Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 204South Africa
Namutoni Boedery (Pty) Ltd and Another v Afgri Poultry (Pty) Ltd t/a Daybreak Farms (2023/091417) [2025] ZAGPPHC 204 (7 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Namutoni Boedery (Pty) Ltd and Another v Afgri Poultry (Pty) Ltd t/a Daybreak Farms (2023/091417) [2025] ZAGPPHC 204 (7 March 2025)
Namutoni Boedery (Pty) Ltd and Another v Afgri Poultry (Pty) Ltd t/a Daybreak Farms (2023/091417) [2025] ZAGPPHC 204 (7 March 2025)
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sino date 7 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No:2023-091417
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
(3) REVISED.
DATE 7
MARCH 2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
NAMUTONI
BOEDERY (PTY) LTD
FIRST APPLICANT
SM
VAN DYK BOEDERY (PTY) LTD
SECOND APPLICANT
and
AFGRI
POULTRY (PTY) LTD t/a
RESPONDENT
DAYBREAK FARMS
JUDGMENT
HF
JACOBS, AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
Afgri
[1]
operates a poultry abattoir on Portion 8
[2]
,
which is adjacent Portion 10
[3]
and Portion 35
[4]
. Portion 35 is
owned by Namutoni
[5]
and SM
Boerdery
[6]
conducts crop
farming operations thereon. Portion 10 is owned by Mr van
Rooyen who is not a party to these proceedings.
[2]
Afgri uses
a significant amount of water in its abattoir operations
and has a wastewater treatment plant and a pond on Portion 8. In the
answering
affidavit, it explains that it slaughters 125,000 chickens
daily, twenty four hours per day, seven days a week, substantially
less
than the capacity of 980 000 chickens per week that its
infrastructure allows. The water Afgri uses is extracted from
an underground water source on Portion 8 and it discharges wastewater
after use (and after treatment) on Portion 10 into a pan.
It does so
with the permission of the applicants since 2012.
[3]
The pan holds
runs-off water and, as can be expected, the volume of
run-off water that flows into the pan increases during the rainy
season and
decreases during the dry highveld winters. Afgri
pumps its wastewater throughout the year and the level of the water
in the
pan on Portion 10 rises and encroaches onto Portion 35.
This encroachment, so the applicants contend, is the direct
consequence
of the unmonitored volume of wastewater Afgri pumps into
the pan on a full time basis. Over time, so the applicants say,
the pan has become a permanent reservoir (dam) which encroaches onto
arable land of the applicants to such an extent that, during
2023,
the applicants revoked their permission granted 11 years earlier to
Afgri and demanded from Afgri to cease pumping its wastewater
to the
pan on Portion 10. Afgri did not cease the pumping of its
wastewater. In this application the applicants claim
interdictory relief aimed at interdicting and restraining Afgri from
pumping its wastewater into the pan on Portion 10.
[4]
On 22 March
2023 SM Boerdery’s attorney wrote to Applicant as
follows:
“
1.
We refer to the abovementioned matter and confirm that the writer
hereof (hereinafter referred to as "we")
received
instructions from Mr SM van Dyk, a director and authorised
representative of SM Van Dyk Boerdery (Pty) Ltd (hereinafter
referred
to as “our client") to address this letter to you and to
place the following on record.
2.
It is our instruction that you
conduct business as an abattoir and food processing operation on the
agricultural holding known as
Afgri Poultry t/a Daybreak Farms, on
the remaining extent of portion 8 of the farm Modderfontein,
Mpumalanga, situated directly
adjoined to our client's agricultural
holding, known as SM Van Dyk Boerdery (Pty) Ltd.
3.
It is our further instruction that
you pump water directly into one of our client's water ponds situated
on our client's agricultural
holding in terms of an oral agreement
concluded between our client and one of your erstwhile
representatives. It was agreed that
you may pump water from the
abattoir and food processing operation directly into our client's
pond to alleviate your excessive
water challenges as experienced from
time to time.
4.
We herewith confirm that it was an
agreed term, alternatively an implied term that the water flow to the
pond will be monitored
and managed to ensure that the pond perimeter
remains the same in extent and that the surface that the water
occupies does not
increase in perimeter.
5.
You however fail to comply with the
terms of the oral agreement in that you continue to pump wastewater
in our client's pond to
the extend that the pond perimeter increased
so much so that it takes up valuable agricultural land (10 hectares
under irrigation)
which land cannot be utilised by our client and
encroaches on our client's land and diminish their ability to use
their land commercially
and furthers causes economical and financial
damage and loss to our client.
6.
We herewith demand that you
immediately refrain from further pumping wastewater into our client's
pond. Should you fail to adhere
to this demand we confirm that our
client will continue to suffer irreparable harm in that they will not
be able to utilise their
agricultural land for agricultural purposes
and to derive an income from its crops because of your unlawful
utilisation of their
agricultural land and your infringement and
uptake of their agricultural economic land and agricultural economic
units.
7.
We herewith demand that you
immediately refrain from pumping any further wastewater and/or any
other water to our client's water
pond and/or property in any manner
whatsoever. Any permission and/or consent previously granted is
herewith retracted and/or revoked.
Your operation is encroaching on
our client's agricultural land and our client is no longer willing to
condone your conduct as
explained and herewith placed on record.
8.
Should you continue to pump any
water and/or wastewater to our client's water pond and/or property
after delivery of this letter
of demand, our client will have no
alternative remedy than to approach the High Court, for the granting
of an interdict and we
will also request that a cost order be granted
against you herein on a punitive cost scale.
9.
We trust you find the above in order
and await your urgent response herein by no later than close of
business on
31 MARCH 2023
.
10.
Kindly acknowledge receipt of this
letter in writing.
11.
Our client's rights remain strictly
reserved.”
[5]
Following the
applicants’ attorney’s letter of 22 April
2023 the parties met but could not resolve their differences and
during September
2023 the applicants instituted these proceedings
claiming the following relief in their notice of motion:
“
1.
The respondent is interdicted and restrained with immediate effect
from pumping any further water from the wastewater
treatment plant
and pond on the property known as Portion 8 of the farm Modderfontein
("the
Abattoir property
"
) to the first applicant's farm known as the Remaining Extent of
Portion 35 (a Portion of Portion 9) of the farm Modderfontein
("the
Irrigation Farm
"
).
2. That
the interdict under paragraphs 1 supra operate, pending the
finalisation of an action to be instituted by the
applicants for a
declaration of rights and damages within 20 days from the date of
this order.
3.
That the attorneys and client cost of the application be paid by the
respondent.
4.
Further and/or alternative relief.”
[6]
During argument
counsel for the applicants informed me that a final
order is sought by the applicants as claimed in paragraph 1 of the
notice of
motion and should such an order not be granted, that the
application should be dismissed. I will, therefore, not deal
with
the requirements for an interim interdict and return to this
aspect of the matter later in this judgment.
[7]
Afgri contends
that the papers show that there exist
bona fide
and material disputes of fact not capable of resolution in these
motion proceedings that call for the application to be referred
to
trial or dismissed. I state the law applicable to disputes of
fact in motion proceedings before I turn to the facts of
the case.
DISPUTES
OF FACT IN MOTION PROCEEDINGS: THE GENERAL PRINCIPLES
[8]
Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are designed for
the resolution of legal disputes based on common cause
facts.
Unless the circumstances are special they cannot be utilised to
resolve disputes of fact because they are not designed
to determine
probabilities.
[7]
Long before
the formulation of the Plascon-Evans rule
[8]
our courts recognised that respondents frequently attempt to create
disputes of fact when none exist. Our courts adopted
the
attitude that it should apply a “robust approach” to
disputes of fact in such instances.
[9]
It is expected from a court in such circumstances to undertake a
careful perusal of the affidavits filed of record to determine
whether the disputes can be decided on the affidavits.
[10]
[9]
The
starting point is always the Plascon-Evans-rule that provides that
“
(W)here
in proceedings on notice of motion disputes of fact have arisen on
the affidavits, a final order, whether it be an interdict
or some
other form of relief, may be granted if those facts averred in the
applicant's affidavits which have been admitted by the
respondent,
together with the facts alleged by the respondent, justify such
an order
.”
[11]
[10]
The
Plascon-Evans-rule must be applied mindful of the law stated by Zondo
CJ in his minority judgment in
Botha
[12]
.
The Plascon-Evans rule has been refined and extended to encompass
untenable evidence challenges in motion proceedings. In
Fakie
[13]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held:
“
That
conflicting affidavits are not a suitable means for determining
disputes of fact has been doctrine in this court for more than
80
years. Yet motion proceedings are quicker and cheaper than trial
proceedings and, in the interests of justice, courts have been
at
pains not to permit unvirtuous respondents to shelter behind
patently implausible affidavit versions or bald denials. More
than 60
years ago, this Court determined that a Judge should not allow a
respondent to raise 'fictitious' disputes of fact to delay
the
hearing of the matter or to deny the applicant its order. There had
to be 'a bona fide dispute of fact on a material
matter'.
This means that an uncreditworthy denial, or a palpably implausible
version, can be rejected out of hand, without recourse
to oral
evidence. In Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints
(Pty) Ltd, this Court extended the ambit of uncreditworthy
denials.
They now encompassed not merely those that fail to raise a real,
genuine or bona fide dispute of fact but also
allegations
or denials that are so far-fetched or clearly untenable that the
Court is justified in rejecting them merely on the
papers.”
[11]
The
Plascon-Evans-rule is applied always conscious of the further rule
that an applicant will not be permitted to introduce new
matter in
its replying affidavit. When evidence is presented in reply,
the rule against new matter in reply is not absolute
and should be
applied with a fair measure of common sense
[14]
.
Practical application of the principled approach recorded above,
appears from judgments such as
Wightman,
[15]
Lombaard,
[16]
Buffalo,
[17]
Mokala
[18]
and
National
Scrap Metal
[19]
where our Courts held that a genuine and
bona
fide
dispute of fact can only exist where the Court is satisfied that the
party who purports to raise the dispute has in its affidavits
seriously and unambiguously addressed the facts said to be disputed.
There will be instances where a bare denial meets the
requirement but
only if there is no other way open to a litigant to raise the dispute
and nothing more than a bare denial can be
expected. But even a bare
denial would not always be sufficient if the fact lies purely within
the knowledge of the averring party
and no basis is set out in the
opposing affidavit for disputing the veracity or accuracy of the
disputed averment. If a litigant
possesses knowledge of the
facts and can provide an answer (or countervailing evidence) but
instead of doing so rest his or her
case on an ambiguous denial, a
Court will generally have difficulty finding that the test for the
existence of a genuine and
bona
fide
dispute of fact is satisfied.
[20]
The starting point is always to list the facts that are common cause.
THE PERMISSION TO PUMP
WASTEWATER IN THE FOUNDING PAPERS
[12]
It is common cause that Namutoni is the
owner of Portion 35 and what the extent of Afgri’s operations
entail. In their
founding papers the applicants rely on its
ownership of Portion 35 to found their right to assert their right to
claim the interdictory
relief. In connection with the consent
it granted to Afgri to pump wastewater into the pan concerned it
states as follows
in paragraphs 18 – 22.8 of its founding
affidavit:
“
18.
As already mentioned, the Irrigation
Farm [Portion 35] borders the Abattoir Property [Portion
8] and there
is a wetland area or pan and centre pivot irrigation system on the
Irrigation Farm. The wetland or pan (hereinafter
"the pan"
or "dam") and the irrigation system lie adjacent to AFGRI's
Abattoir Property. In corroboration of
the aforesaid, I refer the
Court to an image obtained via Google Earth. The image is attached
and marked "FA1".
19.
The image (annexure "FA1") shows the Abattoir Property
(marked as A on
the image), the pan on the Irrigation Farm (marked as
B on the image) and the irrigation system on the Irrigation Farm
(marked
as C on the image).
20.
During about 2012/2013, AFGRI approached the applicants and advised
us that they
had plans to expand their operations on the Abattoir
Property. According to them, the expansion would benefit everyone.
21.
The representatives of AFGRI also asked us permission to pump treated
wastewater
from the pond next to the abattoir facility to the pan on
the Irrigation Farm and from there to another pan situated on my
neighbour's
farm.
22.
To the best of my recollection, the engagements mainly happened under
the leadership
of a man by the name of Mr Chris Venter. At the time
of the approach:
22.1.
There was already a pan on the Irrigation Farm. The water in the pan
mainly
amassed during summer. During the winter, the size of the pan
would shrink significantly. There was never any encroachment by the
water mass at any time on the arable land under the irrigation system
on the Irrigation Farm.
22.2.
In corroboration of the aforesaid, I again refer the Court to the
images
obtained via Google Earth. The image shows how the pan looked
like in 2005 and 2012 before permission was granted to AFGRI to pump
the treated wastewater to the pan. The images are attached and marked
"FA2".
22.3.
AFGRI's representatives assured us that there would be no issues and
that
the pumping of the water would not interfere with the farming
operations on the Irrigation Farm because they would monitor and
manage waterflows and because:
22.3.1.
The expansion of the wastewater treatment plant would result in
better and more effective
use of the wastewater produced by the
abattoir facility.
22.3.2.
AFGRI would manage the quantities of water pumped from the pond on
the Abattoir Property
to the pan on the Irrigation Farm by installing
pumps and associated equipment next the pan on the Irrigation Farm.
22.3.3.
AFGRI would use the aforementioned pumps installed at the pan on the
Irrigation Farm to manage
the size of the pan by pumping water from
the pan on the Irrigation Farm to the pan on the neighbour’s
farm.
22.4.
According to AFGRI's representatives, there was just nothing to be
concerned about.
22.5.
Within the context set out above, the applicants agreed to allow
AFGRI to pump water from the pond on the
Abattoir Property to the pan
on the Irrigation Farm and from there to the neighbours' farm.
22.6.
It expressly communicated that the applicants were granting AFGRI and
indulgence and was understood and
tacitly agreed between the parties
that:-
22.6.1.
The applicants had the right to withdraw the permission given to
AFGRI to pump water;
22.6.2.
AFGRI had to monitor and manage the amounts of water pumped to make
sure that it does not
interfere with the applicant's operations on
the Irrigation Farm;
22.6.3.
AFGRI had to exercise the right to pump water reasonably and with due
regard and respect
to the rights of the applicants in relation to the
Irrigation Farm.
22.7.
Over time, AFGRI pumped so much water into the pan that size of the
area expanded to the extent that the
pan is now a permanent dam which
encroaches on about ten hectares of arable land on the Irrigation
Farm. The arable land lies underneath
the applicants' irrigation
system.
22.8.
AFGRI has failed to monitor the amounts of wastewater it pumps to the
pan and has also failed to use the
pumps installed at the pan on the
Irrigation Farm to manage water flows and the size of the pan. The
pumps and the associated equipment
are now underwater because of
AFGRI's failures to monitor and manage the situation. The pumps
cannot be used to pump excess water
to the neighbour's farm.”
THE PERMISSION TO PUMP
WASTEWATER IN THE ANSWERING PAPERS
[13]
To this evidence, Afrgi answers in
paragraphs 40 – 58 of its answering affidavit:
“
40.
AD PARAGRAPH 18 THEREOF:
40.1.
It is denied that Namutoni's property is an "irrigation farm"
for the reasons already
set out hereinbefore. It is denied that
either of the Applicants made out a case that they are entitled to
use water for any purpose
of Namutoni's property for the reasons set
out above.
40.2.
It is submitted that Namutoni's property borders on the Respondent's
property.
40.3.
It is specifically denied that the pan, which only partially lies on
Namutoni's property, is a wetland
for the purposes of the NWA. I am
advised that a wetland is defined by section 1 of the NWA to mean
'land which is transitional
between terrestrial and aquatic systems
where the water table is usually at or near the surface, or the land
is periodically covered
with shallow water and which land in normal
circumstances support or would support vegetation typically adapted
to life in saturated
soil'. I am advised that full legal argument in
this regard will be presented to the Honourable Court at the hearing
of the application.
40.4.
I further specifically deny that the pan that is partially situated
on the Remaining Extent of Portion
35 (a portion of portion 9) of the
farm Modderfontein 236 IR, lies adjacent to the Respondent's
property. In this regard, I refer
the Honourable Court to paragraph
3.5.8 of Mr Vorster's report, specifically figure 20 on page 8. It is
evident that the portion
of the pan that is situated on the Remaining
Extent of Portion 35, (a portion of Portion 9) of the farm
Modderfontein 236, Registration
Division IR which belongs to Namutoni
is not situated adjacent to Portion 8 but borders on the remaining
extent of Portion 10 of
the farm Modderfontein 236, Registration
Division IR.
40.5.
The remaining extent of Portion 10 of the farm Modderfontein 236,
Registration Division IR is a property
that is owned by Nicolaas
Jacobus Lourens van Rooyen in terms of Deed of Transfer T203/2017 a
copy of which is attached hereto
as "AA11". I further
attach hereto a copy of the SG diagram A3404/14 as "AA12a"
that shows that the pan that
is situated on the remaining extent of
Portion 10 of the farm Modderfontein 236, Registration Division IR
borders on the southern
boundary of the Remaining Extent of Portion
35 (a portion of Portion 9) of the farm Modderfontein 236 IR.
40.6.
It is evident from the Google Earth image that was attached to the
founding affidavit as "FA1",
that the deponent did not take
the Honourable Court into his confidence and show the Honourable
Court where the property boundaries
of Namutoni's property is. I
attach hereto a copy of the surveyor diagram of Namutoni's property
indicating the boundaries of that
property as "AA12b",
40.7.
I deny that the irrigation systems that are situated next to the
Respondent's properties may be used to
apply water that is taken from
underground resources illegally. In this regard, I specifically refer
the Honourable Court to figures
13, 14, 15, 16 and 17 of Mr Vorster's
report. The first time that an irrigation system was present on
Numatoni's property was when
a centre pivot was visible at fields 7
and 8 on the Landsat 7 satellite image of 15 July 1998.
40.8.
The first time that any irrigation was visible on the area designated
field 14 is on 23 April 2000 when
field 16 is visible for the first
time. Prior to this, field 16 formed part of field 14, which was
probably not irrigated according
to Mr Vorster's report.
40.9.
I specifically deny that annexure "FA1" to the founding
affidavit is helpful, as it does not
provide a glimpse of what
happened during the qualifying period being the period between 1
October 1996 to 1 October 1998, when
the NWA came into operation.
40.10. I
am advised that Google Earth images are unable to shed any light on
what the historical water use on the property
was as the earliest
clear Google Earth image of the area was taken on the 27'" of
June 2002. This is the reason why the Respondent
employed the
services of Mr Vorster, an expert, in order to obtain the appropriate
satellite images.
41.
AD PARAGRAPH 19 THEREOF:
41.1. The contents of
this paragraph are denied. The Google Earth image that is attached is
only an indication of what happened
at a specific time and the Google
Earth image does not indicate the date of the imagery on the Google
Earth image itself. I presume
that the date that appears in the right
top corner namely 12 September 2023 at 08:24:36am is not the date of
the Google image as
this date and various times appear also on all
the pages of the founding affidavit.
42. AD PARAGRAPH 20
THEREOF:
42.1.
Although it is correct that the Respondent approached the Applicants
in about 2012, it is denied that the
plans to expand the abattoir on
the Respondent's property started at that time. The remainder of the
allegations in this paragraph
is denied. The expansion of the
abattoir took place even before the Respondent became the owner of
the Remaining Extent of Portion
8 of the Farm Modderfontein 236
Registration Division IR. The first time that it was evident that any
extension took place was
on 2 May 2007, when construction is visible
on the Google Earth imagery of that date. I attach hereto three
Google Earth images
as "AA13", "AA14" and "AA15",
"AA13", taken on 3 February 2005, clearly shows only the
existing buildings at the time, while "AA14" shows
construction that was undertaken on 2 May 2007, while "AA15",
taken on 1 March 2010, clearly shows the completed and extended
abattoir,
42.2.
The property was only registered in the Respondent's name on 12
December 2012 according to the Deed of
Tra g T13522/2012.
43.
AD PARAGRAPH 21 THEREOF:
43.1.
The content of this paragraph is admitted.
44.
AD PARAGRAPH 22 THEREOF:
44.1.
The content of this paragraph is denied.
44.2.
I do not know and could not, through enquiries, establish if a person
by the name of Chris Venter ever
worked for or represented the
Respondent.
44.3.
The deponent is probably mistaken. He refers most likely to Kobus
Venter and not Chris Venter. This is
but one further example of the
inaccuracies contained in the Applicants' founding affidavit.
44.4.
The Respondent engaged the local farmers when the abattoir was
expanded. The Respondent was represented
by Willem Breedt and Kobus
Venter. Both gentlemen are no longer employed by the Respondent.
44.5.
The Applicants concede on their own version that the expansion of the
abattoir included the construction
of the wastewater treatment plan,
which dramatically increased the abattoir's ability to use less
water, to re-use water and to
dispose of the same or less wastewater
despite the increase in production.
44.6.
I will later, in this affidavit, return to the operation of the
abattoir's wastewater treatment plant,
the abattoir's capacity and
water usage.
45.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.1 THEREOF:
45.1.
I deny that Namutoni's property is an irrigation farm for the reasons
already set out above. Although it
is correct that water collected in
the pan during summer months and the area of the pan receded during
winter, the remaining allegations
in this paragraph are denied.
46.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.2 THEREOF:
46.1.
The contents of this paragraph are denied. Without the services of a
remote sensing specialist, I respectfully
submit that no deductions
can be made from these Google Earth images.
47.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.3 THEREOF:
47.1.
The contents of this paragraph are denied. Part of the agreement that
was reached between the Respondent
and Namutoni was that the
Respondent would make available extra land on the Remaining Extent of
Portion 8 of the farm Modderfontein
236, Registration Division IR to
compensate Namutoni for any loss of land that it would suffer as a
result of water that is accumulated
in the pan that is partially
situated on Numatoni's property. The land that was so made available
could be farmed free of charge
the account of the Applicants. Up
until the making of this affidavit, the Applicants are entitled to
plant at least 9,41 hectares
on the Respondent's property free of
charge. The area that Numatoni could plant crops on is situated to
the West of the pan that
is situated on the Remaining Extent of
Portion 8 of the farm Modderfontein 236, Registration Division IR.
Currently and area of
9,41 hectares is planted.
47.2.
I specifically deny that Namutoni's property is an irrigation farm
for the reasons already set out above.
48.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.3.1 THEREOF:
48.1.
It is correct that the expansion of the wastewater treatment plant
resulted in a better and more effective
use of wastewater that is
produced by the abattoir facility.
49.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.3.2 THEREOF:
49.1.
The Respondent has managed the quantities of water pumped from the
pan on the abattoir to the pan, which
is partially situated on
Namutoni's property, It is specifically denied that Namutoni's
property can be categorised as an "irrigation
farm" for the
reasons already set out herein. It is specifically denied that the
pumps and associated equipment were installed
on Namutoni's property.
The pumps and associated equipment that were installed next to the
pan were installed on the remaining
extent of Portion 10 of the farm
Modderfontein 236, Registration Division IR that belongs to Nicolaas
Jacobus Lourens van Rooyen.
The water that was pumped from the pan is
partially situated on Namutoni's property but mostly situated on the
remaining extent
of Portion 10 of the farm Modderfontein 236 IR.
According to Mr Vorster's report and specifically page 26 thereof,
only 3,48 hectares
of the pan was situated on Namutoni's property,
being the Remaining Extent of Portion 35 of the farm Modderfontein
236, Registration
Division IR on 13 July 2015.
49.2.
According to Mr Vorster's report and specifically page 27 thereof
only 7,32 hectares are situated on Numatoni's
property. The bulk of
the pan that is partially situated on Nunatoni's property namely
25,97 hectares (on 13 July 2015 - see page
35 and figure 2 35,62
hectares (on 28 January 2023 - see page 36 and figure 30) is situated
on the remaining extent of Portion
10 of the farm Modderfontein 236,
Registration Division IR, that belongs to Nicolaas Jacobus Lourens
van Rooyen.
50.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.3.3 THEREOF:
50.1.
The contents of this paragraph are denied. It is reiterated that
Namutoni's farm is not an "irrigation
farm" for the reasons
already set out above. It is further reiterated that the pumps that
are installed to pump water from
the pan that is partially situated
on Namutoni's property has been installed on the remaining extent of
Portion 10 of the farm
Modderfontein 236, Registration Division IR
belonging to Nicolaas Jacobus Lourens van Rooyen.
50.2.
However, it is correct that the pumps are used to pump water from the
pan that is partially situated on
Namutoni's property to another pan
which is situated on the remaining extent of Portion 10 of the farm
Modderfontein 236, Registration
Division IR.
51.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.4 THEREOF:
51.1.
The contents of this paragraph are denied. As is evident from what is
said herein before, there was a quid
pro quo in the form of land that
was provided by the Respondent on which Namutoni could farm and plant
crops free of charge.
52.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.5 THEREOF:
52.1.
The contents are denied. The deponent on behalf of the Applicants do
not take the court into its confidence.
Nowhere in the founding
affidavit is there any mention made of the quid pro quo that was
provided by the Respondent to allow water
to be pumped into the pan
that is partially situated on Namutoni's property and that as a quid
pro quo the Applicants were allowed
to farm on a part of the
Remaining Extent of Portion 8 of the farm Modderfontein 236,
Registration Division IR free of charge.
53.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.6:
53.1.
The content of this paragraph is denied. There was no indulgence that
was granted to the Respondent. As
a quid pro quo for the storing of
water in the pan that is partially situated on Namutoni's property,
the Applicants were granted
the right to farm on the Respondent's
land free of charge. As I have indicated earlier, there are at least
9,41 hectares planted
by the Applicants on the Respondent's property.
54.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.6.1 THEREOF:
54.1.
The content of this paragraph is denied. the agreement that was
entered into between the parties was that
water could be stored in
the pan while Namutoni could farm at least 9,41 hectares of land on
the Respondent's property. The agreement
that was entered into was,
therefore, reciprocal.
55.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.6.2 THEREOF:
55.1.
I repeat that Namutoni's property is not an "irrigation farm"
as is alleged by the deponent for
the reasons already set out
hereinabove. As part of the quid pro quo the Respondent allowed
Namutoni to farm on at least 9,41 hectares
of the Respondent's
property. The remainder of the paragraph is denied.
56.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.6.3THEREOF:
56.1.
I specifically deny that Namutoni's property is an irrigation farm
for the reasons set out herein. It was
always in the contemplation of
the parties that the pan may extend beyond the boundaries at the time
when the agreement was entered
into, and it is for exactly that
reason that the quid pro quo of farming on the Respondent's land was
offered to the Namutoni and
was accepted by the Applicants.
57.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.7:
57.1.
The contents of this paragraph are a blatant lie and are denied. As
is evident from Mr Vorster's report,
the area of the pan that
encroaches upon Namutoni's property was only 7.32 hectares on 28
January 2023. This is a mere 3,84 hectares
more than the area of 3,48
hectares that was covered by the pan on 13 July 2015. This is again
an indication that the deponent
is prone to over- exaggeration in an
effort to create atmosphere. I categorically deny that 10 hectares of
Namutoni's property
is encroached upon by the pan. I further deny
that Namutoni's property can be classified as an "irrigation
farm" for
the reasons already set out above. The remainder of
this paragraph is denied.
58.
AD PARAGRAPH 22.8 THEREOF:
58.1.
The contents of this paragraph are denied.
58.2.
In amplification of the denial, the court's attention is drawn to the
fact that the pumps are not installed
on Namutoni's property. As is
evident from what is said herein, the pumps and associated
infrastructure are situated on the remaining
extent of Portion 10 of
the farm Modderfontein 236, Registration Division IR. It is admitted
that the pumps that were installed
to pump water from pan 2 to pan 3
(pan 3 to pan 4 on Mr Vorster's report) are currently inundated. It
is also admitted that no
water can currently be pumped between these
two pans. This is for various reasons:
58.2.1.
Pumping stopped when the pumping infrastructure situated on the
remaining extent of Portion
10 of the farm Modderfontein 236 IR, was
inundated during rainstorms that the area received during November
and December 2022;
58.2.2.
A result of the flooding of the pump station was that the electricity
that supplied the pumps
tripped, and the pumps were submerged.
58.2.3.
The pump station is still under water and is inoperable as a result
of the current water
levels.
58.2.4.
The water can, in any case, not be pumped to the other pan that is
situated on the remaining
extent of Portion 10 of the farm
Modderfontein 236 IR, as that pan was also filled up during the
rainstorms that occurred during
November and December 2022. I will
deal with the rainfall that the area received later in this
affidavit.”
THE PERMISSION TO PUMP
WASTEWATER IN THE REPLYING PAPERS
[14]
In their replying affidavit (paragraphs 9 –
22 and 58 – 65.5) the applicants states as follows:
“
9.
Mr Manzini has no
personal knowledge of the matter, and he has never had any
dealings
with me or my father, Mr Thinus van Dyk, regarding the pumping of
treated wastewater from the Abattoir property to the
Irrigation farm.
10.
In my Founding Affidavit, I explained that we dealt with Mr Chris
Venter of AFGRI
during 2012/2013 and that Mr Venter approached us on
behalf of AFGRI with a request to allow AFGRI to pump treated
wastewater from
the Abattoir property to the Irrigation farm.
11.
Mr Manzini responded to the applicants' version by stating that we
probably met Mr
Kobus Venter and not Chris Venter. According to Mr
Manzini, AFGRI was represented by Mr Willem Breedt and Kobus Venter.
At the
time, the aforementioned gentlemen were the representatives of
AFGRI who had been mandated to deal with local farmers, including
the
applicants, on behalf of AFGRI.
12.
The applicants accept that the gentlemen who approached them was Mr
Kobus Venter
and not Mr Chris Venter. I made a bona fide mistake in
my Founding Affidavit by recording the name of Mr Venter as Chris
instead
of Kobus.
13.
Returning to the version put forward by Mr Manzini on behalf of
AFGRI:
13.1.
Mr Manzini stated in paragraph 56.1 of the AFGRI affidavit as
follows:
"It was always in
the contemplation of the parties that the pa may extend beyond the
boundaries at the time when the agreement
was entered into, and it
for exactly that reason that the quid pro quo of farming on the
Respondent's land was offered to Namutoni
and was accepted by the
Applicants. "
13.2.
Mr Manzini states in paragraph 88.2 of the AFGRI affidavit as
follows:
"The Second
Applicant currently farms at least 9,41 hectares that belong to the
Respondent free of charge. It is denied that
Namutoni's property is
an irrigation farm for the reasons already set out above."
14.
The applicants and I were taken by total surprise when they read the
aforementioned
paragraphs because we never had any dealings with Mr
Manzini regarding the permission that was granted by the applicants
to AFGRI
to pump treated water from the Abattoir property to the
Irrigation farm and because what is stated by him is just a blatant
lie.
15.
The statements prompted me and the applicants' legal team to go and
look for Mr Kobus
Venter and Willem Breedt who were the
representatives of AFGRI at the time the applicants' decided to allow
AFGRI to pump water
to the Irrigation farm.
16.
AFGRI's legal team had consultations with both gentlemen. The
applicants' legal team
consulted with Mr Kobus Venter on 29 February
2024 and thereafter with Mr Breedt on or about 7 March 2024. In
short, they confirm
that Mr Venter dealt with the applicants and
reported to Mr Breedt, and Mr Venter confirms the following:
16.1.
In 2012/2013, both gentlemen were duly authorised to represent AFGRI
in its dealings with local farmers
in the area. At the time, Mr
Venter was the engineer who assisted AFGRI with managing the water
purification part of the abattoir
facility, and Mr Breedt was the
factory manager. Later, in 2016, Mr Venter was appointed as one of
AFGRI's Managing Directors and
resigned after there was a change in
AFGRI's shareholding and management.
16.2.
During our interactions Mr Venter communicated with my father, Mr
Thinus van Dyk and me and asked us permission
for AFGRI to pump
properly treated wastewater from the Abattoir property to the
Irrigation farm.
16.3.
We (the applicants) agreed to allow AFGRI to pump properly treated
wastewater from the Abattoir property
to the pan on the Irrigation
farm subject to the following conditions:
16.3.1.
The applicants could withdraw the permission given to AFGRI to pump
water at any time.
16.3.2.
AFGRI had to monitor and manage the quantities of water pumped to the
Irrigation farm to
make sure that the water did not interfere with
the applicants' farming operations on the Irrigation farm in any way
or manner.
16.3.3.
It was specifically discussed that AFGRI would not allow the size of
the water mass created
by AFGRI on the Irrigation farm to increase or
rise beyond the gravel road that runs around the irrigation circle in
the area where
the water was going to be pumped.
16.3.4.
AFGRI would manage the size of the water amassed on the Irrigation
Farm by using pumps to
pump the water it had pumped to the Irrigation
Farm to Portion 10 of the Farm Modderfontein ("the Neighbours
Farm").
16.3.5.
AFGRI would at all relevant times exercise their right to pump water
from the Abattoir property
to the Irrigation farm with due regard to
the rights of the applicants in relation to the Irrigation farm and
their farming operations.
17.
The version of Mr Venter regarding what was discussed and agreed to
between the applicants
and AFGRI back in 2012/2013, corroborates and
supports what I have already stated on behalf of the applicants in my
Founding Affidavit
and Mr Venter's confirmatory Affidavit is filed
simultaneously with this Affidavit.
18.
Mr Venter also confirms that there was never any quid pro quo
discussed between the
parties at the time the applicants gave AFGRI
permission to pump treated wastewater to the Irrigation farm and that
the applicants
received nothing in return for allowing AFGRI to pump
water from the Abattoir property to the Irrigation farm. Again, I
refer the
Court to the confirmatory Affidavit of Mr Venter.The
Affidavit is attached and marked as annexure "RA2".
19.
Completely separate from the permission that was granted by the
applicants to AFGRI
to pump treated wastewater from the Abattoir
property to the Irrigation farm towards the end of 2013:
19.1.
AFGRI approached my father and me with a crisis; the local
municipality had
run out of water. At the time, AFGRI relied on the
municipality for its supply of water to operate its abattoir facility
and because
the municipality was unable to supply water to AFGRI its
operations had grinded to a halt and it was at risk of suffering
enormous
damages and losses. The abattoir facility of AFGRI cannot
operate without water.
19.2.
Mr Venter asked us whether there was any way we could assist AFGRI by
supplying
it with water from the borehole, which we also use for
irrigation purposes on the Irrigation Farm.
19.3.
M father and I always acted reasonably and in good faith towards
AFGRI and
did not want AFGRI to suffer damages. I add, at that point
in time, the applicants had also supplied AFGRI with thousands of
chickens
to slaughter and sell to retailers.
19.4.
We agreed to allow AFGRI to build and connect a second pipeline
between the
Abattoir and the borehole situated on the Irrigation farm
and draw water from the borehole to enable AFGRI to operate the
abattoir
facility. The situation lasted for a couple of months while
AFGRI got drillers to drill for water on its property to sink a
borehole.
AFGRI eventually found water and stopped pumping water from
the borehole on the Irrigation farm to the abattoir facility.
19.5.
As a sign of its gratitude, Mr Venter advised the applicants that
they could
plant about 9 hectares of arable land on the abattoir
property. There was no agreement concluded between the parties
regarding
the applicants' right to plant the 9 hectares of arable
land. AFGRI just granted the applicants permission to plant the
arable
land until such time as it had decided otherwise.
19.6.
The applicants planted the 9 hectares for about three seasons, and
AFGRI
withdrew the permission that was granted to the applicants. The
applicants stopped planting the 9 hectares on the Abbatoir property
about 2016 and the lands on the abattoir property are now being
planted by Mr Van Rooyen. Mr van Rooyen's confirmatory Affidavit
is
attached and marked as annexure “RA3”.
19.7
The applicants are not planting the 9 hectares of arable land on
AFGRI's
property, and Mr Manzini is being dishonest in his Opposing
Affidavit, where he states that the lands are currently being planted
by the applicants or SM. Mr Mazini lied about the terms of the
agreement and about AFGRI planting the 9 hectares of arable land
in
an attempt to win the case for AFGRI.
20.
At this juncture, I refer the Court to the confirmatory Affidavit of
Mr Venter
who confirms that the planting of the 9 hectares was a
"completely separate deal” and had nothing to do with the
permission
that was granted to AFGRI to pump treated wastewater from
the Abattoir property to the irrigation farm.
21.
I also obtained a Confirmatory Affidavit of Mr Van Rooyen, who
confirms that he has
been planting arable land on the Abattoir
property with permission from AFGRI. The Confirmatory Affidavit of Mr
Van Rooyen is already
attached.
22.
Mr Manzini's false version effectively destroys AFGRI's entire case
because it is
beyond dispute that the applicants were, as they have
done, entitled to withdraw the permission granted to AFGRI to pump
treated
wastewater from the Abattoir property to the Irrigation farm
and that should be the end of the matter.”
“
58.
AD PARAGRAPH 40:
58.1.
The irrigation farm falls within the upper regions of the Quaternary
Catchment C21 D in the Vaal Primary
Catchment Group.
58.2.
The Irrigation farm is a depressional wetland area which connects
with the Blesbok Spruit.
58.3.
With regard to the applicants' right to use water on the Irrigation
farm for irrigation purposes, I refer
the Court to what I have said.
59.
AD PARAGRAPH 42:
59.1.
The applicants do not know when exactly AFGRI started expanding the
abattoir facility. The applicants were
only engaged about the
expansion in 2012/2013.
59.2.
Between the period 2013 to 2015, the size of the water amassed on the
Irrigation farm increased because
of AFGRI pumping wastewater to the
Irrigation farm.
59.3.
From 2015 to 2023, the size of the wastewater amassed on the
Irrigation farm increased even more because
of AFGRI pumping even
more wastewater to the Irrigation farm.
59.4.
The size of the water amassed on the Irrigation farm is not reducing
as AFGRI will have the Court believe.
That statement by Mr Manzini is
just not true.
59.5.
The pumps next to the water, which were used by AFGRI to manage water
levels, are still submerged.
60.
AD PARAGRAPH 44:
60.1.
It is correct that the person who engaged the applicants was not
Chris Venter but by Mr Kobus Venter.
60.2.
Mr Kobus Venter reported to Mr Willem Breedt, who was the factory
manager at the time.
60.3.
Mr Kobus Venter is the one who dealt with the applicants and who
approached my father and me for permission
to pump treated wastewater
from the Abattoir property to the Irrigation farm.
60.4.
The applicants were entitled to withdraw the permission that was
given to AFGRI to pump treated wastewater
from the Abattoir property
to the Irrigation farm and at present AFGRI is unlawfully pumping
polluted wastewater to the Irrigation
farm.
61.
AD PARAGRAPH 47:
61.1.
Mr Manzini is being dishonest in the paragraph under reply because:
61.1.1.
He is acutely aware that he was never personally involved in any of
the negotiations between
AFGRI and the applicants regarding the
pumping of treated wastewater from the Abattoir property to the
Irrigation farm.
61.1.2.
Without having any knowledge of the facts, Mr Manzini states that the
applicants plant about
9.4 hectares of arable land on the Abattoir
property, free of charge, in exchange for allowing AFGRI to pump
wastewater to the
Irrigation farm.
61.1.3.
Mr Manzini is being dishonest in the paragraph under reply because
the true position is that
the applicants are not planting any land on
the Abattoir property. The land is being planted by Mr Van Rooyen.
61.1.4.
The planting of the 9 hectares had nothing to do with the permission
that was granted by
the applicants to AFGRI to pump treated
wastewater to the Irrigation farm. The permission to pump treated
wastewater and the planting
of the 9 hectares have no relation to
each other.
61.2.
I repeat what I said in the exposition above regarding the permission
that was granted by the applicants
to AFGRI to pump treated
wastewater from the Abattoir property to the Irrigation farm and how
it came about that the applicants
planted crops on the arable land
which belongs to AFGRI.
62.
AD PARAGRAPH 49:
62.1.
The Irrigation farm is correctly categorised as an Irrigation farm.
62.2.
AFGRI failed to manage the quantities of wastewater pumped from the
Abattoir property to the Irrigation
farm.
62.3.
This is borne out by the following:
62.3.1.
Before the abattoir facility was expanded, there was no permanent
water mass in the area
where the pan is now on the Irrigation farm.
62.3.2.
After AFGRI started pumping wastewater to the Irrigation farm, the
size of the water amassed
on the Irrigation farm increased over the
years until a portion of the arable land on the Irrigation farm and
pumps next to the
water was submerged.
62.4.
As explained in my Founding Affidavit, AFGRI pumped so much water to
the Irrigation farm that it created
a permanent pan or dam on the
Irrigation farm.”
[15]
As mentioned in its replying affidavit, the
applicants annexed thereto an affidavit of Mr Venter who represented
Afgri during 2012
when it was granted permission to pump wastewater
from Portion 8. Paragraphs 3.1 – 3.12 of Mr Venter’s
affidavit
read as follows:
“
3.1.
I was duly authorised to represent AFGRI in its dealings with local
farmers.
3.2.
In 2012/2013 I was the engineer who assisted AFGRI with manging the
water purification
part of the abattoir which operates from the
property known as Portion 10 of the farm Modderfontein ("the
Abattoir property").
Mr Breedt was the factory manager and I
reported to him.
3.3.
In 2016, I was appointed as AFGRI's Technical and Biological
Executive, and I resigned
after there was a change in AFGRI's
shareholding and management.
3.4.
During my interactions with the applicants, I communicated with Mr
Tinus van Dyk
and his son, Mr Stephanus Martinus van Dyk. About
2012/2013 I asked the gentleman permission for AFGRI to pump treated
wastewater
from the Abattoir to property on Portion 35 of the farm
Modderfontein ("the Irrigation farm").
3.5.
The applicants duly represented and authorised by the aforesaid
gentleman agreed
to allow AFGRI to pump properly treated wastewater
from the Abattoir property to the Irrigation farm subject to the
following conditions:
3.5.1.
The applicants could withdraw the permission given to AFGRI to pump
water
at any time.
3.5.2.
AFGRI had to monitor and manage the quantities of water pumped to the
Irrigation
farm to make sure that the water does not interfere with
the applicants' farming operations on the Irrigation farm.
3.5.3.
AFGRI will not allow the size of the water mass created by AFGRI on
the Irrigation
farm to increase or rise beyond the gravel road that
runs around the irrigation circle on the Irrigation farm.
3.5.4.
AFGRI would manage the size of the water amassed on the Irrigation
Farm by using
pumps to pump the water it had pumped to the Irrigation
Farm from the Irrigation Farm to Portion 10 of the Farm
Modderfontein.
3.5.5.
AFGRI would at all relevant times exercise their right to pump water
from
the Abattoir property to the Irrigation farm with due regard to
the rights of the applicants in relation to the Irrigation farm
and
their farming operations.
3.6.
There was never any quid pro quo discussed between the parties at the
time the applicants
gave AFGRI permission to pump treated wastewater
to the Irrigation farm. The applicants received nothing in return for
allowing
AFGRI to pump wastewater from the Abattoir property to the
Irrigation farm.
3.7.
Towards the end of 2013, I on behalf AFGRI approached Mr Van Dyk
(snr) to assist
AFGRI with water because the municipality became
unable to supply water to the Abattoir property. AFGRI's abattoir
facility cannot
operate at all without water.
3.8.
Mr Venter asked us whether there was any way we could assist AFGRI by
supplying it
with water from the borehole which we also use for
irrigation purposes on the Irrigation Farm.
3.9.
The applicants agreed to allow AFGRI connect pipeline to the
applicants' borehole
on the Irrigation farm and to draw water from
the borehole to use to operate the abattoir facility. The situation
lasted for a
couple of months whilst AFGRI got drillers to drill for
underground water for purposes of sinking a borehole. AFGRI
eventually
found water and stopped pumping water from the borehole on
the Irrigation farm to the abattoir facility.
3.10.
As a sign of its gratitude, I advised the applicants that they could
plant about 9.4 hectares
of arable on the Abattoir property. There
was no agreement concluded between the parties regarding the
applicants' right to plant
the 9 hectares of arable land on the
Abattoir property. AFGRI just granted the applicants permission to
plant the arable lands
until such time as it had decided otherwise.
3.11.
The second applicant ("SM") planted the 9 hectares for
about three seasons whereafter
AFGRI withdrew the permission that was
granted to the applicants.
3.12.
The applicants stopped planting the 9 hectares on the Abattoir
property about 2016.”
APPLICATION OF THE LAW
TO THE ISSUE OF PERMISSION TO PUMP THE WASTEWATER
[16]
The
evidence indicates that the applicants permitted Afgri to pump
wastewater from its abattoir into the existing pan on Portion
35 at
its request, as stated by Mr Venter. This consent could be revoked at
any time. The applicants have communicated their withdrawal
of
permission, and there is no genuine dispute of fact on this point
that cannot be resolved in these proceedings. Mr Manzini’s
denials and statements to the contrary are without substance and
nothing more than assertions which have no evidentiary value in
civil
proceedings of the kind afoot here.
[21]
On the facts and in law the applicants were entitled to revoke the
permission and they did.
[17]
Afgri objects to the length of the replying
affidavit. This affidavit is extensive because the challenge
presented in the answering
affidavit is elaborate, contrived, and
materially false in several respects. It includes evidence that
refutes Afgri’s unmeritorious
challenges, and the claim that it
should be struck out must inevitably fail. The dispute raised by Mr
Manzini, who swore to Afgri’s
answering affidavit, regarding
the consent under which Afgri pumps the water and the conditions
attached to it, is neither bona
fide nor material. Mr Manzini asserts
under oath that he has personal knowledge of the facts he presents.
However, it later emerges
from Mr Venter's affidavit that Mr Manzini
either lacked personal knowledge or, if he possessed it, presented
facts and devised
a challenge in the High Court proceedings, knowing
those facts to be incorrect. In my view Afgri’s challenges on
the facts
and law in this context are untenable and must fall to be
rejected. Afgri’s approach to the matter affects the issue of
costs,
as recorded below.
THE LAW ON EXPERT
EVIDENCE IN CIVIL LITIGATION
[18]
Afgri
relies on the expert testimony of Mr. Vorster, a “Remote
Sensing and Value-Added Products Technologist,” attached
to its
answering affidavit. I consider the expert evidence of Mr Vorster
against the following duties and responsibilities of expert
witnesses
recorded by Wallis JA in
PriceWaterHouseCoopers
[22]
at
[97] – [99]:
“
Opinion
evidence is admissible „when the Court can receive “appreciable
help” from that witness on the particular
issue‟. That
will be when:
“…
by
reason of their special knowledge and skill, they are better
qualified to draw inferences than the trier of fact. There are some
subjects upon which the court is usually quite incapable of forming
an opinion unassisted, and others upon which it could come
to some
sort of independent conclusion, but the help of an expert would be
useful.‟
As to the nature of an
expert’s opinion, in the same case, Wessels JA said:
“…
an
expert's opinion represents his reasoned conclusion based on certain
facts or data, which are either common cause, or established
by his
own evidence or that of some other competent witness. Except possibly
where it is not controverted, an expert's bald statement
of his
opinion is not of any real assistance. Proper evaluation of the
opinion can only be undertaken if the process of reasoning
which led
to the conclusion, including the premises from which the reasoning
proceeds, are disclosed by the expert.‟
[98] Courts in this
and other jurisdictions have experienced problems with expert
witnesses, sometimes unflatteringly described
as “hired guns‟.
In The Ikarian Reefer Cresswell J set out certain duties that an
expert witness should observe when
giving evidence. Pertinent to the
evidence of Mr Collett in this case are the following:
“
The
duties and responsibilities of expert witnesses in civil cases
include the following:
1. Expert evidence
presented to the Court should be and should be seen to be the
independent product of the expert uninfluenced
as to form or content
by the exigencies of litigation …
2. An expert witness
should provide independent assistance to the Court by way of
objective unbiased opinion in relation to matters
within his
expertise … An expert witness in the High Court should never
assume the role of advocate.
3. An expert witness
should state the facts or assumptions on which his opinion is based.
He should not omit to consider material
facts which detract from his
concluded opinion. . . .
4. An expert witness
should make it clear when a particular question or issue falls
outside his expertise.‟
These principles echo
the point made by Diemont JA in Stock that:
“
An
expert … must be made to understand that he is there to assist
the Court. If he is to be helpful he must be neutral. The
evidence of
such a witness is of little value where he, or she, is partisan and
consistently asserts the cause of the party who
calls him. I may add
that when it comes to assessing the credibility of such a witness,
this Court can test his reasoning and is
accordingly to that extent
in as good a position as the trial Court was.‟
[99] Lastly when
dealing with the approach to an expert witness I have found helpful
the following passage from the judgment of
Justice Marie St-Pierre in
Widdrington:
“
Legal
principles and tools to assess credibility and reliability
[326] “Before
any weight can be given to an expert’s opinion, the facts upon
which the opinion is based must be found
to exist”
[327] “As long
as there is some admissible evidence on which the expert’s
testimony is based it cannot be ignored; but
it follows that the more
an expert relies on facts not in evidence, the weight given to his
opinion will diminish”.
[328] An opinion based
on facts not in evidence has no value for the Court.
[329] With respect to
its probative value, the testimony of an expert is considered in the
same manner as the testimony of an ordinary
witness. The Court is not
bound by the expert witness‟s opinion.
[330] An expert
witness‟s objectivity and the credibility of his opinions may
be called into question, namely, where he or
she:
•
accepts
to perform his or her mandate in a restricted manner;
•
presents
a product influenced as to form or content by the exigencies of
litigation;
•
shows
a lack of independence or a bias;
•
has
an interest in the outcome of the litigation, either because of a
relationship with the party that retained his or her services
or
otherwise;
•
advocates
the position of the party that retained his or her services; or
•
selectively
examines only the evidence that supports his or her conclusions or
accepts to examine only the evidence provided by
the party that
retained his or her services.
”
THE EXPERT EVIDENCE OF
MR VORSTER
[19]
The report of Mr Vorster (annexure AA3 at
F118 of the Caselines Record) is dated November 2023 and records
under the heading “Introduction”
the following:
“
1
Introduction
1.1 The
South African National Space Agency (SANSA) as represented by Willem
Adriaan Vorster (Remote Sensing Specialist,
with specific field of
expertise in satellite image processing) was request to assist in a
field irrigation investigation by means
of using available satellite
imagery and satellite data.
1.2 The
incident, which is the subject matter of this water irrigation
investigation, occurred on the farm Modderfontein
236, portions 08
(Daybreak Farms), in the Sundra area in Mpumalanga, and the specific
request was to establish with the aid of
satellite imagery whether
the area was irrigate within the qualifying periods between October
1996 and I October 1998.”
[20]
In paragraph 1.3 of his affidavit Mr
Vorster states, with reference to his report of November 2023 that :
“
31.
I confirm that I conducted a satellite image-based assessment
and analysis of field irrigation and water bodies on the
Remaining
Extent of Portion 10, Portion 8 and on Portion 35 (a Portion of
Portion 9) of the Farm Modderfontein 236, Registration
Division IR,
titled Assessment and Analysis of Field Irrigation Near Sundra that
is dated November 2023.”
APPLICATION OF THE LAW
TO THE EXPERT EVIDENCE PRESENTED BY AFGRI
[21]
In my view the evidence of Mr Vorster is of
very little if any evidentiary value. He is not to be blamed
for that. It
is from his affidavit and report not clear that
his report and affidavit have been formulated while mindful of his
obligations
mentioned in the quoted passages from
PriceWaterhouseCoopers. Alternative methods of disposal of Afgri’s
wastewater are not
considered by Mr Vorster. He was clearly not
briefed or mandated to provide any such expert testimony as
interpreter of satellite
images. I accept Mr Vorster’s
testimony that not more than 3.9 hectares of the 170 hectares of
Portion 35 becomes encroached
by water from the pan. That
amounts to just over 2% of the surface of Portion 35 which begs the
question: How much
more surface must the applicants be expected
to sacrifice for the convenience and financial benefit of Afgri?
I am of the
view it should not be compelled to sacrifice any.
AFGRI’S
SUBMISSIONS WITH REFERENCE TO THE
NATIONAL WATER ACT 36 OF 1998
AND
ITS COMMERCIAL STATUS
[22]
In its answering affidavit Afgri raises a
plethora of legislative provisions. Afgri submits with
reference to those provisions
that “
When
following the triad of language, context and purpose …. it is
submitted that the pans are not water resources for the
purposes of
the NWA.”
The order granted
below is granted mindful of the interpretation offered and submitted
by Afgri.
[23]
Afgri refers to its shareholding, its
participation in the provision of food and its contractual
obligations to supply meat to retailers
and the enormity of the
investment in the facility on Portion 8. I am mindful of those
allegations but am of the view that
it does not outweigh the right of
the applicants to exercise their ownership of Portion 35 and their
rights attendant thereto.
THE REQUIREMENTS FOR A
FINAL INTERDICT
[24]
An
order for permanent cessation of the wastewater pumping may only be
granted if it is shown that the applicants have a clear right
according to substantive law shown on the evidence to exist on a
balance of probability; that Afgri commits an act of interference
on
a continuing basis; and the absence of any alternative legal remedy
available to the applicants.
[23]
JUDIDICAL DISCRETION
[25]
Once
an applicant has satisfied the requirements for final interdict,
judicial discretion only exists on a limited aspect, namely
the
availability of an adequate alternative remedy. If a final
interdict should issue, a court has a discretion to order
suspension
or to order deferment of the interdict where the circumstances of the
case outweighs an applicant’s right to immediate
cessation of
the infringement.
[24]
The
evidence before me shows that the applicants have no adequate or
alternative remedy other than the interdictory relief they
seek.
Sections 24 and 27 of the Constitution
[25]
and the regulatory remit the concept of public trusteeship in natural
resources imposed over the past decades require, in my view,
that
Afgri be afforded two months to ensure that its wastewater is managed
and provided for. I impose this deferment, not for the
benefit of
Afgri, but for the common good. Afgri has had the benefit and
luxury to dispose of its wastewater for more than
a decade free of
charge. Afgri’s right to pump its wastewater to the pan
on Portion 10 since termination of the permission
it had, with the
resulted encroachment on Portion 35, continued for a period just shy
of two years. Under the circumstances
and should Afgri for any
reason whatsoever be unable to dispose of its wastewater within the
two month period mentioned in the
executive part of this judgment,
the interdictory relief shall take effect as stated in the order.
COSTS
[26]
Afgri’s opposition to the application
is unreasonable, spurious and at variance with what one would expect
from a reasonable
neighbour who had been enjoying and still enjoys
the opportunity to dispose of its wastewater yielded by a commercial
activity.
In my view judicial displeasure should be expressed
with the appropriate cost order and the applicants should be
indemnified in
respect of the costs they had to incur to obtain the
relief on the appropriate scale of costs. I, therefore,
exercise my
discretion in this regard to award the costs of this
application to the applicants on a scale as between attorney and
client.
THE ORDER
Under the circumstances I
make the following order:
1.
The respondent is interdicted and
restrained from pumping water from the wastewater treatment plant and
pond on the property known
as Portion 8 of the Farm Modderfontein
236, Registration Division IR, Mpumalanga Province to the first
applicant’s property
known as Portion 35 (a portion of portion
9) of the farm Modderfontein, 236, Registration Division I.R.,
Mpumalanga Province.
2.
The order set out in paragraph 1 above
shall become effective after 2 months from date of this order to
allow the respondent time
to arrange its affairs to dispose of the
wastewater it produces on its property mentioned in paragraph 1
above.
3.
The respondent shall pay the applicants’
costs on a scale as between attorney and client.
H F JACOBS
ACTING Judge of the
High Court
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e-mail. The date
and time for hand-down is
on the 7
TH
of MARCH 2025 at 14h00.
APPEARANCES
Counsel for
applicant:
Adv PL Uys
Email:
lafras@lulaw.co.za
Attorneys for
applicant:
VFV Attorneys
Email:
hein@vfv.co.za
Counsel for
respondent:
Adv JP Van Den Berg SC
Email:
advjp1@gmail.com
Adv
JHA Saunders
Email:
advjhas@gkchambers.co.za
Attorneys for
respondent:
VZLR Attorneys
Email:
wian@vzlr.co.za
[1]
The
respondent
[2]
Portion
8 of the Farm Modderfontein 236, Registration Division IR,
Mpumalanga Province, 170 hectares in extent
[3]
Portion
10 of the Farm Modderfontein 236, Registration Division IR,
Mpumalanga Province
[4]
The
remaining extent of Portion 35 (a portion of portion 9) of the Farm
Modderfontein 236, Registration Division I.R., Mpumalanga
Province
[5]
The
first applicant
[6]
The
second applicant
[7]
See
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) at
[26]
[8]
See
below
[9]
See
Soffiantini v Mould
1956 (4) SA 150
(E) at 154E-H; Room Hire Co
(Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd
1949 (3) SA 1155
(T) at
1165; BR Southwood, Essential Judicial Reasoning, Lexis Nexis, 2015,
pages 22-30
[10]
See
Trust Bank van Afrika Bpk v Western Bank Bpk en Andere NNO
1978 (4)
SA 281
(A) at 293H.
[11]
Mamadi
v Premier, Limpopo and Others
2024 (1) SA 1
(CC) at [22]
[12]
Botha
v Smuts
2025 (1) SA 581
(CC) at [271] – [280]
[13]
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) at 55
[14]
Juta
& Co Ltd and Others v De Koker and Others
1994 (3) SA 499
(T) at 511F;
Smith
v Kwanonqubela Town Council
1999 (4) SA 947
(SCA) at [15]
[15]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd & Another
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) at par
[13]
; MV New Endeavor and Others v
Indian Oil Corp Ltd
2024 (6) SA 64
(SCA) at [44]
[16]
Lombaard
v Droprop CC & Others
2010 (5) SA 1
(SCA) at [26].
[17]
Buffalo
Freight Systems (Pty) Ltd v Crestleigh Trading (Pty) Ltd &
Another
2011 (1) SA (8) SCA at [19]-[21].
[18]
Mokala
Beleggings & Another v Minister of Rural Development and Land
Reform & Others
2012 (4) SA 22
(SCA) at [11].
[19]
National
Scrap Metal (Cape Town) (Pty) Ltd & Another v Murray &
Roberts Ltd & Others
2012 (5) SA 300
(SCA) at [17]
[20]
Wightman
(supra)
at [13]
[21]
See:
South
Africa Post Office v De Lacy
2009 (5) SA 255
(SCA) at [37]
[22]
PriceWaterhouseCoopers
Inc and Others v National Potato Co-Operative Ltd and another
ZASCA 2 (4 March 2015) para [97]
[23]
LAWSA
Vol 43 par 505 - 506
[24]
Laskey
and Another v Showzone CC and Others
2007 (2) SA 48
(C) at [40] – [47]
[25]
The
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa of 1996 read with
section 3
of the
National Water Act, 36 of 1998
sino noindex
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