Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 913South Africa
Shilane v Ten Napel and Others: In re: Ten Napel and Another v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another (A5017/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 913 (17 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Shilane v Ten Napel and Others: In re: Ten Napel and Another v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another (A5017/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 913 (17 November 2022)
Shilane v Ten Napel and Others: In re: Ten Napel and Another v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another (A5017/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 913 (17 November 2022)
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sino date 17 November 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
A5017/2022
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
17/11/2022
In
the matter between:
SHILANE,
NYEPANE PETRUS
Appellant
and
TEN
NAPEL, JAN
LOURENS
First Respondent
DU
RANDT,
HUGO
Second Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Third Respondent
In
re the matter between
TEN
NAPEL, JAN LOURENS
First Applicant
DU
RANDT,
HUGO
Second Applicant
And
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
SHILANE,
NYEPANE PETRUS
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ [SENYATSI J ET VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ CONCURRING]
Summary
The
Court has a discretion at common law to order the demolition of
structures illegally erected on land. The owners of neighbouring
properties to the property on which the offending structure was
erected, enjoy standing to approach the court for appropriate private
law relief.
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal with the leave of the presiding Judge to the full
court of the Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg, by the second respondent
in the court
a quo.
The first and second applicants
a quo
are the first and second respondents in the appeal, and are referred
to as ‘
the respondents.’
The first respondent
a
quo
did not participate in the appeal and is referred to as ‘
the
Council.’
Background
[2]
The
appellant is the owner of immovable property described as Portion
[....] of Erf [....] Parkhill Gardens Township.
[1]
He erected a structure (a multi-storey block of eight apartments) on
the property that was illegal for a number of reasons:
2.1
Firstly, no
building plans were approved by the Council as required by section
4(1) of the National Building Regulations and Building
Standards Act,
103 of 1977;
[2]
2.2
Secondly,
the structure encroached on building line restrictions imposed by the
Ekurhuleni Town Planning Scheme of 2014;
[3]
2.3
Thirdly,
the structure did not comply with the Residential 1 zoning of the
property;
[4]
2.4
Fourthly, a restrictive condition in the title deed was contravened.
The title deed permitted
only one dwelling on the property and the
appellant was erecting a second.
[3]
On dates prior to 3 November 2020, the first as early as March 2020,
the Council issued
two contravention notices to the appellant. The
appellant did not comply with the notices. On 25 November 2020 the
appellant gave
an undertaking to cease the works but instead the
building process was accelerated.
[4]
The appellant therefore persisted with his unlawful conduct even when
he knew that the works
were not compliant.
[5]
The
respondents approached the Court for relief in the form of an urgent
interdict application (Part A) and final interdictory relief
(Part B)
aimed at the eventual demolition of the structure. They derived their
standing from the fact that they are the owners,
respectively, of an
adjoining residential property and one across the street.
[5]
[6]
On 22 December 2020 Keightley J granted an interim order that pending
finalisation
of Part B of the application, the appellant be
interdicted and restrained from continuing with building activities
on the property.
[7]
Part B of the application came before Fisher J in August 2021.
Shortly before the hearing
in August 2021 the appellant brought an
application for a stay of the application pending the finalisation of
a rezoning application
to the Council. Atter hearing argument the
court
a quo
refused the application for a stay and granted the
order now appealed against.
[8]
In terms of the judgment,
inter alia
,
8.1
the application for a stay or postponement was refused;
8.2
the structure erected by the appellant on the property was declared
to be unlawful for being constructed
in contravention of the
Council’s Town Planning Scheme of 2014 and of restrictive
condition no. 3 in Title Deed T [....],
and also without the prior
approval of building plans by the Council as required in terms of
sections 4 and 7 of the National Building
Regulations and Building
Standards Act, 103 of 1977 (“the Act”), and
8.3
the appellant was ordered to demolish the structure.
The
appeal process
[9]
Fisher J granted leave to appeal on 10 November 2021. The appellant
failed to prosecute
the appeal timeously and brought an application
for condonation and for reinstatement of the lapsed appeal.
Condonation
application
[10]
The appeal lapsed and the appellant brought an application seeking
reinstatement and condonation
for the late lodging of a security
bond, the late finalisation of the record, the late application for a
date for the hearing of
the appeal, and the late prosecution of the
appeal.
[11]
It would appear that nothing was done to prosecute the appeal from 8
December 2021 when
the appeal was noted until January 2022 when the
appellant’s attorneys requested a transcription of the record.
As the matter
was decided on application, it is not apparent why an
expensive transcription was required, and the appellant baulked at
paying
this apparently unnecessary expense.
[12]
The
appellant failed to timeously deliver a power of attorney required in
terms of Rule 7(2),
[6]
failed to
apply for a date as required by Rule 49(6)(a),
[7]
failed to file and serve copies of the record as required by Rule
49(7)(a), and failed to timeously enter into the required security
as
required by Rule 49(13)(a).
[8]
[13]
The appeal should have been prosecuted by 4 March 2022 but the
application for condonation
and reinstatement was only brought on 14
April 2022.
[14]
In argument Mr Verster who appeared for the respondents indicated
that the respondents
would no longer oppose the application for
condonation and reinstatement, but would seek an appropriate cost
order.
[15]
The application for condonation and reinstatement is granted in the
interests of the proper
ventilation of the issues.
The
merits of the appeal
[16]
In the notice of appeal the appellant prayed for an order setting
aside the judgment and
order, and substituting an order staying or
postponing the application pending final resolution of the
appellant’s application
for rezoning and the removal of
restrictive conditions on the property.
[17]
The appellant relied on the following grounds of appeal.
17.1 The
Judge
a quo
erred in refusing the application for a stay of
proceedings pending the outcome of the rezoning application and
removal of restrictive
conditions;
17.2 There
was no compelling reason to order demolition of the building;
17.3 There
were good prospects of success in the pending application for
rezoning and removal of restrictions;
17.4
There was
no evidence that the amenity and value of surrounding properties
would be affected by a temporary stay of the application;
[9]
17.5 The
presiding Judge failed to appreciate the evidence that the appellant
would suffer irreversible damage in the
event of the structure being
demolished.
[18]
As will be
shown below, it is common cause that the Ekurhuleni Municipal
Planning Tribunal approved the rezoning of the property
from
Residential 1 to Residential 3 with a density of 65 dwelling units,
subject to a number of conditions not relevant for the
purposes of
this judgment. The rights will be incorporated into the City of
Ekurhuleni Land Use Scheme of 2021.
[10]
It is specifically noted in the resolution approving the rezoning
that the Tribunal did not condone the ‘
partly
constructed building that encroaches into the building lines of the’
property. A site development plan including a landscaping plan as
well as building plans had to be submitted and the legislation
must
be complied with before the commencement of any further building
work.
The
application in terms of section 19(b)
[19]
The parties jointly applied in terms of
section 19(b)
of the
Superior
Courts Act, 10 of 2013
, for the leave of the court to receive the
minutes of the Tribunal meeting referred to above. Both parties
relied on the minutes
in argument.
[20]
It is the case for the respondents that the resolution of the
Tribunal renders the appeal
moot. The application for a stay or
postponement was sought on the basis of the outcome of the
application for the rezoning and
removal of restrictions. The
Tribunal has now granted both parts of the relief sought and the
illegal structure is still illegal.
The stay sought would not have
cured the illegality.
[21]
The Tribunal resolution indeed renders the appeal moot insofar as the
appellant seeks an
order that the application be stayed. The
resolution addresses the rezoning of the property and the removal of
the restrictive
condition, but does not dispose of the illegality. No
building plans had been approved and the building encroached on the
building
lines prescribed in the Scheme.
[22]
The appellant argues however that the notice of appeal must be
interpreted in such way
that a stay be granted also to permit the
appellant to apply for the approval of building plans and relaxation
of building lines.
This in essence introduces a new ground of appeal
raised on the day of the appeal, and is rejected.
The
discretion to order demolition
[23]
A
town-planning scheme serves the interests of the community.
[11]
Members of the community who are affected by non-compliance therefore
enjoy standing to approach the court for relief under the
common
law,
[12]
including a
demolition order. The right to seek such an order most often arises
when one landowner erects a structure that encroaches
on
[13]
or over
[14]
the land of
another but there is no difference in principle when the encroachment
is not on a neighbour’s land, but on his
rights. In
De
Villiers v Kalson
[15]
Graham JP said:
“…
in
the present case there has been no encroachment upon the ground of
another, but an encroachment upon his rights as defined …
I am
inclined to think that this difference makes little or no change in
the plaintiff's rights for many of the same arguments
used in favour
of the view that the Court has no discretion but must grant an order
for removal, apply equally well to encroachment
on land and
encroachment on rights, such as exist in this case.”
[24]
The fact
that section 4 of the Act creates a criminal offence with a penal
sanction militates against the exercise of a discretion
not to order
demolition.
[16]
[25]
In
Lester
v Ndlambe Municipality and Another
[17]
the Supreme Court of Appeal was seized with a matter where a local
authority had applied to court in terms of section 21 of the
Act for
an order that an illegal structure be demolished.
[18]
The Court held that section 21 did not lend itself to the
interpretation that the Court may grant relief other than a
demolition
order.
[26]
The
judgment must be distinguished from the present matter as the Supreme
Court of Appeal was dealing with an application under
section 21 of
the Act. Section 21 of the Act (not relevant in this case) provides a
public law remedy.
[19]
Individuals do not have standing to pursue the remedies in section
21.
[20]
[27]
In the
present matter the respondents are seeking a private law remedy.
[21]
[28]
In
BSB
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed a partial demolition order and
held
[22]
that the court had a
broad general discretion to order demolition after considering all
relevant circumstances. As in the present
matter, the application was
one brought by a neighbour seeking a private law remedy and the
municipality did not participate in
the proceedings.
[23]
[29]
It is clear
therefore that Fisher J had a discretion to order the demolition of
the offending structure. She analysed the facts
in the light of the
legal principles and exercised her discretion properly and with great
care. She was alive to the prejudice
that demolition would have for
the appellant
[24]
and weighed
up
[25]
the competing interests
in arriving at her order.
[30]
The fact
that the appellant persisted with the erection of the offending
building even when he knew it was an illegal structure
weighed
heavily with the learned Judge.
[26]
The
courts should not permit landowners to erect illegal structures on
their land and then present the authorities with a
fait
accompli
created
by their illegal actions.
The
dictum
by Harms J (as he then was) In
United
Technical Equipment Co (Pty) Ltd v Johannesburg City Council
[27]
is apposite:
“…
a
lenient approach could be an open invitation to members of the public
to follow the course adopted by the appellant, namely to
use land
illegally with a hope that the use will be legalised in due course,
and, pending finalisation, the illegal use would be
protected.”
[31]
The
respondents on the other hand took steps to protect their rights
immediately when it became apparent that the appellant was
not
constructing a garden cottage as he had previously represented to
them, but rather an apartment block. They reported the illegal
structure to the Council. The Council issued two stop building orders
to the appellant which were both ignored and that led to
an urgent
application when the Council failed to act after their stop-building
orders were ignored
[28]
[32]
The
approval of building plans is not a mere formality in town planning
and compliance with building standards promote public safety.
Local
authorities are required to appoint building control officers
[29]
who have the duty,
inter
alia
,
to inspect buildings erected in compliance with approved building
plans.
[30]
Buildings must
comply with prescribed standards and building codes, and compliance
is directly related to the approval of compliant
building plans. No
evidence was placed before the Court
a
quo
regarding compliance by the appellant with building standards.
[33]
It follows that the decision to order demolition can not be faulted.
The
nature of the discretion exercised by the Judge a quo when dismissing
the application for a stay
[34]
The
decision to grant a stay involves the exercise of a true and
unfettered discretion. A court of appeal will only interfere when
it
is of the view that the Court vested with the discretion did not
exercise the discretion judicially
[31]
or was influenced by wrong principles or a misdirection on the facts,
or that the decision was not one that could be arrived at
reasonably.
[32]
[35]
The court of appeal will not substitute its own decision for that of
the Judge
a quo
merely because it believes it would have
arrived at a different conclusion.
[36]
There is no indication that the learned Judge failed to exercise her
discretion judicially,
or that she misdirected herself on the facts
or applied the wrong principles. Her judgment is well-reasoned.
ORDER
[37]
The following order is made:
1.
The appellant’s application for condonation for the late
prosecution of
the appeal is granted;
2.
The appeal is reinstated;
3.
The appellant is ordered to pay the costs of the application for
condonation;
4.
The minutes of the meeting of the Ekurhuleni Municipal Planning
Tribunal of 14
September 2022 is received in terms of
section 19(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
;
5.
The appeal is dismissed;
6.
The appellant is ordered to pay the costs of the appeal.
J
MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I
agree and it is so ordered.
M
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I
agree and it is so ordered.
S
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judges whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be
17 November 2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT
S MARITZ
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MARK-ANTHONY BEYL ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR FIRST AND
SECOND
RESPONDENTS:
M VERSTER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
BMV ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
26 October 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
17 November 2022
[1]
The respondent’s late wife who died eight years ago was
also cited in the application.
[2]
Non-compliance is a criminal offence:
S 4(4).
[3]
Non-compliance with the Scheme is a criminal offence.
[4]
Residential 1 zoning restricted occupation to one dwelling on the
property, for one family unit.
[5]
See
B
EF
(Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality and Others
1983
(2) SA 387
(C)
401B
,
[6]
It was delivered on 23 March 2022.
[7]
See also
Aymac
CC and Another v Widgerow
2009 (6) SA 433 (W).
[8]
It was signed on 8 April 2022 and uploaded to Caselines on 14
April 2022.
[9]
It must be noted that diminution in value is not a
requirement for an order compelling compliance with a town planning
scheme. See
BEF
(Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality and Others
1983
(2) SA 387
(C)
401B.
[10]
The 2021 Land Use Scheme superseded the Town Planning Scheme
of 2014.
[11]
The
Administrator, Transvaal and The Firs Investments (Pty) Ltd v
Johannesburg City Council
1971
(1) SA 56 (A)
70D
[12]
Escherich
and Others v De Waal and Others
2017
(6) SA 257 (WCC)
[13]
Higher
Mission School Trustees v Grahamstown Town Council
1924 EDL 354.
[14]
Pike
v Hamilton, Ross & Co.
(1853-1856) 2 Searle 191
.
[15]
De
Villiers v Kalson
1928
EDL 217.
[16]
Lester v
Ndlambe Municipality and Another
2015 (6) SA 283
(SCA) para 20.
[17]
Lester v
Ndlambe Municipality and Another
2015 (6) SA 283 (SCA).
[18]
Majiedt JA rejected the conclusions reached by the court
a
quo
that neighbour-law principles are applicable in this case and
secondly that a court has a discretion in all demolitions sought
under the Act.
[19]
Para 22. See also
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd v Swartland Municipality and Others
2011 (5) SA 257 (SCA).
[20]
BSB
International Link CC v Readam South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
2016 (4) SA 83
(SCA) para 23.
[21]
Lester
is also perhaps not the last word on the subject of demolitions
under section 21: In
BSB
International Link CC v Readam South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
2016
(4) SA 83
(SCA) paras 27 and 28 doubt was cast, albeit
obiter
,
on the interpretation of section 21 in the
Lester
decision a year earlier.
[22]
Paras 25, 26 and 29.
[23]
Para 2.
[24]
See para 46 of the judgment.
[25]
See para 21 of the judgment.
[26]
See paras 39 and 46 of the judgment.
[27]
United
Technical Equipment Co (Pty) Ltd v Johannesburg City Council
1987 (4) SA 343 (T) 348 I-J.
[28]
See paras 28 and 47 of the judgment.
[29]
S 5 of the Act.
[30]
S 6(1)(c) of the Act.
[31]
Hotz
and Others v University of Cape Town
2018 (1) SA 369 (CC) para 25.
[32]
Naylor
and Another v Jansen
2007 (1) SA 16 (SCA) para 14.
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