Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1047South Africa
Mahlo and Others v City of Ekurhuleni Municipality and Another (2019/08890) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1047 (28 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mahlo and Others v City of Ekurhuleni Municipality and Another (2019/08890) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1047 (28 December 2022)
Mahlo and Others v City of Ekurhuleni Municipality and Another (2019/08890) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1047 (28 December 2022)
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sino date 28 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
no: 2019/08890
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
Date:
30 December 2022
In
the matter between:
SARAH
MAHLO
First
Applicant
NOMSA
SIWELA Second
Applicant
SAMANTHA
JONSON AND OTHERS Third
Applicant
and
CITY
OF EKURHULENI MUNICIPALITY First
Respondent
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN
POLICE
DEPARTMENT
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading
the signed copy to
Caselines.
MOULTRIE
AJ
[1]
This matter involves the determination of the reserved costs arising
out of
a review application combined with an urgent application
launched by the forty-six applicants on 28 February 2019, as well as
an
urgent interlocutory contempt application launched by them on 14
March 2019.
[2]
The applicants are self-employed street traders operating within the
jurisdiction
of the City of Ekurhuleni. It is common cause that in
January and February 2019 officers of the City’s Metropolitan
Police
Department conducted raids during which they evicted the
applicants from their stalls and confiscated certain of their goods
and
equipment on the basis that they were trading without the
required permits.
[3]
According to the applicants, they had applied to the City for the
renewal of
their trading permits some time before the raids, but no
decision had yet been made in relation to their permit applications.
This
is admitted by the respondents in relation to all of the
applicants other than the first applicant.
[4]
On 28 February 2019, the applicants launched a review application
seeking (in
part B of the notice of motion) orders for the review and
setting aside of the respondents’ “decision” to
evict
and confiscate the applicants’ goods in the raids (prayer
B1) and the City’s failure to consider and process the
applicants’
trading permit renewal applications (prayer B2).
The review application was combined with an urgent application in
part A: firstly,
to compel the respondents to return the applicants’
confiscated goods (prayer A3.1) and secondly to interdict the
respondents
from interfering with their trading activities pending
the final adjudication of the review application (prayer A3.2). The
applicants
also sought costs against the respondents on a punitive
scale in both part A and part B.
[5]
No opposing papers were delivered by the respondents before the
urgent application
was heard on 12 March 2019. On that day, Wepener J
granted orders compelling the respondents to immediately return the
goods confiscated
in the raids (paragraph 4 of the order), ordering
the respondents to decide on the applicants’ permit renewal
applications
on or before 25 March 2019 (paragraph 2), and
interdicting the respondents from interfering with the applicants’
trading
activities pending that decision (paragraph 5). Wepener J
further afforded the parties an opportunity to supplement their
papers
before 25 March 2019 should they elect to do so (paragraph 3)
and postponed the matter to 26 March 2019 (paragraph 6).
[6]
Although the respondents contend that the order of 12 March 2019 was
granted
“
after the Learned Justice [Wepener] urged the
parties to resolve the [matter] amicably and the order came about
because of [an]
agreement between the parties and what clearly
appears is that there was no costs order against the respondents
”,
the applicants and (more importantly) the order itself states that
the costs were reserved. This makes sense, given that
the matter was
postponed until a date approximately two weeks hence for further
hearing following the delivery of further papers.
[7]
It is common cause that the respondents did not comply with the order
requiring
them to return the applicants’ confiscated goods
immediately. According to the deponent of the respondents’
answering
affidavit in the costs application (Mr Selven Frank, the
City’s Divisional Head of Specialist Corporate Legal Services),
the non-compliance came about “
because of a misunderstanding
of the wording”
. Although Mr Frank’s affidavit
purports to refer to an affidavit of Mr Hezekiel Ngamlane Nkosi, the
Acting head of the Metro
Police’s by-laws unit explaining the
nature of this misunderstanding and the circumstances giving rise to
it, no such affidavit
was delivered.
[8]
On 14 March 2019, the applicants launched an urgent application under
the same
case number to be heard the following day for orders
directing the respondents to return their goods immediately,
requiring them
to deliver an affidavit explaining why they had failed
to comply with the order of 12 March 2019, and declaring them to be
in contempt
thereof. As before, the applicants sought costs on a
punitive scale. On 15 March 2019, the matter again came before
Wepener J,
who granted orders compelling the respondents to return
the applicants’ goods by 17h00 that day, and directing the City
Manager
and the Chief of the Metro Police to file affidavits showing
cause why they should not be committed to prison for failing to
comply
with the order of 12 March 2019.
[9]
On the applicant’s version, the respondents then “
managed
to partially comply with the court order
” requiring them to
return the confiscated goods. Although the applicants had “
since
requested the Respondents to fully comply with the court order by
returning some of the missing assets and food that were
confiscated
and our request was in vain
”, the respondents state in
their answering affidavit in the costs application that when the
matter came before Wepener J
for the final time on 26 March 2019 the
applicants did not pursue either the issue of partial compliance or
the order requiring
the delivery of affidavits explaining the
non-compliance. This is not pertinently disputed by the applicants in
reply.
[10]
On 25 March 2019, the day before the matter was due for hearing
pursuant to the postponement order
of 12 March 2019, the respondents
filed “supplementary” affidavits (evidently pursuant to
the order of 12 March 2019,
and not to the order of 15 March 2019)
deposed to by Mr Frank and by Mr Thabo Molapo of the City’s
Customer Relations Management
Department who is responsible for
processing trading permits. In these affidavits, the respondents
indicated that they had processed
the trading permit renewal
applications of the applicants, with the exception of the first
applicant, who they insisted had
“
not
made an application for the trading permit at the spot she is trading
at and … her application would not have been approved
as it
contravenes the Bylaw
”.
[11]
It will be apparent that the orders of 12 and 15 March 2019, together
with the conduct of the respondents
described in the preceding two
paragraphs, effectively disposed not only of the relief sought in the
urgent application but also
of the essence of the review application,
thus effectively rendering the entire matter (including the contempt
application) moot
save as to the question of costs. As such, when the
matter came before Wepener J on 26 March 2019, nothing of substance
remained
to be determined, and the order granted on that date was
simply to remove it from the roll and to reserve the question of
costs.
The applicant’s counsel confirmed during the hearing
before me that the applicants seek no further substantive relief in
the matter and consider that it has been finalised save as to the
question of costs.
[12]
The
usual principle is that a successful party should be awarded their
costs. The question of success is considered on an overall
conspectus
of the case and it is not usually appropriate to apportion costs
between the parties based on which of them has been
successful in
relation to each individual dispute,
[1]
except perhaps when such disputes are substantial and raise separate
and discrete issues such as counterclaims, or where it is
otherwise
practicable to do so.
[2]
[13]
Thus, notwithstanding the relatively insubstantial dispute between
the parties as to whether or not
the first applicant herself had
applied for the renewal of her trading permit, there is no doubt in
my mind that the applicants
have been successful in all of the
proceedings in the matter, and that they should be awarded their
costs.
[14]
A further question, however, is whether the respondents should be
ordered to pay any of the costs on
a punitive scale. In advancing the
contention that this should be the case, the applicants rely on the
Constitutional Court’s
judgment in the similar case of
South
African Informal Traders Forum v City of Johannesburg
2014 (4) SA
371
(CC), arguing that the raids and confiscations (which effectively
deprived the applicants of the means to earn a living) constituted
a
serious breach of their constitutional rights to human dignity, and
because the respondents
“
acted
without due care and consideration
” of their rights, which
“
severely affected
” them.
[15]
While
I am prepared to assume (without deciding) that it is indeed the case
in this instance that the raids infringed the applicants’
constitutional rights with severe consequences, I do not accept that
this, in itself, is sufficient to justify the award of costs
on a
punitive basis against the respondents. If that were the case,
punitive costs orders would be justified in every matter in
which a
party successfully litigates against the state to vindicate their
constitutional rights. This is clearly not the case:
punitive costs
were not awarded by the Constitutional Court in
Informal
Traders Forum
,
and such orders are not granted as a matter of course - even in those
instances where litigants have sued the state for damages
arising out
of unlawful arrest and detention,
[3]
which arguably results in a more serious violation of human rights
than that experienced by the applicants in the current matter.
[16]
I therefore decline to order the respondents to pay the applicants
costs on a punitive scale in relation
to either Part A or Part B of
the initial application, or in relation to the current application
regarding costs.
[17]
The
respondents’ failure to comply with paragraph 4 of the order of
12 March 2019 and the consequent need for the applicants
to launch
the urgent contempt application on 14 March 2019 is, however, another
matter. As noted above, the respondents failed
to deliver the
promised affidavit of Mr Nkosi explaining the nature and
circumstances giving rise to the “
misunderstanding
”
that led to the non-compliance. It is difficult to conceive what
possible misunderstanding could have arisen. The order
is framed in
clear and unequivocal terms. There is simply no room for a
misunderstanding. Unexplained non-compliance by government
officials
with court orders is a serious matter that justifies the award of
costs on a punitive basis.
[4]
[18]
I make the following order:
1.
The respondents are ordered jointly and severally to pay the
applicants’
costs associated with the urgent contempt
application launched on 14 March 2019 and heard on 15 March 2019 on
the attorney and
client scale.
2.
The respondents are ordered jointly and severally to pay the
applicants’
costs associated with all other proceedings in the
matter in relation to which the costs have been reserved on the party
and party
scale.
RJ
Moultrie AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
DATE
HEARD: 6
October 2022
JUDGMENT
SUBMITTED FOR DELIVERY: 30 December 2022
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicants:
Attorney M Marweshe
of Marweshe Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
Attorney EM Modiga of Modiga Attorneys
[1]
Cf
MC
Denneboom Service Station CC and Another v Phayane
2015
(1) SA 54
(CC) para 19;
Walele
v City of Cape Town
[2008] ZACC 11
;
2008
(6) SA 129
(CC) per O’Regan ADCJ at para 143.
[2]
Cf
Kondile
v Nothnagel NO
[2019] JOL 41520
(GP) paras 101 and 104; Cilliers
Law
of Costs
.
Looseleaf (LexisNexis, 2022) at 2.17.
[3]
See, for example
De
Klerk v Minister of Police
2021
(4) SA 585 (CC).
[4]
Municipal
Manager O.R. Tambo District Municipality v Ndabeni
2022 JDR 0404 (CC) paras 39 - 44. See also
Paterson
NO v Road Accident Fund and Another
2013
(2) SA 455
(ECP) para 17, in which it was held that and “
it
is trite that a party that fails to comply with a court order is
visited with a costs order on a punitive scale unless exceptional
circumstances exist
”.
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