Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 308South Africa
New GX Enviro Solutions and Logistics Holdings (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (53694/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 308 (2 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 June 2021
Headnotes
to be just and equitable in the circumstances. New GX argues that I erred in reaching this conclusion.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## New GX Enviro Solutions and Logistics Holdings (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (53694/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 308 (2 April 2024)
New GX Enviro Solutions and Logistics Holdings (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (53694/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 308 (2 April 2024)
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sino date 2 April 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 53694/2020
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
DATE: 02/04/2024
In the matter between:
NEW GX ENVIRO
SOLUTIONS AND
LOGISTICS HOLDINGS
(PTY)
LTD
APPLICANT
and
CITY OF TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
FIRST RESPONDENT
JUSTICE SANDILE NGCOBO
N.O.
SECOND RESPONDENT
In re:
CITY OF TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
FIRST APPLICANT
ACTING MUNICIPAL
MANAGER – CITY OF
TSHWANE METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY SECOND
APPLICANT
THE ADMINISTRATOR -
CITY OF
TSHWANE METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY THIRD
APPLICANT
and
NEW GX ENVIRO
SOLUTIONS AND
LOGISTICS HOLDINGS
(PTY)
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT ON
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
MARX DU PLESSIS, AJ
Introduction
[1]
On
25 August 2023 I delivered a judgment in this matter and dismissed
New GX’s Rule 42(1)(b) application. New GX now
applies for
leave to appeal. The parties are referred to as they were in the Rule
42(1)(b) application.
[2]
In
terms of the Rule 42(1)(b) application, New GX applied
for declaratory relief as well as the variation of
an order by Van der Westhuizen J handed down on 21 June 2021.
[3]
New
GX sought this relief in relation to paragraph 4 of the order granted
by Van der Westhuizen J which declares the following:
“
4.
It
is declared that any rights which may already have accrued prior to
the cancellation of the service agreement and to which the
respondent
would be entitled under the impugned service agreement of 10 August
2016, save for any rights to any claim for loss
of profit and claim
for shortfalls pertaining to waste, be preserved;”
[4]
The
relief sought by New GX was premised on the assertion that paragraph
4 of the order by Van der Westhuizen J, as quoted above,
does not
reflect the true intention of Van der Westhuizen J.
[5]
The
basis for this assertion being that Van der Westhuizen J intended to
make an order in line with a concession made by the COT
in its heads
of argument. The concession relied on by New GX being:
“
69.
We
submit that it would be just and equitable if this court following
the declaration of invalidity was to order that, the respondent
be
entitled to any rights which have already accrued and which it is
entitled to under the service agreement save for rights to
any claim
for loss of profits and claims for shortfalls pertaining to waste, be
preserved.
70.
The
just and equitable relief proposed above would enable the respondent
at arbitration to claim for all its expenses pertaining
to the
construction of the transfer station as well as amounts for the works
which it already performed. To that end the city would
not stand to
benefit unduly from the declaration of invalidity.”
[6]
The
judgment of Van der Westhuizen J however records the concession made
by the COT as follows:
“
[46]
It
was conceded on behalf of the applicants that any rights which may
have already accrued prior to the cancellation and to which
the
respondent would be entitled under the impugned service agreement of
10 August 2016, save for any rights to any claim for loss
of profit
and claim for shortfall pertaining to waste, be preserved. In that
regard it, it would be just and equitable to hold
so.”
[7]
I
found that the concession recorded by Van der Westhuizen J in the
judgment of 21 June 2021 is the contention and concession accepted
by
Van der Westhuizen J and which Van der Westhuizen J held to be just
and equitable in the circumstances. New GX argues that I
erred in
reaching this conclusion.
[8]
According
to New GX, it is apparent from the judgment of Van der Westhuizen J
that the court intended to accept and give effect
to the COT’s
concession as set out in its heads of argument, and that Van der
Westhuizen J considered granting an order along
those lines to be
just and equitable.
[9]
The
effect of paragraph 4 of the order by Van der Westhuizen J is to
deprive New GX of a claim for expenses and loans it had incurred
in
order to perform in terms of the impugned service agreement, i.e.
contractual damages. This, New GX argues, is contrary to the
intention of Van der Westhuizen J which was to grant an order
allowing New GX to claim for such expenses and loans.
The
test for leave to appeal
[11]
In
terms of the provisions of
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act,
10 of 2013
(
the
Superior Courts Act
>), leave to appeal
may only be granted when the appeal would have a reasonable prospect
of success; or where there is some other
compelling reason why the
appeal should be heard.
[12]
The
threshold to be met by an applicant for leave to appeal in terms of
the provisions of
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act was
recently explained by the Supreme Court of Appeal in the matter of
Ramakatsa v African National Congress
as follows:
“
[10]
Turning the focus to the relevant provisions of the
Superior
Courts Act (the
SC Act), leave to appeal may only be granted where
the judges concerned are of the opinion that the appeal would have a
reasonable
prospect of success or there are compelling reasons which
exist why the appeal should be heard such as the interests of
justice.
This Court in Caratco, concerning the provisions of s
17(1)(a)(ii) of the SC Act pointed out that if the court is
unpersuaded that
there are prospects of success, it must still
enquire into whether there is a compelling reason to entertain the
appeal. Compelling
reason would of course include an important
question of law or a discreet issue of public importance that will
have an effect on
future disputes. However, this Court correctly
added that ‘but here too the merits remain vitally important
and are often
decisive’. I am mindful of the decisions at high
court level debating whether the use of the word ‘would’
as
opposed to ‘could’ possibly means that the threshold
for granting the appeal has been raised. If a reasonable prospect
of
success is established, leave to appeal should be granted. Similarly,
if there are some other compelling reasons why the appeal
should be
heard, leave to appeal should be granted. The test of reasonable
prospects of success postulates a dispassionate decision
based on the
facts and the law that a court of appeal could reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different to that of the trial court.
In other words, the
appellants in this matter need to convince this Court on proper
grounds that they have prospects of success
on appeal. Those
prospects of success must not be remote, but there must exist a
reasonable chance of succeeding. A sound rational
basis for the
conclusion that there are prospects of success must be shown to
exist.”
[1]
(footnotes
omitted)
Grounds for leave to
appeal
[13]
The
grounds upon which New GX seeks leave to appeal is briefly summarised
in paragraphs [7] – [9] above.
[14]
Upon
reading and considering the judgment of Van der Westhuizen J it is
apparent that the concession made by the COT in its heads
of argument
in no way factored into the judgment and order of Van der Westhuizen
J. The judgment makes no reference to this concession
whatsoever.
[15]
The
concession referred to by Van der Westhuizen J, which he found to be
just and equitable considering the facts and circumstances
of the
matter before him, is the concession recorded in paragraph [46] of
the judgment dated 21 June 2021 and which I quote in
paragraph [6]
hereof.
[16]
Van
der Westhuizen J held that this concession constituted a just and
equitable remedy in so far as the preservation of New GX’s
accrued rights under the impugned service agreement were concerned.
This finding of Van der Westhuizen J has not been overturned
and is
not subject to an appeal.
[17]
According
to New GX, I erred in finding:
(1)
that
the COT’s concession was correctly recorded in paragraph [46]
of the judgment of Van der Westhuizen J; and
(2)
that
Van der Westhuizen J intended to the give effect to the concession so
recorded.
[18]
New
GX argues that these findings are a material misdirection on my part.
According to New GX, an appeal court will hold that the
phrase “
any
rights which have already accrued prior to the cancellation
”
did not form part of the COT’s concession, and that it was not
the intention of Van der Westhuizen J to grant an order
divesting New
GX of its contractual rights, in particular its right to claim
compensation for expenses it incurred in order to
perform in terms of
the impugned service agreement.
[19]
The
concession recorded in paragraph [46] of the judgment accords with
paragraph 4 of the order granted by Van der Westhuizen J.
The order
and its meaning are clear and unambiguous, so too is the effect
thereof.
[20]
It
is evident from the judgment of Van der Westhuizen J that the order
granted correctly reflects the intention of Van der Westhuizen
J as
the order was based on a finding by Van der Westhuizen J that New GX
was not free from blame, as well as the concession which
Van der
Westhuizen J recorded in paragraph [46] of the judgment dated 21 June
2021, and which Van der Westhuizen J found to be
just and equitable
in the circumstances.
[21]
The
fact that Van der Westhuizen J did not intend to preserve New GX’s
right to claim for expenses it incurred in the performance
of its
obligations under the impugned service agreement is, in my view,
further underscored by the fact that Van der Westhuizen
J declined to
grant New GX relief, which it argued for, the effect of which was not
to divest New GX of its contractual rights
under the impugned service
agreement, but for the declaration of invalidity.
[22]
New
GX’s claim for compensation for
expenses
it incurred in order to perform in terms of the impugned service
agreement is a right which accrued to it in terms of clause
12 of the
impugned service agreement, upon cancellation thereof, and is nothing
other than a contractual right under the impugned
service agreement.
[23]
The
provisions of Rule 42(1)(b) allow a court, upon application, to vary
an order or judgment in which there is an ambiguity.
The power to vary an
existing court order is limited to the extent of the ambiguity and a
court may only amend an order if, on a
proper interpretation thereof,
the order does not give effect to the true intention of the court
granting the order.
[24]
Rule
42(1)(b) does not allow or empower a court to alter or vary findings
or to vary or alter the import and substance of an order.
[25]
The
basis of New GX’s contentions is that the COT’s
concession was incorrectly recorded by Van der Westhuizen J. Any
alleged or perceived error or misdirection in relation to the
concession made by the COT
is
not an error or misdirection that can properly be corrected or
ameliorated by a court in terms of Rule 42(1)(b).
[26]
In
my view, there is no indication in the judgment of Van der Westhuizen
J that the court intended to grant an order in line with
the
concession made by the COT, and with the same effect as proposed by
the COT, in its heads of argument.
Conclusion
[27]
In
terms of the Rule 42(1)(b) application which served before me, the
court was asked to vary the court order dated 21 June 2021
in order
to bring it in line with the true intention of Van der Westhuizen J.
[28]
Paragraph
4 of the order granted by Van der Westhuizen J follows the wording of
paragraph [46] of the judgment exactly. As stated
above, t
he
effect of paragraph 4 of the order by Van der Westhuizen J is to
deprive New GX of a claim for expenses and loans it had incurred
in
order to perform in terms of the impugned service agreement. This
much is common cause.
[29]
O
mitting
the phrase “
any
rights which have already accrued prior to the cancellation
”
from paragraph 4 of the order by Van der Westhuizen J dated 21 June
2021,
or granting the order sought
by New GX in the Rule 42(1)(b) application, will have the effect of
allowing New GX the right to claim
contractual damages in terms of
clause 12 of the impugned service agreement which accrued to it upon
cancellation thereof.
[30]
Doing
so would not only broaden the scope of the order of Van der
Westhuizen J but would also alter the substance and import of
the
order. This will be at odds with the finding made by Van der
Westhuizen J in paragraph [46] of the judgment as well as the
reasoning set out in the judgment.
[31]
New GX’s argument that
varying the order of Van der Westhuizen J dated 21 June 2021 will
bring it in line with the intention
of Van der Westhuizen J is not
borne out by the findings and reasoning of Van der Westhuizen J in
the judgment dated 21 June 2021.
[32]
In
the circumstances, I find there are no reasonable prospects that
another court would come to a different conclusion and no compelling
reason exists why an appeal should follow.
I
make the following order:
1.
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed, with costs.
Z MARX DU PLESSIS
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date of Hearing:
25 March 2024
Judgment delivered:
2 April 2024
Appearances:
Counsel for the
applicant:
I B Currie
Instructed
by:
Edward Nathan Sonnensbergs Inc
Counsel for the first
respondent: E C
Labuschagne SC
V
Mabuza
Instructed
by:
Diale Mogoshoa Attorneys
[1]
[2021] ZASCA 31
at para
[10]
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