Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 232South Africa
Lombardy Development (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (64850/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 232 (4 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 March 2024
Headnotes
the City may not impose rates retrospectively. Hence the application to review and set aside the City’s adoption of the
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Lombardy Development (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (64850/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 232 (4 March 2024)
Lombardy Development (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (64850/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 232 (4 March 2024)
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sino date 4 March 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: 64850/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE: 4/3/2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
LOMBARDY
DEVELOPMENT (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
MUNICIPAL MANAGER OF
THE TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Second
Respondent
CITY
OF TSHWANE VALUATION APPEAL BOARD
Third Respondent
HENDRIK
JOHANNES VILJOEN
Fourth Respondent
FREDERIK
COENRAAD DE BEER
Fifth Respondent
MAMOKGETHI
MAMMOLE MOKGWETSI
Sixth Respondent
LIEZL
KLEYNHANS
Seventh Respondent
SHANA
FRANK DA CUNHA
Eighth Respondent
PIETER
JOHANNES SPAUMER
Ninth Respondent
KAITECH
(PTY) LTD
Tenth Respondent
WILLIAMS
PROPERTY INVESTMENT (PTY) LTD
Eleventh
Respondent
CJ
VAN DER LINDE EN VENTER PROJECTS (PTY) LTD
Twelfth
Respondent
ELIZABETH
COMBRINK
Thirteen
Respondent
NOMLAMLI
VERONICA MAHANJANA
Fourteenth Respondent
JOHANNES
NICOLAAS DE VOS
Fifteenth Respondent
JAMES
SLABBERT
Sixteenth Respondent
LISHA
HARILAL
Seventeenth Respondent
BUSISIWE
LETTIE NKOSI
Eighteenth Respondent
KETSO
OBED TSEKELI
Ninetieth
Respondent
RICHARD
MAFUNISE
Twentieth Respondent
MICHAEL
JOHAN LEDWITH
Twenty-first Respondent
KHANYISA
ANTHONY MBABELE
Twenty-second
Respondent
MANQOBA
FREDERICK AYANDA SALIMANE
Twenty-third
Respondent
BOITSHOKO
RAKUBU NTSHABELE
Twenty-fourth Respondent
MANTI
ANGELA MATEKANE
Twenty- fifth Respondent
KGAUGELO
ROMEO SHADUNG
Twenty-sixth Respondent
MASHUNDU
GANGAZHE
Twenty-seventh
Respondent
LISPA
RONELLA KANIA
Twenty-eighth Respondent
MTHUNDHOLOVHANI
FAMILY TRUST
Twenty-ninth Respondent
AMATIMA
FAMILY TRUST
Thirtieth
Respondent
WYNAND
JACOBUS LE ROUX
Thirty-first Respondent
HEILA
ELIZABETH GELDENHUYS
Thirty-second
Respondent
Delivered.
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email. The date and time for
hand down is deemed to be 10h00 on 4
March 2024.
JUDGMENT
RANCHOD J
Introduction
[1]
This is a review application which concerns a decision by the City of
Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality (the City) to implement a so-called
‘Extraordinary Valuation Roll’ (the EVR) which purported
to retrospectively
re-categorise seventy-eight properties (the
properties) owned by the applicant for rates
purposes.
The application is in terms of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act, 2000 (PAJA), alternatively, the principle
of legality.
Where I refer to the first, second and third respondents jointly they
will be referred to as ‘the respondents’
as none of the
other respondents are opposing the application.
[2]
The applicant says the Fourth to Thirty-second respondents, who
became owners of properties
appearing in the EVR as owned by the
applicant during the period of the EVR (i.e., 1 July 2013 to 30 June
2017) are necessary respondents
to this application. No relief is
sought against these respondents, save for seeking costs against any
of them who elect to oppose
the application. They are cited due to
their direct and substantial interest in the outcome of the review
application.
[3]
The City adopted and retrospectively imposed the EVR in response to
decisions of Tuchten
J (the Tuchten judgment) and the Supreme Court
of Appeal (the SCA) judgment, which confirmed the Tuchten judgment on
appeal (save
for paragraphs 5 and 6 of the order which were set
aside. The Tuchten judgment set aside previous valuation rolls in
terms of which
the City had purported to retrospectively
re-categorise the applicant’s properties for purposes of
levying rates. The City
says it complied with the Tuchten and SCA
judgments by re-categorising the properties for a second time. This
it did by adopting
the EVR and implementing it retrospectively.
[4]
The applicant, however, contends that the Local Government: Municipal
Property Rates
Act 6 of 2004 (the Rates Act) makes no provision for
an EVR and further, that the Tuchten and SCA judgments have expressly
held
that the City may not impose rates retrospectively. Hence the
application to review and set aside the City’s adoption of the
EVR; the decision of the Municipal Valuer to dismiss the applicant’s
objections to the EVR; and the VAB’s decision
to dismiss the
applicant’s appeal.
Material background
facts
[5]
In July 2011 the Kungwini Local Municipality together with the
neighbouring Nokeng
tsa Taemane Local Municipality and Metsweding
District Municipality were dis-established and incorporated into the
City of Tshwane.
[6]
The applicant’s properties are situated within the former
Kungwini area. They
were at all relevant times vacant stands in the
Lombardy Estate situated to the east of Pretoria. Whilst under
administration of
Kungwini, the applicant’s properties were
categorized as “
residential”
despite provision
having been made in its rates policy for a rateable category
for vacant land. After the disestablishment
of Kungwini, the City
adopted a Special Valuation Roll (SVR) in 2012 which recategorized
the vacant properties in the Kungwini
area from residential to vacant
land for the purposes of the municipal rates, in accordance with the
City’s rates policies.
The City had determined a higher rate
for vacant land in terms of the Local Government: Municipal Systems
Act 32 of 2000 (the Systems
Act).
[7]
The recategorized properties included seventy-eight properties of the
applicant. It
is not in dispute that the properties of the applicant
were vacant at the relevant time. The applicant consequently had to
pay
the higher rate. Unsurprisingly, the applicant was unhappy about
this. It, together with thirteen others instituted review proceedings
seeking,
inter alia
, the review and setting aside of the
City’s 2012 SVR.
[8]
Tuchten J was seized with the matter. The learned Judge held that by
adopting the
2012 SVR the City failed to comply with the notice
requirements provided for in section 49 of the Rates Act and
accordingly reviewed
and set aside the administrative decision of the
City to recategorize the applicant’s properties from
residential to vacant
land. The judgment was delivered on 31 May
2016. The order reads:
“
1
To the extent necessary, any lateness in bringing these review
proceedings is
condoned under section 9(2) of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000 (PAJA) and the period of 180
days provided
for in Section 7(1) of PAJA is concomitantly extended.
2
The respondent’s 2012 supplementary valuation roll is declared
invalid
and set aside to the extent that it re-categorised as
“Vacant” properties situated in the municipal area of the
former
Kungwini Local Municipality formerly categorised as
“Residential” (the affected properties).
3
The respondent’s 2013 general valuation roll and all subsequent
valuation
rolls of the respondent are declared invalid and set aside
to the extent that they categorise the affected properties as
“Vacant”
unless and until the affected properties are
lawfully recategorized as such.
4
The imposition by the respondent of the assessment rate applicable to
vacant
land on those of the affected properties which belonged to the
applicants on 28 June 2013, the date upon which the review
application
was instituted, is declared invalid and set aside.
5
Item 5.1.5(d) of the respondent’s rates policy with effective
date
1 July 2011, as amended (pp784-799 of the record) is declared
invalid and set aside.
6
The respondent is prohibited from further implementing any of the
decisions
mentioned above in this order to the extent that they have
been set aside.
7
Pursuant to the applicants’ tender made through counsel, the
applicants
are directed to pay rates to the respondent in respect of
the affected properties owned by them at the rate applicable to such
properties immediately preceding the coming into operation of the
respondent’s 2012 supplementary valuation roll until the
rate
applicable to such properties is changed according to law.
8
The decision to implement the 2013 general valuation roll is remitted
to
the respondent to consider afresh the appropriate categorisation
of the affected properties and the rate which should be levied
upon
the affected properties, with due regard to the provisions of the
Municipal Property Rates Act, 6 of 2004, to other applicable
legislation and to this judgment.
9
Except as expressly stated in this order, decisions taken and acts
performed
under and pursuant to any of the valuation rolls mentioned
in this order are not invalid merely because of the invalidity of
such
valuation rolls themselves.
10
The respondent must pay the applicants’ costs, including the
costs consequent
upon the employment of both senior and junior
counsel.”
[9]
The City appealed to the SCA. Save for setting aside paragraphs 5 and
6 of the order
made by Tuchten J, it dismissed the City’s
appeal with costs. The judgment of the SCA was handed down on 31 May
2018.
[10]
The City thereafter purported to comply with the orders of Tuchten J
and the SCA by adopting
an Extraordinary Valuation Roll which
retrospectively recategorised the affected properties as vacant land.
[11]
The applicant is of the view that the City’s recategorization
of its properties was invalid
and unlawful in that there is no
provision in the Rates Act for the creation of an EVR nor is there
provision for the retrospective
implementation of the EVR. It
therefore launched the present application in which it seeks to
review and set aside:
11.1
the adoption of an EVR
alternatively
, to declare the EVR
invalid and unlawful to the extent that it retrospectively
recategorized properties owned, or previously owed
by the applicant
(the review application);
11.2
the decision of the City’s Valuer (the Valuer) to reject the
applicant’s seventy-eight objections;
and
11.3
the decision of the Valuation Appeal Board (VAB) to dismiss the
applicant’s appeals against the decision
of the Valuer.
[12]
There are two related interlocutory applications for determination:
12.1 A
belated application by the City to strike out certain portions of the
applicant’s replying affidavit
in the main application (the
strike out application).
12.2 A
conditional application by the applicant for an extension, in terms
of section 9(1) of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of
2000 (the PAJA), of the 180 days time period provided for in section
7(1) of the PAJA,
alternatively
, condonation for any failure
to institute the review proceedings within a reasonable time, and for
exemption, in terms of section
7(2)(c) of PAJA, from the duty to
exhaust any internal remedies (the extension and exemption
application).
Points
in limine
[13]
The respondents raised four points
in limine
. It would be
apposite to deal with them before I turn to the interlocutory and
review applications.
The first point
in
limine: lis alibi pendens
[14]
The City contends that the review application ought to be stayed on
the grounds of
lis alibi pendens
. The contention is based on
the fact that the applicant had launched an application to hold the
City in contempt (the contempt
proceedings) for failing to comply
with the order of Tuchten J (as confirmed by the SCA save for
paragraphs 5 and 6 which were
set aside) and that application was
still pending.
[15]
The requirements for a plea of
lis alibi pendens
are
well-established. There must be: (a)
proceedings between
the parties; (b) on the same cause of action; and
(c) for the same relief.
[16]
The City submitted that the present proceedings “
in essence”
are based on “
the same subject matter”
as the
contempt proceedings. I do not agree. The cause of action in the
contempt proceedings was the City’s failure to comply
with the
order granted by Tuchten J. However, the cause of action in the
present proceedings is the City’s adoption of the
EVR which the
applicant alleges is unlawful and therefore must be reviewed and set
aside. They are two distinct applications.
The second point
in
limine
: the EVR is immune from revie
w
[17]
The City contends that the EVR is immune from review or judicial
challenge because the Tuchten
and SCA judgments required the adoption
of the EVR. It therefore constituted a “
court ordered
valuation roll”
which is “
immune to being
challenged on review unless these judgments are rescinded or
repealed.”
As will become apparent later in this judgment,
the Tuchten and SCA judgments did not contemplate the adoption of an
EVR, let alone
retrospectively, hence this point
in limine
falls to be dismissed.
The third point
in
limine
: delay
[18]
The City’s third point
in limine
(which is conditional
upon its second one failing) is that the applicant
unduly delayed the institution of these
proceedings. It says the EVR
became effective on 10 December 2018. The applicant launched the
review application only two years
later whereas section 7(1)(a) of
the PAJA requires an applicant to institute proceedings without
unreasonable delay and not later
than 180 days of the conclusion of
any internal remedies available to it.
[19]
On 7 November 2018 the City gave notice of the EVR. The applicant
lodged seventy-eight objections
on 7 December 2018 (for the
seventy-eight properties it had) against the City’s decision to
impose rates based on its re-categorisation
of the applicant’s
properties from ‘residential’ to ‘vacant land’.
On 29 April 2019, the Municipal
Valuer rejected the objections. The
applicant appealed to the Valuation Appeal Board (the VAB) on 23 May
2019. The VAB heard the
appeal more than a year later, on 26 June
2020, and gave its decision dismissing the appeal on 28 July 2020.
The applicant issued
the present application on 9 December 2020.
[20]
The City admits this timeline in its answering affidavit. The
timeline shows that the applicant
launched these proceedings within
180 days of the VAB’s decision. However, the City contends that
the applicant erred in
lodging its objections and appeals to the
Municipal Manager and thereafter to the VAB in terms of sections 51
and 54 of the Rates
Act. The consequence of this, according to the
City, is that the objections and appeals pursued by the applicant
should be disregarded
in considering whether the applicant delayed in
instituting these proceedings. If they are disregarded then the
applicant was well
outside the 180 day time limit provided for in the
PAJA. However this submission overlooks the fact that the City
was complicit
in the applicant’s decision to lodge the
objections and the appeal in terms of sections 51 and 54,
respectively, of the Rates
Act. The City acquiesced in the
applicant’s attempts to challenge the EVR by objections and
appeal.
[1]
It represented to the
applicant that the VAB should decide the appeals.
[2]
The VAB delayed the making of a decision. In response to an
application to compel the VAB to determine the appeals, the City
agreed
to a draft order stating that the VAB “
shall
decide the Applicant’s appeals
”.
[3]
And it did so well knowing the grounds on which the appeal was
based.
[4]
The first time the
City took the point that the challenge against the EVR was not
justifiable, was in the heads of argument it
filed in respect of the
appeal in June 2020.
[5]
In my
view the City is therefore precluded from now taking issue with the
applicant’s decision to challenge the EVR on the
basis that it
did.
[21]
The City also argued that it was not permissible for the applicant to
invoke the objection and
appeal processes that it did, because
section 50(2) of the Rates Act provides that objections must be in
relation to specific individual
properties and not against the
valuation roll as such.
[6]
But
the applicant in fact did submit seventy-eight objections – one
each for the individual properties.
[22]
The point
in limine
falls to be dismissed.
The fourth point
in
limine:
failure to exhaust internal remedies
[23]
The City’s fourth point
in limine
is that the applicant
failed to exhaust its internal remedies by not utilising an internal
appeal process in terms of section 62(1)
of the Systems Act. I have
already alluded to the fact that the City was complicit in the
applicant’s decision to lodge the
objections and the appeal in
terms of sections 51 and 54, respectively, of the Rates Act. In any
event the reliance on section
62(1) of the Systems Act is in my view
misplaced.
[24]
Section 62(1) provides for a right of appeal against “a
decision taken by a political structure,
political office bearer,
councilor or staff member of a municipality in terms of a power or
duty delegated or sub-delegated by
a delegation authority to the
political structure, political office bearer, councilor or staff
member. A “
delegating authority
” is defined in
section 1 of the Systems Act as being either the municipal council or
a political structure, political office
bearer, councilor, or staff
member of the municipality, depending on the nature of the
delegation. But the City does not suggest
that the decision to adopt
the EVR was taken “
in terms of a power or duty delegated or
sub-delegated by a delegating authority.”
Nor could it,
because on its own version, the decision to adopt the EVR was not
taken in terms of a power ordinarily vested in
a municipality but
rather in terms of the power (“
vires”)
conferred
upon it in terms of the Tuchten and SCA judgments.
[25]
The applicant’s submission, which is conceded by the City, is
that the Rates Act makes
no provision for an EVR. Since the power in
terms of which the decision to adopt the EVR was purportedly taken is
not one provided
for in statute, it cannot have been one subject to
delegation in terms of section 59 and, hence, subject to appeal in
terms of
section 62(1) of the Systems Act. It follows that the
applicant had no right of appeal in terms of section 62(1). Either it
was
required to object and appeal in terms of sections 51 and 54 of
the Rates Act, as it did, or it was required to do nothing at all.
Either way, the applicant did not fail to exhaust its internal
remedies.
[26]
In the circumstances, the fourth point
in limine
also falls to
be dismissed.
The extension and
exemption application
[27]
The applicant launched the application for an extension and exemption
because the City raised
delay and failure to exhaust internal
remedies as points
in limine.
I have determined that the
points
in limine
fall to be dismissed. There is therefore no
need to determine the application for extension and exemption.
However, the applicant
seeks costs on the attorney and client scale
against the first to third respondents. There was no need for the
City to have put
the applicant to the cost of bringing the
application. A punitive costs order would be justified in the
circumstances.
The striking out
application
[28]
The City launched a striking out application after the applicant
filed its replying affidavit
in the main application on the basis
that certain paragraphs therein constituted new matter, which should
have been contained in
the founding affidavit. It was contended that
the City will not be able to file a further affidavit in response
without the leave
of the court. It is not clear why it chose not to
apply for leave to file a further affidavit. The applicant opposes
the striking
out application on the grounds that it is moot or
without merit.
[29]
The allegedly offending paragraphs are paragraphs 45, 47 to 57 and
paragraphs 58 to 60 of the
replying affidavit. However, the impugned
paragraphs are a comprehensive response to the points
in limine
raised by the City in its answering affidavit in the main
application. In the circumstances it could hardly be contended that
it was new matter.
[30]
In view of the findings I have made regarding the points
in
limine,
the application to strike out must fail.
The main (review)
application
[31]
I turn then to the main application, a synopsis of which has been set
out at the beginning of
this judgment.
[32]
As I said, the applicant raised several grounds for reviewing and
setting aside the decision
of the City to impose what it termed an
‘Extraordinary Valuation Roll’ (the EVR). I deal with
them in turn.
That the EVR is
ultra
vires
and is impermissibly of retrospective effect
[33]
The applicant’s contention is that the EVR is neither
contemplated in, nor authorised by
the Rates Act. It is therefore
ultra vires
the City’s powers and unlawful.
[34]
The City does not dispute that there is no legislative basis for the
adoption of the EVR. It
adopted the EVR based on its own
interpretation of the Tuchten and SCA judgments. The City referred to
paragraph 30 of the SCA
judgment where it explained how order 8 of
the Tuchten judgment should be interpreted. The SCA stated:
“
30
As to paragraph 8 of the order: understood contextually, the order
requires the City to undertake
a valid process of re-categorization
of the Kungwini vacant properties, thereby complying with the MPRA
[the Rates Act]. Put another
way, if the City wishes to apply its
vacant land rate to those properties it must first properly
recategorise them as vacant.
This does
not require the retrospective compiling of a Valuation Roll.
(My emphasis.) Rather it is for the City to issue, following the
procedures prescribed in the MPRA a General or Supplementary
Valuation Roll that validly re-categorises the Kungwini properties as
vacant. Once it has done that it would be free to apply the
vacant
land rate to those properties. The respondents did not challenge the
validity of the rate applicable to vacant land and
it is plain that
the High Court does not mean by its order that the City must
reconsider this rate or that the rate has been declared
invalid.”
[35]
Tuchten J having remitted the decision to implement the 2013 GVR,
insofar as the categorization
of the affected properties are
concerned, the City considered the process “
afresh
”.
It states that it complied with the order by issuing, in
compliance with the prescribed procedure in the Rates Act,
other
applicable legislation and the Tuchten judgment the EVR in which the
affected properties were re-categorised as vacant.
[7]
The EVR accordingly corrected the categorization of the affected
properties based on the
de
facto
condition of the properties on 1 July 2013.
[36]
Insofar as retrospectivity is concerned the City’s stance is
that the Tuchten and SCA judgments
contemplated a “
sui
generis process
”
which resulted in a “
court
ordered Valuation Roll in respect of the affected properties for the
period 1 July 2013 to 30 June 2017
”.
This, it says, did not result in a retrospective compilation of a
valuation roll but, instead, resulted in the 2013 GVR
being replaced
with a valuation roll as provided for in the Tuchten and SCA
judgments. It says the “effect” of the
Tuchten and SCA
judgments “
is
to have clothed the Municipality with the necessary vires to have
adopted and published the EVR.
”
[8]
[37]
The applicant contends that the City’s interpretation of the
Tuchten judgment is incorrect.
The judgment requires compliance with
the Rates Act and other applicable legislation. Insofar as the City
defended its decision
to impose the increased rate retrospectively,
the learned Judge held at paragraph 54 of the judgment:
“
I
therefore hold that the City has no power to impose rates
retrospectively.”
[38]
In my view, it is clear that once the SCA held that a “retrospective
compiling of a valuation
roll” was not required. The City’s
submissions to the contrary fall to be rejected. It follows that the
EVR is
ultra vires
in that there is no provision for it in the
Rates Act. It is also invalid insofar as it is purported to be of
retrospective effect.
That the City
failed to comply with procedural requirements
[39]
The City claims to have “substantially” complied with the
procedural requirements
of section 49 of the Rates Act.
[9]
However, it failed to comply in four respects. Firstly, the
prescribed notice did not contain all the prescribed information.
Secondly, the notice was not delivered in time. Thirdly, the City did
not serve the notice on every owner. Fourthly, it failed to
provide
any evidence that it published the EVR on its website as required.
That the EVR was
adopted for an ulterior purpose
[40]
The applicant avers that the City’s main purpose for creating
an EVR and implementing it
retrospectively was to avoid having to
potentially refund or credit the applicant with millions of Rands it
had raised by the application
of the EVR. Counsel for the City
conceded as much in their heads of argument where it is argued that
if the EVR is set aside the
City would have to reverse the amounts
levied against the properties. It was also argued that the City’s
(then) current budget
did not make provision for a situation where
millions would have to be repaid and that ‘it would place a
tremendous burden
on an already financially strained City.’
This submission overlooks the converse situation that if an unlawful
and invalid
EVR were allowed to stand then it is the applicant who
would be highly prejudiced financially by having paid rates that it
was
not obliged legally to pay. The submissions of Counsel for the
City in this regard can therefore not be sustained. There is merit
in
the applicant’s contention that the EVR was adopted for an
ulterior purpose.
[41]
In all the circumstances the EVR falls to be reviewed and set aside.
[42]
I make the following order:
1.
The points
in
limine
are dismissed with costs
including the costs of two counsel.
2.
The application to strike out is dismissed
with costs including the costs of two counsel.
3.
The applicant is awarded the costs of the
application for extension and exemption on the attorney and client
scale including the
costs of two counsel.
4.
The decision of the first respondent to
impose an extraordinary valuation roll in respect of the period 1
July 2013 to 30 June 2017
(“the EVR”) is reviewed and set
aside to the extent that it applies to properties owned, or
previously owned, by the
applicant (“the Properties”).
5.
The EVR is reviewed and set aside to the
extent that it applies to the Properties.
6.
It is declared that, for the period 1 July
2013 to 30 June 2017 (“the EVR period”), the applicant
shall pay rates in
respect of the Properties at the residential
tariff.
7.
It is declared that the applicant shall
only be liable for rates in respect of the Properties for the periods
in respect of which
it owned the Properties.
8.
The first respondent is directed to give
effect to paragraphs 6 and 7 above by taking the following steps in
respect of the Properties
within 90 (ninety) days of this order:
8.1 Retrospectively
reversing all invalid rates (i.e. vacant property rates) levied
against the Properties for the EVR period and
charging the Properties
residential property rates for the period (“the adjustments”).
When making the adjustments
the first respondent must also
recalculate the interest charged against the Properties, taking into
account both the reversal of
the vacant property rates and all
amounts paid in respect of each of the Properties during the EVR
period.
8.2 Where the adjustments
result in the total rates amount paid in respect of any of the
Properties exceeding the total amount actually
payable for the EVR
period:
8.2.1
reimbursing the excess amounts, together with interest thereon at the
prescribed
lending rate, to the applicant to the extent the applicant
was responsible for making payment of the excess amounts and has
subsequently
sold the Properties concerned; or
8.2.2
crediting the excess amounts, together with interest thereon at the
prescribed
lending rate, to the rates accounts of the Properties
concerned to the extent the applicant was responsible for making
payment
of the excess amounts and has not subsequently sold the
Properties concerned, subject thereto that any credit balances
remaining
upon the sale of the Properties concerned will be
reimbursed to the applicant.
8.3 Where the adjustments
do not result in the total amount paid in respect of any of the
Properties exceeding the total amount
actually payable for the EVR
period, reducing the amount owing as a reduced debit balance on the
rates account of the Properties
concerned.
8.4 Once having affected
the adjustments, furnishing the applicant with a written account in
terms of
section 27(1)
of the
Local Government: Municipal Property
Rates Act 6 of 2004
, which written account must specify the credit or
debit balance for rates payable; the date on or before which any
debit balance
is payable; how the credit or debit balance was
calculated; the market value of the property; and any other relevant
information
required to understand the basis upon which the credit or
debit balance was calculated.
9.
The decision of the second respondent (City
of Tshwane Municipal Valuer) to dismiss the applicant’s
objections to the EVR
is reviewed and set aside.
10.
The third respondent’s decision to
dismiss the applicant’s objections to the EVR is reviewed and
set aside.
11.
The first, second and third respondents,
together with any other respondents who oppose this application, are
directed to pay the
costs of the application, including the costs of
two counsel.
RANCHOD J
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
12 November 2023
Date
of judgment:
4 March 2024
Appearances:
For
Applicant:
Adv
N Ferreira & Adv A Molver
Instructed
by Adams and Adams Attorneys
4
Daventry Road
Lynnwood
Bridge Office Park
Lynwood
Manor, Pretoria
For
Respondents:
Adv
T Strydom SC & Adv L Kotze
Mothle
Jooma Sabdia Inc
Ground
Floor, Duncan Manor
Cnr
Duncan and Brooks Street
Brooklyn,
Pretoria
[1]
Replying
affidavit, paras 50.1 and 50.4, Caselines 5 – 24.
[2]
Replying
affidavit, para 50.4, Caselines 5 – 24.
[3]
Replying
affidavit, para 50.5 and annexures “RA3” and “RA4”,
Caselines 5 – 24.
[4]
Replying
affidavit, para 50.5 and annxures “RA3” and “RA4”,
Caselines 5 – 24.
[5]
Replying
affidavit, para 50.6, Caselines 5 – 25.
[6]
Answering
affidavit, para 7.16, Caselines 4 – 33.
[7]
The
City’s answering affidavit in the main application at para
4.23.
[8]
Answering
affidavit para 6.12.
[9]
When
adopting a valuation roll, section 49 of the Rates Act requires the
City to –
(a)
Publish notice of a valuation roll in the
Provincial Gazette, which must set out the inspection period for the
notice;
(b)
Disseminate the substance of the notice in
the manner prescribed in Chapter 4 of the Municipal Systems Act;
(c)
Serve “on every owner of property
listed in the valuation roll” a copy of the notice together
with an extract of the
valuation roll pertaining to that owner’s
property; and
(d)
Publish the notice and the valuation roll
on its official website.
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