Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 420South Africa
Iviyo Consulting Engineers (Pty) Ltd v Dongastro Emperio (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024-304) [2024] ZAGPPHC 420 (9 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
9 May 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Iviyo Consulting Engineers (Pty) Ltd v Dongastro Emperio (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024-304) [2024] ZAGPPHC 420 (9 May 2024)
Iviyo Consulting Engineers (Pty) Ltd v Dongastro Emperio (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024-304) [2024] ZAGPPHC 420 (9 May 2024)
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sino date 9 May 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2024-304
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/
NO
DATE:
9/5/24
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
IVIYO
CONSULTING ENGINEERS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
DONGASTRO
EMPERIO (PTY) LTD
Respondent
SIFISO
NKOSITHANDILE NGEMA
2ND Defendant
MANGALISO
NGEMA N.O.
3RD Respondent
ROBSON
NGEMA N.O.
4TH Respondent
SHAKA
NGEMA N.O.
5TH Respondent
MAMOKEBE
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
6TH Respondent
MAMOKEBE
MOTAU COLLIERY (PTY) LTD
7TH Respondent
RAMATSIMELE
FRANCINA MOTJOADI
8TH Respondent
KGAAPU
STANLEY MPHAHLELE
9TH Respondent
RT
COAL (PTY) LTD
10TH Respondent
GA
SOLUTIONS AG
11TH Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
12TH Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
13TH Respondent
NGABADE
MINERALS (PTY) LTD
14TH Respondent
SAKHILE
VUSUMUSI THUSI
15TH Respondent
JUDGMENT
POTGIETER AJ:
[1]
The Applicant, a company, is applying for various final alternatively
temporary mandatory and prohibitory interdicts.
[2]
Fifteen Respondents have been cited but only nine are opposing the
requested
relief and have filed answering affidavits. They are the
First to Fourth, Sixth, Eighth, Ninth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Respondents.
(They are hereinafter, jointly, referred to as “
the
opposing Respondents
”).
[3]
The Respondents either have registered addresses in or are resident
in
four provinces
viz
:
[3.1]
The First, Second, Seventh, Thirteenth, Fourteenth,
Fifteenth and
Sixteenth Respondents have registered addresses or reside at
addresses within Gauteng.
[3.2]
The Sixth and Eighth Respondents respectively
have a registered and
residential address in Limpopo.
[3.3]
The Third, Fourth and Fifth Respondents are trustees
of the Ngema
Family Trust whose address is in Mpumalanga.
[3.4]
The Tenth Respondent has a registered address
in Kwa-Zulu Natal.
[4]
In a nutshell this application is about the following:
[4.1]
The Applicant, (at a cost to
date hereof exceeding R2.4 million), has
applied for a mining permit from the Department of Mineral Resources
and Energy, (“
the Department
”), of which the
Twelfth Respondent has been cited as the Nominal Respondent because
the Twelfth Respondent is the Minister
responsible for that
Department.
[4.2]
The property in respect of
which the Applicant’s application
for a mining permit pertains belongs to the aforementioned Ngema
Family Trust, (hereinafter
simply “
the Trust
”).
[4.3]
No other person or entity possesses
a mining permit or any right
whatsoever to mine coal on the aforementioned property of the Trust.
[4.4]
Some of the Respondents are
involved in illegal mining activities on
the Trust’s property to which the application for a mining
permit, pertains. (This
varies from actual mining and stock piling to
the selling and purchase of such illegally mined coal).
[4.5]
The authorities responsible
to prevent illegal mining are not doing
so. (
In casu
the only authorities cited are the Twelfth and
Thirteenth Respondents who are respectively the Ministers of Mineral
Resources and
Energy and of the Police).
[5]
This application started as an urgent application but was struck off
the roll due
to lack of urgency on 16 January 2024 whereafter it was
re-enrolled in the normal course. As a result there are averments in
the
papers pertaining to urgency which are no longer relevant and
will not be addressed herein.
[6]
The opposing Respondents have taken the following points
in
limine
, (akin to a plea in abatement), and no other, (no opposing
Affidavits dealing
ad seriatim
with the Founding Affidavit
have been filed by the opposing Respondents):
[6.1]
A contention that this Court
has no jurisdiction.
[6.2]
The Applicant’s deponent
is not authorized to institute the
present application, more particularly, because no resolution by the
Applicant authorizing him
to do so, has been attached to the Founding
Affidavit.
[6.3]
The Applicant has no
locus standi
because neither the
application for a mine permit nor the payment of in excess of R1.4
million to the Department, (which was paid
at the Department’s
request in respect of the rehabilitation/management of the
environmental impacts associated with the
proposed mining activities
which the Applicant wishes to undertake), suffices to grant the
Applicant
locus standi
especially in the light thereof that
when the Department accepted the Applicant’s application the
Applicant was warned that
acceptance of the application does not
grant the Applicant the right to commence with mining operations. In
addition it is averred
that the Applicant would have to negotiate
with the Trust and no lease agreement has yet been concluded with the
Trust.
[7]
Before dealing with the main opposition
viz
a lack
locus
standi
I shall briefly deal with the other two points
in
limine
:
[7.1]
The contention that this Court
lacks jurisdiction is unsustainable in
view of section 21(2) of the Superior Courts Act and the fact that
seven of the Respondents
are either resident in- or have registered
addresses within the area of jurisdiction of this Court.
[7.2]
In
viva voce
argument the Respondents’ Counsel also
contended that this Court lacks jurisdiction because the Trust’s
property on
which the illegal activities are occurring is situated in
Mpumalanga. The short answer to this argument is that this
application
does not pertain to any attribute of the property but
rather to unlawful conduct or the failure to act where one is
required to
do so.
[8]
The point that the Applicant’s deponent was not authorized to
launch the present
application is dismissed for the following
reasons:
[8.1]
Whilst it is preferable to
do so it is not fatal to not attach an
authorizing document such as a resolution to the founding papers. The
only argument with
merit, in this regard, could be that the best
evidence rule is contravened where a deponent testifies that he is
authorized but
fails to attach the written authorization. But this is
curable and it was indeed cured.
[8.2]
In the Applicant’s reply
the necessary resolution to authorize
the institution of the present proceedings, was attached as an
Annexure.
[9]
I shall now proceed to deal with the averred lack of
locus standi
.
[10]
I perceived the averment that the Applicant has no
locus standi
to mean that the Applicant has no protectable interest because the
Applicant does not have any rights to mine on the property.
The
opposing Respondents contend that until a mining permit is issued to
the Applicant the Applicant merely has a
spes
.
[11]
The Applicant avers that it is a foregone conclusion that a mining
permit will be issued once
the slowly grinding wheels of the
Department have run their course. This averment is not contested by
any of the opposing Respondents
nor, most importantly, by the Twelfth
Respondent. It follows that I am constrained to accept what the
Applicant contends. This
means that I am constrained to accept that
there is no longer a question of a mere
spes
but rather only a
question of time. (Having regard to when the application was launched
and the time the guarantee was requested
and the time when the
guarantee was provided it is obvious that the wheels of the
Department grind slowly but eventually do arrive
at a conclusion).
[12]
As far as the opposing Respondents rely on the non-existence of a
lease agreement with the Trust
at this point in time, the Applicant’s
Counsel, correctly so, indicated to the Court, (albeit from the Bar),
that the Act
and/or Regulations regulating the Applicant’s
position once a permit has been granted, make it clear that the Trust
cannot
stymie the exercise of the rights which the holder of a mining
permit has by failing to negotiate and/or conclude a lease agreement.
To my knowledge this is indeed correct. The lack of negotiations with
or the lack of a lease with the Trust, at this point in time,
is
therefore of no consequence.
[13]
It is the uncontested evidence before this Court that many hundreds
of tons of illegally mined
coal are either being stockpiled for
illegal sale or are being removed from the premises on a daily basis.
(The roles of the Respondents
in this regard are readily apparent
from the orders which I grant herein later). Furthermore, illegal
mining remains ongoing. This
is coal to which the Applicant will be
entitled once the mining permit applied for, is granted. The losses
which the Applicant
will suffer if this conduct is not interdicted
are manifest.
[14]
The contention by the opposing Respondents that the Applicant does
not have a protectable interest
rings hollow in the light of the fact
that until very recently most of, if not all of, the Respondents
engaged with the Applicant
in consultation with the South African
Police Services tasked with preventing illegal mining. It is not
necessary to spell out
these meetings/events which are fully
described in the Applicant’s Founding Affidavit and remain
uncontested by any of the
15 Respondents. It boggles the mind why the
Respondents would have been deemed the Applicant a necessary party to
all the arrangements
which the South African Police Services
attempted to put in place to calm the waters between,
inter alia
,
the Applicant and those Respondents guilty of illegal mining
activities or dealing with the fruits thereof if none of the
Respondents
had believed that the Applicant had no protectable
interest.
[15]
In the premises I dismiss all of the points
in limine
raised
by the opposing Respondents.
[16]
I turn now to consider the requested and appropriate relief.
[17]
When I requested the Applicant’s Counsel to point out, in the
Founding Affidavit, what
evidence the Applicant relies upon against
the Seventh, Eighth and Ninth Respondents, (
vide
prayers 6 and
7 where the Sixth and Seventh Respondents are mentioned in both
prayers and
vide
prayer 6 where the Eighth and Ninth
Respondents are mentioned), the Applicant’s Counsel could refer
only to the original
meeting which occurred in November 2023 where
most, if not all, of the Respondents were present. When I indicated
that I was not
satisfied that the mere attendance at that meeting
meant that any wrongful and culpable conduct was committed by the
Respondents
present, I was informed that the Applicant would not
persist in requesting relief against the Seventh, Eighth and Ninth
Respondents.
[18]
I thereupon requested the opposing Respondents’ Counsel to
indicate what would be an appropriate
costs order in these
circumstances. He initially indicated that those Respondents who
successfully opposed should be granted costs
and, if I were to grant
the relief against the other Respondents he represented, the costs
should follow the cause. The Applicant’s
Counsel agreed.
[19]
What the Counsels agreed upon is logical. But I, nevertheless,
proposed an alternative
viz
that it would be more equitable,
where the Applicant was partially successful and the Respondents were
partially successful, (the
Respondents made common cause), to order
that each party pays its own costs, (i.e. the opposing Respondents
pay their own costs
and the Applicant pays its own costs pertaining
to those Respondents). This both Counsels agreed to.
[20]
It follows from the aforegoing that prayers 6 and 7 as contained in
the Notice of Motion cannot
be granted as they stand.
[21]
As far as the question whether the other requested interdicts should
be final or interim are
concerned I see no reason why they should be
temporary.
[22]
The Applicant also relies, for its
locus standi
, on the fact
that it is a subject of the Republic of South Africa and as such has
the right, especially where the authorities tasked
with doing so
failed in their duties, to request a Court to interdict illegal
activity such as illegal mining and anything flowing
from same. I did
not discuss this as a basis for finding that the Applicant has
locus
standi
when I dealt specifically with the question of
locus
standi
above because it was unnecessary as the reasons I advanced
to reject the point
in limine
about
locus standi
sufficed. However, it is seems to me to be illogical to limit any
interdict against any illegal mining activities and to compel
the
authorities to do what they should be doing to merely the outcome of
the Applicant’s application for a mining permit
is known. In
the first instance, as set out above, it is a foregone conclusion
that the Applicant will receive its mining permit.
Secondly, it
cannot be gainsaid that illegal mining activities are ongoing despite
same having been temporarily ceased because
of intervention by the
SAPS’ Task Force created specifically to prevent illegal mining
activities. Such activities will remain
illegal regardless as to the
outcome of the Applicant’s application.
[23]
As far as prayer 8 in the Notice of Motion is concerned I can find no
evidence against the First
Respondent pertaining to the threats,
intimidation and victimization referred to in prayer 8, (
vide
paragraph 6.19 at CaseLines 002-33 of the Founding Affidavit). Whilst
it is clear, and undisputed, that the First and Second Respondents
are the main culprits in the illegal mining activities and appear to
be working together, (
vide
e.g. paragraph 6.20 of the Founding
Affidavit at p. 002-33 read with paragraph 6.19), I am not convinced
that the responsibility
of the First Respondent for the conduct of
the Second Respondent and other unnamed and unspecified persons in
the threatening,
intimidating and victimizing of any persons, has
been illustrated.
[24]
It thus follows that also in respect of prayer 8 that order cannot be
granted as it presently
stands and has to be amended.
[25]
In the premises I make the following orders:
[25.1]
Prayers 2, 3, 6, (duly amended as aforementioned),
and prayer 8,
(duly amended as aforementioned), are granted.
[25.2]
The Applicant and the opposing Respondents,
(i.e. the First to
Fourth, the Sixth, the Eighth, the Ninth, the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Respondents), are to pay their own costs.
[25.3]
As there was no opposition by the other Respondents
and the Applicant
does not request costs if no opposition is noted, there are no
further costs to be ordered against any other
Respondents.
[26]
The Applicant is ordered to ensure that a draft order reflecting the
amendments to the prayers
set out above and excluding those prayers
which are not granted is uploaded onto CaseLines after the Applicant
and opposing Respondents’
legal representatives have agreed
that the draft order correctly records the relief granted
supra
.
The Court shall thereafter consider the draft order before signing
same.
TALL
POTGIETER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FOR APPLICANT:
ADV
WW GIBBS
ROOM
222 CLUB ADVOCATES’ CHAMBERS 30
PINASTER
STREET HAZELWOOD
TEL:
(012) 947 9222 MOBILE: 082 818 0696
E-mail:
waynewgibbs@gmail.com
CILLIERS
& REYNDERS INC
106
JEAN AVENUE,
CENTURION,
GAUTENG
REF:
JC VAN ZYL/VIYO CONSULTE
E-MAIL:
jc@cilreyn.co.za
FOR RESPONDENTS:
ADV
WB NDLOVU
JOHANNESBURG
CHAMBERS
PETER
ZWANE ATTORNEYS
UNIT
4A REEF PARK BUILDING,
NO.7
GOLD REEF ROAD,
ORMONDE
MOBILE: 073 280
5258 TEL: 087 093 1344
E-MAIL:
secretary@pzainc.co.za
/
ca@pzainc.co.za
REF:
PZA/CVL/DON1157
C/O: NTOZAKHE
ATTORNEYS
UNIT 3, BLOCK 1
LOMBARDLY BUSINESS
PARK
CNR COLE &
GRAHAM RD SHERE,
PRETORIA, 0081
This
judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the Court Online
digital data base of the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
e-mail to
the attorneys of record of the parties. The deemed date and for the
delivery is the 9
TH
day of MAY 2024.
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