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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2025] ZAGPPHC 103
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## Hoshoza Resources Vryheid (Pty) Ltd v Julovista (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/080004)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 103 (3 February 2025)
Hoshoza Resources Vryheid (Pty) Ltd v Julovista (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/080004)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 103 (3 February 2025)
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sino date 3 February 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number:
2024/080004
Date
of hearing: 17 January 2025
Date delivered: 3
February 2025
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 3/2/25
SIGNATURE
In
the application of:
HOSHOZA
RESOURCES VRYHEID (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
JULOVISTA
(PTY) LTD
First Respondent
TRIPALEX
(PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
VERREYNNE
S
Third Respondent
DE
BRUYN M
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J
:
[1]
On 16 August 2024 I granted an order against the first respondent,
interdicting it from conducting
any form of mining in terms of the
mining right issued to the applicant under DMRE reference number KZN
10081 (233) MR, also known
as the “Kariboo” mining right.
[2]
The first respondent sought leave to appeal against my order, which
application I dismissed on
2 October 2024. On 1 November 2024 the
first respondent launched an application for leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Appeal,
which application is still pending. The
result is that in terms of section 18 (1) of the Superior Courts Act,
10 of 2013 (“the
Act”) the execution of the order
is stayed, either until the application for leave to appeal is
dismissed, or, if leave is
granted, then, until the appeal is finally
determined.
[3]
The applicant now seeks an order in terms of section 18 (3) of the
Act, to set the order into
operation notwithstanding that the appeal
is still pending. The first respondent opposes the application. The
second, third and
fourth respondents are not protagonists in this
application and no relief is sought against them.
[4]
The first issue to decide is whether a video that the applicant
relies upon, and which allegedly
depicts the first respondent
undertaking unlawful mining activities is admissible in evidence. The
first respondent objects to
the video on the basis that it
constitutes inadmissible hearsay. The applicant also relies upon
photographs which it attached to
its replying affidavit, to which the
first respondent objects on the basis that the applicant should have
made its case in its
founding affidavit.
[5]
The video was apparently recorded by an unknown person who demanded
payment for the video. It
was received by one Trichardt Du Plessis
who forwarded it to the deponent to the founding affidavit. There is
no suggestion that
the video that is put up is the original. The
applicant does not say who recorded the video. There is no evidence
when it was recorded.
Accordingly, the authenticity of the video
cannot be established, and I find that it is inadmissible.
[6]
The photographs only found their way into the pleadings in the
replying affidavit. It is trite
that an applicant has to make its
case in its founding papers. There is no explanation why the
photographs were not attached to
the founding affidavit. The first
respondent has not had an opportunity to deal with the photographs in
its answer. For that reason
I disregard the photographs.
[7]
Section 18 (1) and (3) provide as follows:
“
(1)
Subject to subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under
exceptional circumstances orders otherwise,
the operation and
execution of a decision which is the subject of an application for
leave to appeal or of an appeal, is suspended
pending the decision of
the application or appeal.
(2)
…….
(3)
A court may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or
(2), if the party who applied
to the court to order otherwise, in
addition proves on a balance of probabilities that he or she will
suffer irreparable harm if
the court does not so order and that the
other party will not suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders.”
[8]
I have dealt extensively with the facts of the matter in my judgment
in the main application.
However, for purposes of this application,
the material facts are briefly the following:
[8.1]
On 23 August 2022 the parties entered into a written agreement in
terms of which the first respondent
obtained the right to mine the
Kariboo Colliery under the mining right held by the applicant. Clause
2 of the agreement provided
that the contract would terminate on 30
June 2024, unless an extended period was agreed to in writing.
[8.2]
The applicant reminded the first respondent in writing on more than
one occasion that its right to
mine would terminate on 30 June 2024,
a fact which the first respondent seemingly accepted. Belatedly, the
first applicant alleged
that the agreement did not reflect the true
intention of the parties, and that clause 2 should be rectified to
provide for a termination
date of 2033, the year in which the mining
right expires.
[8.3]
The first respondent alleges that it was never the intention of the
parties to enter into a short-term
agreement, and that it did not
make economic sense to fund the operation simply to have it terminate
a brief two years later. It
does not seem, however, that the first
respondent has taken any further steps to pursue the rectification
argument in court.
[8.4]
I held that there was no true dispute of fact raised in the answering
affidavit. The first respondent
provided no explanation for its
seeming acceptance of the termination date as being 30 June 2024, not
an iota of evidence to suggest
that the parties intended a different
termination date, nor how the alleged error in the agreement came
about. For that reason,
I held that there was no real factual
dispute, and that the applicant had shown a clear right to the relief
sought in the interdict
application.
[9]
In common-law, the rule of practice was that an order could not be
carried out once an appeal
had been noted, unless the court that had
granted the order ordered otherwise.
[1]
In
South
Cape
the Court explained that the reason for the rule was to prevent
irreparable harm to the appellant by the execution of the order.
Furthermore, the Court emphasized that it had a wide discretion to
grant or refuse such an order, and to determine the conditions
under
which an order would be executed, if such an order were to be made.
[10]
Rule 49 (11) of the Uniform Rules of Court (now repealed) restated
the common law. However, section 18 of
the Act introduces a new test,
and places a more onerous burden on an applicant seeking to execute
in the face of an appeal. As
the Supreme Court of Appeal pointed out
in
University
of the Free State v Afriforum
[2]
:
“
[9]
What is immediately discernible upon perusing s 18 (1) and (3) is
that the legislature has
proceeded from the well-established premise
of the common law that the granting of relief of this nature
constitutes an extraordinary
deviation from the norm that, pending an
appeal, a judgment and its attending orders are suspended. Section 18
(1) thus states
that an order implementing a judgment pending appeal
shall only be granted ‘under exceptional circumstances’.
The exceptionality
of an order to this effect is underscored by s 18
(4), which provides that a court granting the order must immediately
record its
reasons; that the aggrieved party has an automatic right
of appeal; that the appeal must be dealt with as a matter of extreme
urgency;
and that pending the outcome of the appeal, the order is
automatically suspended.
[10]
It is further apparent that the requirements introduced by s 18 (1)
and (3) are more onerous
than those of the common law. Apart from the
requirement of ‘exceptional circumstances’ in s 18 (1), s
18 (3) requires
the applicant ‘in addition’ to prove on a
balance of probabilities that he or she ‘will’ suffer
irreparable
harm if the order is not made, and that the other party
‘will not’ suffer irreparable harm if the order is made.
The
application of rule 49 (11) required a weighing up of the
potentiality of irreparable harm or prejudice being sustained by the
respective parties and, where there was a potentiality of harm or
prejudice to both of the parties, a weighing up of the balance
of
hardship or convenience, as the case may be, was required. Section 18
(3), however, has introduced a higher threshold, namely
proof on a
balance of probabilities that the applicant will suffer irreparable
harm if the order is not granted, and conversely
that the respondent
will not if the order is granted.”
[11]
In
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ellis and Another
[3]
Sutherland J (as he then was) reiterated that subsections 18
(4) and (5) had no precedent in our law, and that they underscored
the exceptionality required for the granting of relief under section
18 (3). In
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation and Another
[4]
the Supreme Court of Appeal remarked that the legislature had set a
high bar for an applicant seeking to execute pending an appeal.
[12]
For obvious reasons, the courts have repeatedly emphasized that the
granting of an order in terms of section
18 (3) is contrary to the
default position, and is only granted in exceptional circumstances.
How then is one to consider the synergy
between the requirement of
exceptional circumstances, and the consideration of irreparable harm?
[13] In
Incubeta (supra)
the Court held that:
“
a
hierarchy of entitlement has been created, absent from the South Cape
(Corporation) test. Two distinct findings of fact must now
be made,
rather than a weighing up to discern a preponderance of equities.”
[14]
In
Tyte
Security Services CC v Western Cape Provincial Government and
Others
[5]
the submission was made that three separate, distinct and
self-standing requirements existed, namely, firstly, whether
exceptional
circumstances were present, secondly, whether the
applicant would suffer irreparable harm if the order were not
granted, and, thirdly,
whether there would be no irreparable harm to
the respondent if the order were to be granted. The Court, however,
held that these
were all different sides to the same question, and
that is whether exceptional circumstances existed. The Court said:
“
[10]
…..An important point of departure, so it
seems to me, is that consideration of the so-called three
requirements is not a hermetically sealed enquiry and can hardly be
approached in a compartmentalized fashion.
[11]
It is important to recognize that the existence of ‘exceptional
circumstances’ is
a necessary prerequisite for the exercise of
the court’s discretion under s 18. If the circumstances are not
truly exceptional,
that is the end of the matter. The application
must fail and falls to be dismissed. If, however, exceptional
circumstances are
found to be present, it would not follow, without
more, that the application must succeed.
[13]
What constitutes irreparable harm is always dependent upon the
factual situation in which the
dispute arises, and upon the legal
principles that govern the rights and obligations of the parties in
the context of that dispute.
It was accepted in
Knoop
that
‘(t)he need to establish exceptional circumstances is likely to
be closely linked to the applicant establishing that
they will suffer
irreparable harm if the . . . order is not implemented immediately.
The same, I dare say, can be said of its counterpart,
the absence of
irreparable harm to the respondent. In that sense, the presence or
absence of irreparable harm, as the case may
be, can hardly be
entirely divorced from the exceptional circumstances enquiry. . .’
[14]
. . . The use of the words ‘in addition proves’ in s 18
(3) ought not to be construed
as necessarily enjoining a court to
undertake a further or additional enquiry. The overarching enquiry is
whether or not exceptional
circumstances subsist. To that end, the
presence or absence of irreparable harm, as the case may be, may well
be subsumed under
the overarching exceptional circumstances enquiry.
As long as a court is alive to the duty cast upon it by the
legislator to enquire
into, and satisfy itself in respect of
exceptional circumstances, as also irreparable harm, it does not have
to do so in a formulaic
or hierarchical fashion.
[15]
Although it has been postulated that the second and third are
distinct enquiries, they are perhaps
more accurately to be understood
as being two sides of the same coin.”
[15]
What would constitute exceptional circumstances? That question was
considered in
Seatrans
Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas and Another
[6]
(albeit
in different circumstances). The Court said that although it is
undesirable to lay down rules as to what would constitute
‘exceptional circumstances, and each case would necessarily
depend on its own facts, certain guidelines could be useful:
[15.1]
’Exceptional circumstances’ are something out of the
ordinary and unusual;
[15.2]
The circumstances must arise out of or be incidental to the case;
[15.3]
The existence of exceptional circumstances or not is a factual
matter, and does not involve the exercise of a
judicial discretion;
[15.4]
Where, in a statute, it is directed that a rule should only be
departed with under exceptional circumstances,
effect must be given
to the intention of the legislature and a strict meaning must be
given to the phrase.
[16]
The existence of exceptional circumstances, it seems to me, is not
strictly a factual enquiry (as is suggested
in
MV Ais Mamas
and
Incubeta
), but rather, a court is required to evaluate the
facts of the matter including the existence or absence of irreparable
harm holistically,
and then decide whether, considering the entire
picture, exceptional circumstances exist to deviate from the norm,
(that an appeal
suspends execution).
[17]
I now turn to the facts of this matter. The applicant contended that
the exceptional circumstances lie in
the fact that the first
respondent is continuing to occupy the Colliery, and is continuing to
mine whereas its entitlement to do
so lapsed on 30 June 2024. In
support of its submission, the applicant has referred me to
Omaruru
Minerals (Pty) Ltd v Mankele Community Trust and Others
[7]
.
In that case the applicant sought the restoration of its possession
of immovable property from which it had been unlawfully spoliated.
The Court granted an order for the restoration of the applicant’s
possession of the property, at which point the respondent
sought
leave to appeal, which application suspended the working of the
order. The applicant sought the execution of the order.
In granting
the section 18 (3) order the court said that it had previously found
that the applicant had been unlawfully dispossessed,
and wanted to
continue occupying the land unlawfully. The court said
[8]
:
“
Countenancing
the persistence of that state of affairs will encourage disdain of
the rule of law, which is so respected and cherished
by this country.
A finding that this is not exceptional will be aberrant.”
[18]
Likewise, the applicant says, the first respondent in this case is
unlawfully mining the colliery and its
continued presence there is
unlawful. In my view, it is in the manner in which the respondent
obtained possession of the land that
the difference lies between
these cases. In
Omaruru
possession was obtained unlawfully,
which is anathema to our law. Generally, courts will restore
possession where there has been
a spoliation, even if the right of
the person who is dispossessed is in question. Spoliation is not
tolerated.
[19] In
this case the first respondent is in possession of the land by virtue
of an agreement between the parties,
albeit that the date of
termination of the agreement is in dispute. The first respondent’s
possession does not carry the
same taint as that of the possessor in
Omaruru
. In my view, the mere unlawful possession of the land
is not in and of itself exceptional.
[20]
What other circumstances are there that may be exceptional? In my
view there are none. That is the end of
the matter. However, if one
were to consider whether the applicant will suffer irreparable harm,
it seems to me that the applicant
has also not crossed that hurdle. I
found in the main application that the first respondent’s
continued occupation of the
colliery would result in irreparable harm
to the applicant, in the sense that the ore body would be
continuously depleted. That
finding was made in circumstances where
the alternative to granting the order was that the first respondent
would continue to mine
whilst a trial played itself out in court,
possibly over a matter of years.
[21]
The circumstances are now that this relief is sought pending an
appeal. The appeal will likely be determined
expeditiously. If leave
is granted, the appeal itself will likely be heard during this year,
and the matter would be finally determined
one way or another. If
leave is denied, that should happen soon, and would finally resolve
the main application. In the meantime,
the evidence is that the first
respondent is accounting to the applicant monthly on the tonnages of
coal being removed from the
mine, and it has tendered payment in
terms of the agreement. If the applicant were to suffer damages by
virtue of the first respondent’s
continued mining, it will be
able to quantify such damages fairly easily. I do not believe that
irreparable harm would ensue to
the applicant if the order were not
to be executed.
[22]
The first respondent has submitted that it would suffer irreparable
harm should the order be put into operation.
The first respondent
would be forced to halt the entire mining operation, and would have
to dismiss its employees. It says that
the operation involves an
enormous financial commitment that would be jeopardized should the
operation be halted. It says that
the resulting loss would be
incapable of calculation and would be unrecoverable. There would,
first respondent says, also be severe
consequences to the surrounding
community, many of the residents being employed by the first
respondent. An immediate shut-down
would result in environmental
fall-out and would pose health risks to the community.
[23] In
reply, the applicant simply pleads that the allegations of
irreparable harm are vague, and that it is unable
to answer thereto.
It does not deny that the community would suffer severe consequences,
but says that the consequences to the
community are irrelevant to the
enquiry. The applicant also says that a shut-down is the natural
consequence of my order. The applicant
attempted to minimize the
rehabilitation fall-out resulting from an immediate shut-down.
[24] In
my view, it is most likely that a shut-down at this stage would
result in severe losses to the first respondent.
If the appeal were
then to be successful, the first respondent will likely have suffered
irreparable harm. The contention that
I must disregard the effect of
a shut-down on the community is ill-founded.
Tyte
made it
clear that the circumstances must be considered holistically, and it
would be unthinkable for a Court to ignore the obvious
effects of a
shut-down on the community, in circumstances where the shut-down may
be temporary if the appeal were to be successful.
The first
respondent’s financial losses that it incurs in the interim may
result in the shut-down being irreversible, and
the community will
invariably be adversely affected by a shut-down.
[25] I
am therefore of the view that there are no exceptional circumstances
in the matter, justifying a section
18 (3) order. I also find that,
given the fact that the appeal is likely to be resolved relatively
soon, there is no irreparable
harm to the applicant. However, if the
order were to be executed pending the appeal, there will likely be
irreparable harm to the
first respondent. It follows then that the
application must be dismissed with costs.
[26]
I make the following order:
[26.1]
The application is dismissed with costs on Scale C.
SWANEPOEL J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv.
P. Lourens
Instructed
by:
Krone
& Associates
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv.
F. van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
Venter
& De Villiers Attorneys
Date
heard:
17
January 2025
Date
of judgment:
3
February 2025
[1]
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
1977 (2) SA 118
(T) at 544 H to 545 A
[2]
University
of the Free State v Afriforum
2018 (3) SA 428
(SCA) at paras [9] and
[10]
[3]
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Ellis and Another
2014 (3) SA 189 (GJ)
[4]
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation
2017 (5) SA 402 (SCA)
[5]
Tyte
Security Services v Western Cape Provincial Government
2024 (6) SA
175 (SCA)
[6]
Seatrans
Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas
2002 (6) SA 150 (C)
[7]
(954/2024)
ZAMPMBHC 30 (dated 22 April 2024)
[8]
At
para [7]
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