Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 868South Africa
Rowing South Africa and Another v Greecy N.O. and Another (26810/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 868 (4 November 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Rowing South Africa and Another v Greecy N.O. and Another (26810/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 868 (4 November 2022)
Rowing South Africa and Another v Greecy N.O. and Another (26810/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 868 (4 November 2022)
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sino date 4 November 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 26810/2022
REPORTABLE:
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
REVISED.
4/10/2022
In the matter between:
ROWING
SOUTH AFRICA
First
Applicant
WORLD
ROWING MASTERS REGATTA
Second
Applicant
And
BARBARA
GREECY N.O.
First
Respondent
SENZO
MCHUNU
N.O.
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME,
J
:
[1]
This matter is divided into two parts. In part “A” the
Applicants seek
an order that the Respondents be directed to consider
the application lodged by the Applicants in terms of
Section 21(1)
of
the
National Water Act 36 of 1998
within 3 days from date of such
order.
[2]
This Section enables the Applicant to deal with certain Hyacinth that
grows on the
Roodeplaat Dam. The Applicants seek permissions and to
be provided with Herbicide for treating the indigenous species.
[3]
They say the application is urgent because during the first week of
November they
are to host Provincial Regatta Competition at the dam
and that next September 2023 they will be hosting World Championships
at
the same venue.
[4]
This application was issued on the 29
th
September 2022 and
served on the second Respondent on Friday the 30
th
September 2022 at 12h25 on the personal secretary of Minister Senzo
Mchunu. There has been no service on first Respondent Minister
Barbara Greecy.
[5]
On the 4
th
October 2022 the parties appeared before me
duly represented by counsel. The matter stood down to the 7
th
October 2022 to afford the Respondents an opportunity to file their
Answering Affidavit which they did. The Applicant subsequently
also
filed their Replying Affidavit.
[6]
It is common cause that the Respondents have in their Answering
Affidavit besides
dealing with the merits of the application raised
the issues that firstly the application is not urgent and falls to be
struck-off
the roll with costs. Secondly that proper procedure was
not followed and thirdly that the application is premature in that in
terms
of the Department’s Standard Operation Procedure the
Respondent had 90 days to consider the application which period will
only expire during December 2022.
[7]
There are two issues for determination by this Court. Firstly, it is
whether the application
is urgent, secondly whether the Applicants
have made out a case justifying an order as prayed for in Part “A”
URGENCY
[8]
The Applicants basis for bringing this application on an urgent basis
is set out from
paragraph 69 up to and including paragraph 71. In
brief it is that the Respondent’s failure or inaction to deal
expeditiously
with their application for a Water Use License in terms
of
Section 21(1)
of the
National Water Act is
prejudicing them in
that firstly the Water Hyacinth is growing rapidly and poses a threat
to the use of the dam for events scheduled
to take place during
November 2022.
[9]
Secondly the Applicant says that for a considerable time it has been
employing labourers
to remove the hyacinth manually and sourced
private funding for herbicides for the spraying of the water
hyacinth. Applicant contend
that it can no longer continue to do that
for an indefinite period.
[10] The
Applicants contend further that the manual removal of the water
hyacinth by labourers has
caused the Applicant to incur costs whilst
obtaining no benefit from such expenditure. It is further contended
by the Applicants
that failure to deal effectively with the water
hyacinth will result in sporting activities scheduled for the dam to
be cancelled
causing them reputational damage. Lastly it is argued
that the Applicants will not receive sufficient redress in the
ordinary course
should this matter not be heard as an urgent
application.
[11] In
response to the urgency aspect the Respondent sets out in paragraph 7
and 8 of its Answering
Affidavit Standard Operating Procedure (SOP)
for dealing with preliminary application for authorisation and water
use license.
The Respondent say that the purpose of the SOP is to
standardise the water use license application assessment processes
with the
Department of Water Services (DWS). That document provides
the necessary tools that must be used by an official during the
process
of assessing a water use license application.
[12]
According to the Respondent the procedure leading to the granting or
rejection of a water use
license is as follows:
12.1 Such application for water
use license are managed through a product called the E Wulaas.
12.2 The pre-application should
be submitted to the North West Region as per the DWS regional
demarcation.
12.3 On receipt of such
application the Wula Manager in Northwest will then assign the
application to an assessor or case
officer.
12.4 The assessor or case
manager will then undertake the necessary pre-application meeting to
determine the type of application
and information required.
12.5 The Department of Water
Service (DWS) will then screen the application to determine if all
the information has been submitted
and if so a letter acknowledging
the application as complete will be sent to the Applicant and if the
application does not meet
the requirement it is rejected.
12.6 The accepted application
undergoes assessment and a decision is made within 90 days as per the
Standard Operating Procedure.
[13] The
Respondent says that the Applicants did not submit the water use
license application to the
DWS and that DWS only received a request
for a pre-application engagement from the Department of Fisheries,
Forestry and Environment
(DFFE) on the 22
nd
September 2022
through Ms Debbie Muir. Even then the Respondent says that the
pre-application request was submitted to the Gauteng
Region instead
of Northwest as per the DWS regional demarcation.
[14] It
is clear that the Respondents are bound by legislation and its own
Standard Operation Procedures
and cannot be expected to flout its own
rules by issuing a Water use license without following the procedure.
The argument that
because of the forthcoming events to be hosted at
Roodeplaat the Applicants want this application to be dealt with
urgently is
untenable. Firstly, the events are set for March 2023 and
September 2023 there is no urgency because the application is being
dealt
with now and the Respondent still has time as per the SOP to
finalise its assessment.
[15] In
my view this application was not urgent and should have been
struck-off the roll. I allowed
the parties to address the merits as
more often than not the issue of merits keeps on cropping up whenever
urgency is taken as
a point in
limine
.
MERITS
[16] It
is worth it to re-state what the Respondents say in paragraph 12-37
of their Answering Affidavit:
“
A thorough
evaluation of the application by the Department is critical to
protect the water resources, ecology, and humans as set
out in
Section 2
and
18
of the
National Water Act, Act
no 36 of 1998. The
activity involves spraying of chemicals to control weeds which
constitute a water use in terms of
Section 21(1)
of the Act, hence a
water use license or authorisation in terms of
Section 22
of the Act
is required.”
[17] It
is against this background that I now have to determination if the
Applicants have made out
a case for the relief they seek in Part “A”
[18]
There is a dispute as to whether the application submitted to the
Respondent was done so in terms
of
Regulation 6
as contended by the
Applicants or whether it was submitted in accordance with the
provisions of E Wulaas which mean that when the
application was
received whether it was on the 6
th
September 2022 or the
22
nd
September 2022 same was still in the pre-application
stage awaiting assessment in accordance with the Standard Operating
Procedures.
[19]
There is merits in the Respondents contention that the application
was still in its pre-application
stage this is evidenced by an email
send to one Kobus by Debbie Muir in which she said the following:
“
Please
advise on how this will be sprayed as I need to do the risk
assessment matrix first.”
This email was in response to a
request by the Applicant to be supplied with 20 bags of some form of
an herbicide called Kilo-max.
[20] It
is significant to note that all the correspondence that the Applicant
makes reference to in
its Replying Affidavit which in fact introduce
new matter is all correspondence exchanged prior to the lodging of
the water use
license in terms of
Section 21(1)
of the Act.
[21] It
is also incorrect to argue that the Respondents have shown no
interest in attending to the
issue at hand I say this because in her
letter dated the 7
th
September 2022 Debbie Muir said the
following:
“
Thank you
for this information I will do the risk assessment with this
information Peter (Venter) by latest Friday 9 September 2022
to
request the GA but the quantities of herbicides to be used I will
calculate based on the biomass and please ensure that the
and submit
to spraying does not exceed these amounts as this will then be
outside the GA approval.”
[22] The
contents of that email can only mean that the Applicants were
permitted in terms of a General
Authorisation (GA) to proceed and
spray the chemicals and deal with the hyacinth whilst the application
for a water use license
in terms of
Section 21
(1) was pending.
[23] The
Applicants have referred this Court to Annexure RA3 attached to its
Replying Affidavit. It
is a copy of the Regulations published in
Government Gazette Number 40713 dated the 24
th
March 2017
of importance is that the regulations are divided into various
paragraphs. Of application to the matter is the portion
titled
“Application for Water Use License” clause 3 (6) reads as
follows:
“
The process
of water use license application, consideration and decision shall be
undertaken within a period of 300 days of submitting
such
application.”
[24]
Then there is a subheading which is titled “Pre application
enquiry meeting” clause
5(3) thereof reads as follows:
“
The
Applicant can submit his or her application at any time after the
pre-application enquiry meeting.”
[26] It
is quite evident that the Applicants have not as yet submitted a
water use application they
are still engaged with the Department with
the pre-application proceedings. The Applicants has accordingly not
demonstrated a clear
or
prima facie
right to be considered as
Applicants for a water use license as contemplated in
Section 21(1).
[27] The
Respondents in its Answering Affidavit at 10.5 and 12-39 have
reiterated that if the Applicant
was desirous of fast tracking its
application there was no need to come to Court with such haste all
that the Applicant should
have done was to request the DFFE to plan
and submit the application in line with the applicable timeframes.
This process is known
to the Applicants. In paragraph 12-39 the
Respondents also allude to the fact that if there is a need to fast
track the application
the Applicant can always requests the DWS to do
so through the relevant water use licencing officials or the Regional
Head Northwest.
They say that the matter could also have been
escalated to Head Office as both offices of DWS and DFFE have a
cordial and open
line of communication on urgent matters. The
Applicant in its Replying Affidavit has not disputed these facts.
[28] I
have accordingly come to the conclusion that the Applicant has failed
to prove that it has
no alternative relief. In my view the balance of
convenience does not favour the granting of the interlocutory
interdict as prayed
for in Part “A”.
[29] The
Court in
Gool vs Minister of Justice and Another
1955 (2) SA 682
C
at page 687
concluded that where the Applicant cannot show a
clear right and more particularly where there are disputes of fact
the Court approach
in determining whether the Applicants ‘rights
is prima facie established though open to some doubt, is to take the
facts
as set out by the Applicant together with any facts set out by
the Respondent which the Applicant cannot dispute and to consider
whether having regard to the inherent probabilities the Applicant
should on those facts obtain final relief at the trial of the
main
action.
[30] The
principal relief claimed in Part “B “of the notice of
Motion is that the Respondent
be declared to have failed to uphold
their obligation arising from the National Water Act 86 of 1988 and
secondly that they be
compelled to give effect to the provisions of
the Act and other ancillary statutory requirements.
[31] The
question which remains to be answered is whether a
prima facie
case on the facts has been established in regard thereto. The reasons
which led the Applicant to approach this Court on an urgent
basis are
largely disputed and not capable of being resolved by notice of
motion. The Respondent relies on the SOP and that it
has never turned
down the application as it has not as yet been received.
[32] In
the result I make the following order:
ORDER
(i)
The
application is dismissed.
(ii)
The
Applicants are ordered to pay the costs of this application on a
party and party scale including the costs of counsel.
Dated
at Johannesburg on this day of November 2022
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE OF HEARING:
07 OCTOBER
2022
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
4 NOVEMBER 2022
FOR APPLICANT:
ADV PETER
INSTRUCTED BY:
VERMAAK MARSHALL WELLBELOVED INC
FOR RESPONDENT:
ADV MOTIMELE
INSTRUCTED BY:
THE STATE ATTORNEY
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