Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 750South Africa
Fire Wings Properties 21 (PTY) Ltd v Sunrise Technologies (PTY) Ltd and Others (2020/16177) [2022] ZAGPJHC 750 (27 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 September 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Fire Wings Properties 21 (PTY) Ltd v Sunrise Technologies (PTY) Ltd and Others (2020/16177) [2022] ZAGPJHC 750 (27 September 2022)
Fire Wings Properties 21 (PTY) Ltd v Sunrise Technologies (PTY) Ltd and Others (2020/16177) [2022] ZAGPJHC 750 (27 September 2022)
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sino date 27 September 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2020/16177
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
27
September 2022
In
the matter of:
FIRE
WINGS PROPERTIES 21 (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
SUNRISE
TECHNOLOGIES (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
JOHANNESBURG
ROAD AGENCY (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG PROPERTY COMPANY (PTY)
LTD
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
BESTER
AJ
[1]
The applicant seeks a declarator that an advertising sign owned,
erected
and maintained by the first respondent on a corner of South
and Rivonia Roads, Sandton, is an illegal structure by reason of
non-compliance
with the Outdoor Advertising By-laws of the City of
Johannesburg, cited as the second respondent (the City). In addition,
the applicant
seeks an order directing the removal or demolition of
the sign.
[2]
The application was originally brought by Smartgrowth Investments
(Pty)
Ltd, as the owner of the property adjacent to the road reserve
on which the structure has been erected. However, prior to the
hearing
of this application, Fire Wings Properties 21 (Pty) Ltd
became the owner of the property, and on this basis brought an
application
to be substituted as the applicant herein. The
application was not opposed, and I granted the substitution at the
commencement
of argument.
[3]
Three issues need to be determined in this application:
a)
Whether the first respondent may rely on the defence of
lis alibi
pendens
;
b)
Whether the advertising sign is illegal; and
c)
Whether the first respondent can rely on the second respondent’s
‘moratorium'
on enforcing its Outdoor Advertising By-laws.
# Lis alibi pendens
Lis alibi pendens
[4]
The City launched an application against the first respondent under
case
number 18793/19 in this division in terms of which the City
seeks an order that eight advertising signs, including the sign that
is the subject matter of this application, be declared unlawful, and
ordering the first respondent to remove them. It is clear
that the
relief sought in the two applications is substantially the same. On
this basis the first respondent contends that it is
entitled to raise
the defence of
lis alibi pendens
.
[5]
The applicant challenged this approach on the basis that it is not a
party
to the other application. In the result, the applicant
contends, there is no litigation pending between the applicant and
the first
respondent for the same relief.
[6]
In
Nestlé
(South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Mars Inc
[1]
Nugent AJA, said of this defence:
“
There is room for
the application of that principle only where the same dispute,
between the same parties, is sought to be placed
before the same
tribunal (or two tribunals with equal competence to end the dispute
authoritatively). In the absence of any of
those elements there is no
potential for a duplication of actions.”
[7]
In a
similar vein, Zulman JA expressed the requirements as follows in
Hassan
and Another v Berrange N.O.
:
[2]
“
Fundamental to the
plea of
lis alibi pendens
is the requirement that the same
plaintiff has instituted action against the same defendant for the
same thing arising out of the
same cause.”
[8]
Ceaserstone
v World of Marble and Granite
[3]
approved of both the aforementioned passages.
[4]
The first respondent contended that
Ceaserstone
[5]
,
with its analysis of
Cook
v Muller N.O.
[6]
,
allows for sufficient relaxation of the requirements of this defence
to make it available in the current circumstances, where
the same
relief is sought in the other application by the City against the
first respondent.
[9]
The
authorities relied upon do not come to the first respondent’s
assistance. In
Ceaserstone
Wallis JA specifically recorded that it was not submitted to the
court that it “
should
strike out in a new direction and allow a relaxation of the
requirement that the two set of litigation be between the same
parties, in the same way as the other requirements of lis pendens and
res iudicata have been relaxed.”
[7]
What the court considered in
Ceaserstone
was whether there was sufficient commonality of interest between
certain parties in the two sets of litigation to allow the plea
of
lis
pendens
to be available. The point was not raised in this application.
[10]
In the result, I find that the special plea of
lis alibi pendens
is not available to the first respondent.
# Is the structure illegal?
Is the structure illegal?
[11]
The
applicant claims that the sign is illegal, because it does not comply
with the City’s Outdoor Advertising By-laws, 2009.
[8]
[12]
Section 2 of the By-laws provides that:
“
2. (1)
These By-laws apply to all outdoor advertising in the area and
jurisdiction
of the Council.
(2) Approval for outdoor
advertising in term of these By-laws is required irrespective of the
zoning of any property in terms of
any applicable town planning
scheme and irrespective of the provisions of any other law.
(3)
The owner of an advertising sign and any person who has applied for
approval of an advertising sign in terms
of these By-laws must comply
with any provision of these By-laws relating to that sign and must
ensure that such provisions are
complied with, subject to anything to
the contrary contained in such provision.”
[13]
Section 3.1 provides that:
“
3.1(1)
No person may erect any advertising sign or use or continue to use
any structure or device as an advertising sign without the prior
written approval of the Council: Provided that the provisions of
this
subsection do not apply to any advertising sign exempted in terms of
section 8.”
[14]
It is common cause on the papers that no such application had been
made, no approval was
obtained from the City, and no exemption as
contemplated in section 8 was granted.
[15]
In
addition, the applicant’s predecessor (Smartgrowth) had caused
a registered professional land surveyor, Mr Willem Coetzer,
to survey
the location of the sign, and he reports that the sign is a mere 36m
from the middle of the intersection. This is a contravention
of
section 6(3)(c)(iii) of the By-laws, which stipulates that a sign my
not be closer than 50m from the centre of an intersection.
[9]
This evidence was met with a mere denial, which is not sufficient to
create a
bona
fide
dispute
of fact.
[10]
[16]
It is thus clear that the sign contravenes the By-laws and is an
illegal structure.
[17]
The
applicant contends that it has
locus
standi in iudicio
to seek the relief as a member of the class of persons in whose
interest the By-laws were enacted. In this regard, it relies on
Pick-Pay
Stores Limited v Teasers Comedy and Review CC
[11]
.
There, Hussain J concluded that the applicant had the necessary
standing to seek compliance with the Town Planning Scheme from
a
property owner in the immediate vicinity of the applicant’s
property, as it was thus a person in whose interest the Scheme
was
enacted. In my view the reasoning is also applicable here.
[18]
The first respondent did not challenge the applicant’s
entitlement to seek the relief,
and I am satisfied that the applicant
has the required legal standing.
# Does the ‘moratorium’
prevent the applicant from obtaining relief?
Does the ‘moratorium’
prevent the applicant from obtaining relief?
[19]
The first respondent contends that the structure is not illegal by
virtue of what it calls
a ‘moratorium’ by the second
respondent on enforcing its Outdoor Advertising By-laws.
[20]
It appears that the first respondent erected the sign pursuant to an
agreement concluded
with the Johannesburg Roads Agency (Pty) Ltd,
cited as the third respondent, in 2009. The third respondent did not
have the jurisdiction
to authorise the erection of the sign,
irrespective of the agreement it concluded with the first respondent.
Wisely in my view,
Mr Stevens, for the first respondent, did not
press this argument. In any event, that agreement endured for a
period of two years,
and the first respondent did not rely on a
written renewal, as a required by the agreement.
[21]
The City endeavoured to replace the existing Outdoor Advertising
By-laws, but those efforts
were scuppered when the advertising
industry raised various objections to the proposed By-laws, and
through litigation prevented
its promulgation. In the result, the
2009 By-laws remained effective, but the City implemented a
‘transitional period’
of 36 months in which it sought to
engage with the industry to regularise various aspects of existing
outdoor advertising, that
may not comply with the extant By-laws.
[22]
This does not mean, as the first respondent argued, that the current
By-laws are unenforceable.
In fact, the report to the Mayoral
Committee that recommended the transitional period, expressly state
that those By-laws must
still be enforced. On my reading of the
City’s invitation to the industry, there is no true moratorium,
in the sense contended
for by the first respondent, whereby illegal
signs will be allowed over the period of the 36-month transition
period.
[23]
The City itself states that the transition period is a form of
indulgence creating an interim
framework for the phasing out of
illegal signs over the 36-month transitional period. The City
undertook to the sector that it
would not take punitive action
against any advertising assets declared to the City, provided
agreement is reached on a timeframe
to remove signs found to be
non-compliant with the By-laws within the 36-month period. This
signifies a pragmatic approach by the
City, which seems to have been
overwhelmed by a multitude of illegal advertising signs and resultant
litigation.
[24]
Once it is accepted that the applicant has legal standing to seek
compliance with the By-laws,
it does not matter, in my view, that the
City took these pragmatic steps. Where a party with sufficient
interest in the matter
approaches a court to enforce the By-laws, a
court would not refrain from enforcing the By-laws on the basis of
the City having
agreed to not prosecute owners of illegal advertising
structures whilst it engaged with them on the regularisation or
demolition
of the illegal structures.
[25]
The fact that the first respondent is an active participant in the
transitional process,
does not give it immunity against its clear
transgression of the By-laws. In any event, the sign cannot be
approved, because it
is built too close to the centre of the
intersection, so there is no basis for arguing that the sign may be
regularised instead
of demolished.
[26]
In the circumstances, I conclude that the City’s transition
period does not prevent
the applicant from seeking compliance with
the Outdoor Advertising By-laws.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[27]
In the result, I make an order in the following terms:
a)
The advertising signage structure owned, erected, and maintained by
or on behalf
of the first respondent and situated on the Corner of
South and Rivonia Roads, Sandton, identified in FA5 to the founding
affidavit,
does not comply with the second respondent’s outdoor
advertising By-laws of 2009, and is an illegal structure.
b)
The first respondent must demolish and/or remove the structure within
20 days
from date of this order at its own cost, failing which the
Sheriff of this Court is authorised and directed to demolish and/or
remove the structure at the expense and costs of the first
respondent.
c)
The first respondent shall pay the applicant’s costs of the
application,
excluding the costs of the substitution application.
A
Bester
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard:
24 November 2021
Judgment:
27 September 2022
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv L Hollander
Instructed
by:
Hirschowitz Flionis Attorneys
Counsel
for the First Respondent:
Adv BD Stevens
Instructed
by:
Jurgens Bekker Attorneys
Second
Respondent:
No appearance
[1]
Nestlé
(South Africa) (Pt) Ltd v Mars Inc
2001 (4) SA 542
(SCA) in [17].
[2]
Hassan
and Another v Berrange N.O.
2012 (6) SA 329
(SCA) in [19].
[3]
Ceaserstone
SDOT-YAM Ltd v World of Marble and Granite 2000 CC
2013 (6) SA 499 (SCA).
[4]
Ceaserstone
supra
in [4] and [12] respectively.
[5]
Supra.
[6]
Cook
and Others v Muller N.O.
1973 (2) SA 240 (N).
[7]
Ceaserstone
supra
in
[31].
[8]
City of
Johannesburg Outdoor Advertising By-Laws, Local Authority Notice
2007, Extraordinary Provincial Gazette 277 of 18 December
2009.
[9]
The exceptions are not relevant here.
[10]
See for instance
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008
(3) SA 371
(SCA) in [13].
[11]
Pick-Pay
Stores Limited v Teasers Comedy and Review CC
2000 (3) SA 645
(W) at 653 C – 654 I.
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