Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 288South Africa
Ba-Phalaborwa Municipality v Tipuprox (Pty) Ltd and Another (030618/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 288 (14 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Ba-Phalaborwa Municipality v Tipuprox (Pty) Ltd and Another (030618/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 288 (14 March 2025)
Ba-Phalaborwa Municipality v Tipuprox (Pty) Ltd and Another (030618/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 288 (14 March 2025)
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sino date 14 March 2025
###### REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:030618/2023
(1) REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 14/03/2025
In the matter between:
BA-PHALABORWA MUNICIPALITY
APPLICANT
and
TIPUPROX (PTY)
LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
MM
RIP SC
N.O.
SECOND RESPONDENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically and by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by way of email and
shall be
uploaded on caselines. The date for hand down is deemed to be on 14
March 2025.
JUDGMENT
MALI
J:
[1]
This is an application for an order declaring the arbitration award
void, based on the lapsing of the arbitration. If it is
found that
the arbitration award is not void, the applicant seeks to set aside
the arbitration award based on the provisions of
section 33 of the
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965 (the Act).
[2]
The applicant is a municipality duly established in terms of
section
12
of the
Local Government: Municipal Structures Act, 117 of 1998
,
with its principal place of business in Limpopo. The first respondent
is a company duly registered and incorporated within the
Laws of the
Republic, with the registered address in Pretoria Gauteng. The
second respondent is a major male practising Senior
Advocate based in
Pretoria, Gauteng.
[3]
The first respondent instituted action proceedings in the Polokwane
High Court against the applicant during July 2014 for the
payment of
amounts allegedly due in terms of an agreement. The first respondent
and the applicant concluded an arbitration agreement
during February
2021. The second respondent is the Arbitrator.
[4]
The first respondent is opposing the application. The first
respondent first raised two points in
limine
, (i) Non-
compliance with
Rule 7
due to lack of Council resolution and (ii)
Lack of jurisdiction.
Non
-compliance with Rule 7
of the Uniform
Rules of Court
[5]
Rule 7 reads:
“
7
Power of Attorney (1) Subject to the provisions of subrules (2) and
(3) a power of attorney to act need not filed,
but the
authority of anyone acting on behalf of a party may,
within
10 days after it has come to the notice of a party that such person
is so acting, or with the leave of the court on good
cause shown at
any time before judgment, be disputed, whereafter such person may no
longer act unless he satisfied the court that
he is authorised so to
act, and to enable him to do so the court may postpone the hearing of
the action or application.”
[Own emphasis]
[6]
The deponent to the founding affidavit is the duly appointed
Municipal Manager. In opposing the point in
limine
, at
paragraph 11 of the replying affidavit the following is stated:
“
11.1
The applicant has indeed complied with the Rule 7 notice.
11.2
It is disputed that a council resolution is required.”
[7]
The averments are as brief as above, the applicant does not take the
court into confidence as to how it has complied with Rule
7 notice.
It also does not state the basis of disputing the requirement of
council resolution.
[8]
The law pertaining to the
Council Resolution to institute legal proceedings by the
Municipality has long been settled in
Manana
v King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality
(345/09)
[2010]
ZASCA 144
. At
paragraphs 16 and 17 the following is stated:
“
[16] A
municipal council is not capable in practice of exercising its
executive authority by running the day-to-day affairs
of the
municipality and it employs staff to do that on its behalf. In the
past it was common for municipal councils to confer the
appropriate
authority upon their staff by delegation of all or some of its
executive powers. Such a delegation of power does not
ordinarily
divest the delegator of the power to perform the particular function
itself. As the authors of De Smith’s
Judicial Review
express
it:
‘
[I]t
has sometimes been stated that delegation implies a denudation of
authority…. This cannot be accepted as an accurate
general
proposition. On the contrary, the general rule is that an authority
which delegates its powers does not divest itself of
them ….’
[17]
In my view s 55(1) is no more than a statutory means of
conferring such power upon municipal managers to attend to the
affairs of the municipality on behalf of the municipal council. There
is no basis for construing the section as simultaneously
divesting
the municipal council of any of its executive powers. Indeed, as I
have already pointed out, the Constitution vests all
executive
authority – which includes the authority to appoint staff –
in the municipal council and legislation is not
capable of lawfully
divesting it of that power. To the extent that there might be any
ambiguity in the statute in that respect
it must be construed to
avoid that result.
[9]
The power/s of the Municipal Manager are not being challenged, but
the lack of authority in the form of Council Resolution by
the
Municipal Manager to institute legal proceedings. The issue is
whether this application is authorised by Council resolutions
and
nothing more. From the above, the Municipal Manager of the
Municipality cannot appoint attorneys and authorise litigation in
the
absence of a Council Resolution.
[10]
The applicant has failed to show that the application is authorised
by the Council resolutions. In conclusion the Rule 7 challenge
on the
lack of authority of the Municipal Manager to institute the
application stands to be upheld. This issue alone is dispositive
of
this application. In the result I grant the following order.
ORDER
1. The
application is dismissed.
2. The applicant is
ordered to pay the costs of this application on a punitive scale as
between attorney and client.
N.P. MALI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
APJ Els SC
apjels@lawcircle.co.za
Adv.
N.G Louw
Attorneys:
Thomas
& Swanepoel Attorneys
louis@tslegal.co.za
For
1
st
Respondents:
Adv.
K Mokwena
kprofessionalincorporation@gmail.com
Attorneys:
HLM
Mamabola Attorneys
hlm@hlmlegal.co.za
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