent to cease activities within 24
hours of receipt of the notice; to remove all process waste in the
wastewater pits
on-site to a registered and approved landfill site
and remove all sludge waste stored on-site to a registered and
approved landfill
site within 30 days and to submit a report to the
applicant within 45 working days regarding all waste disposal and
safe disposal
certificate. It is not evident how the respondents
process the waste in compliance with the norms and standards. The
applicant
submitted that the respondent’s admitted conduct
suggests that criminal prosecution and a fine would be inappropriate
alternative
remedies. In the face of the respondents’ lack of
co-operation in compliance with the environmental legislation, the
only
option is to stop the conduct.
[29]
The purpose of criminal proceedings and a fine may have a deterrent
effect. However, in the present
matter, where the respondents have
demonstrated the intention to pursue the activities of the first
respondent notwithstanding
the criminal proceedings, the pursuit of
criminal proceedings and payment of a fine would appear, in the
context of this legislation,
would not have the desired deterrent
effect. In order to achieve the objective of environmental protection
for the benefit of present
and future generations and to prevent
pollution and ecological degradation, the respondents must cease the
operation of the first
respondent until the latter is compliant.
[30]
The issuing of a monetary fine is not an adequate deterrent where
persons benefit financially
from illegal operations and continue to
pollute the environment leaving an overarching impact on the
environment. I have noted
that the MEC may direct that a report be
compiled as provided for in s 24G(vii) and (viii) of NEMA. The
MEC
may then consider the report and refuse to issue an environmental
authorisation or issue it subject to further conditions
[14]
.
There are various steps that the MEC may take and ultimately the MEC
may defer the decision to issue an environmental authorisation
until
criminal proceedings have concluded and an applicant has exhausted
proceedings pertaining to appeal and review. It follows
that the
application that the first respondent refers to is not concluded due
to such processes. In the interim, and until the
application for
authorisation to conduct activity is authorised, the first respondent
may not proceed uninterrupted with unlawful
activity because it is
proscribed by legislation to protect the environment. It is necessary
to thus cease activity. I am furthermore
in agreement with the view
held in various decisions that an interdict is appropriate where
there is a contravention of the law
[15]
.
In the present matter the respondent’s conduct deserves the
same censure. It is evident that there are no alternative remedies
available to the applicant that will achieve the desired result.
COSTS
[31]
On the issue of costs, counsel for the applicant submits that a
punitive cost order would be
one way in which to show the respondents
the courts disapproval of their conduct in pursuing their business in
contravention of
the law. The applicant served a notice of compliance
in October 2020 and in February 2021, the respondents were still
polluting
the environment. This they submit justifies a punitive
costs order. The first respondent resists such order arguing that the
applicant
has delayed processing their application and has pursued
relief that is inappropriate. I hold the view that the relief
requested
by the applicants is appropriate. Moreover, the attitude of
the first respondent to continue with its conduct in disregard for
its impact on the environment is deserving of censure and a punitive
costs order.
ORDER
[32]
Having considered the above I make the following order:
1.
The respondents are interdicted and
restrained from conducting section 21 listed activities at 4 Ronbex
Road Activia, Germiston without an atmospheric emission license in
contravention of the National Environmental Management: Air
Quality
Management Act 39 of 2004;
2.
The respondents are interdicted and
restrained from conducting section 19, Category A (Activity 3) listed
activities at the same premises without a waste management license in
contravention of the
National Environmental Management: Waste Act 59
of 2008
;
3.
The respondents are interdicted and restrained
from conducting.
Section 19
category C. (Activity five) waste
management activity, in contravention of national norms and standards
for the storage of waste,
published under Government Notice No.926 in
the Government Gazette 37088 of 29 of November 2013.
4.
That the respondents are interdicted and restrained from operating a
waste facility in contravention
of national norms and standards for
the sorting, common shredding, grinding, crushing screening or baling
of general waste published
under Government Notice No. 1093. In the
Government Gazette No. 41175 of 11 October 2017.
5.
In the event that the respondents fail to comply with the orders
above, the applicant is
authorized with the assistance of the sheriff
and all the South African Police and all Metro Police and or a
private security company
to demolish and remove all items and illegal
structures on the premises which are used by the respondents to
conduct listed activities
without environmental authorizations from
the applicant and Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural
Development.
6.
The respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this application
jointly and severally the
one paying the other to be absolved on an
attorney and client scale.
S C MIA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
On
behalf of the applicant
:
Adv K
Monareng
Instructed by
:Nozuko Nxusani Inc
On behalf of the first
respondents
: Adv ME Mathapuhuna
Instructed
by
: Mfinci Bahlmann Inc
Date of hearing
: 2 November 2021
Date
of judgment
: 23 September 2022
[1]
Section
151 of the Constitution and the
Local
Government Municipal Structures Act 117 of 1998
[2]
Section 152(1)(d) of the Constitution of South Africa
[3]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
[4]
Hotz
and Others v University of Cape Town
2017(2)
SA 485 (SCA)
[5]
S 32
.
Lega
l
standin
g
t
o
enforc
e
environmenta
l
laws
.
—(1
)
Any
person
or
group
of
persons
may
seek
appropriate relief in respect of any breach or threatened breach of
any provision of this Act, including a principle contained
in
Chapter 1, or of any provision of a specific environmental
management Act, or of any other statutory provision concerned with
the protection of the environment or the use of natural resources—
(
a
)
in that person’s or group of person’s own interest;
(
b
)
in the interest of, or on behalf of, a person who is, for practical
reasons, unable to institute
such proceedings;
(
c
)
in the interest of or on behalf of a group or class of persons whose
interests are affected;
(
d
)
in the public interest; and
(
e
)
in the interest of protecting the environment.
[6]
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004 (2) SA 81
(SE) at 89B - C.
[7]
S
38(a)
[8]
S 38(b)
[9]
S 38(c)
[10]
S 38(d)
[11]
S 38(e)
[12]
S36 Waste Act
[13]
Record,
Founding Affidavit, Para 19, CaseLines 01-3,
Annexures
“COE4” and “COE5”
[14]
(
b
)
issue an environmental authorisation to such person to continue,
conduct or undertake the activity subject
to such conditions as the
Minister, Minister responsible for mineral resources or MEC may deem
necessary, which environmental
authorisation shall only take effect
from the date on which it has been issued; or
(
c
)
direct the applicant to provide further information or take further
steps prior to
making a decision provided for in paragraph (a) or
(b)
.
[15]
Bitou
Local Municipality v Timber Two Processors CC and Another
2009
(5) SA 618
(C) 8
United
Technical Equipment Co (Pty) Ltd v Johannesburg City Council 1987
(4) SA 343 (T), para 347G.
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Greyvenouw CC
and
Others
2004 (2) SA 81
(SE), para 94
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City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another v Pitse N.O. and Others (A5049/17;14138/16; 34564/14) [2022] ZAGPJHC 682 (13 September 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 682High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Specitrim (Pty) Ltd and Others (2021/42636) [2022] ZAGPJHC 973 (7 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 973High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Thurwood Investments (PTY) Ltd and Another (2022/531) [2022] ZAGPJHC 414 (15 June 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 414High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Themba and Others (26039/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 811 (17 October 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 811High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar