Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 959South Africa
Promispace CC v DRDGold Limited and Others (062949/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 959 (26 September 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Promispace CC v DRDGold Limited and Others (062949/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 959 (26 September 2024)
Promispace CC v DRDGold Limited and Others (062949/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 959 (26 September 2024)
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sino date 26 September 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 062949/2023
- REPORTABLE:
NO
REPORTABLE:
NO
- OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
- REVISED.DATE:
26 September 2024SIGNATURE:
REVISED.
DATE:
26 September 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
PROMISPACE
CC
REGISTRATION
NO: 2010/139045/23
Applicant
-and-
DRDGOLD
LIMITED
REGISTRATION
NO: 1895/00926/06
First
Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Second
Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOBURG PROPERTY COMPANY
SOC
LTD (JPC)
Third
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL RESOURCES
AND
ENERGY
Fourth
Respondent
REGIONAL
MANAGER, GAUTENG REGION,
DEPARTMENT
OF MINERAL RESOURCES
AND
ENERGY (DMR)
Fifth
Respondent
This judgment is issued
by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by email.
The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of this
matter on CaseLines by the Judge or her Secretary. The
date of this
judgment is deemed to be 26 September 2024.
JUDGMENT
COLLIS
J
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an application for an order declaring the mine dump (“mine
dump”) located on Farm Roodepoort, Portion Number
125, Farm
Number 237, Registration Division QI (“the property”) as
a movable property owned by the applicant through
appropriation.
[1]
2.
The applicant contends that it has taken ownership of the mine dump
through appropriation and seeks to be declared the lawful
owner
thereof. It does so on the basis that the mine dump is
res
derelicta
and therefore
res nullius.
3.
The second and third respondents (“the respondents”)
oppose the application. They contend, in the first instance,
that the
mine dump is neither r
es derelict
nor
res nullius
as it
belongs to the second respondent (“the COJ”).
4.
Secondly, in the event that this Court finds that the mine dump does
not belong to the second respondent, the respondents contend
that the
mine dump has acceded to the property, becoming one with the property
itself.
5.
The first respondent does not oppose these proceedings and has filed
a notice to abide this Courts’ decision. It has however
proceeded to file an affidavit setting out that it has informed the
applicant that the mine dumps do not form part of its property
portfolio and referred the applicant to the Department of Mineral
Resources and Energy for any ownership enquiries.
[2]
6.
It further asserts that it is not the holder of
inter alia
,
any servitudes, surface right permits, mining rights and any freehold
associated with the mine dumps. As it has no interest in
the
ownership of the mine dumps and there thus is no dispute between it
and the applicant, it contends that it has been incorrectly
joined as
a respondent in these proceedings.
ISSUES
TO BE DECIDED
7.
In a Joint Practice Note filed by the parties, they set out the
following issues to be decided by this Court, namely:
[3]
7.1 Whether the second
respondent (“COJ”) is the lawful owner of the mine dump;
7.2 In the event that the
Court does not find that the COJ is the lawful owner of the mine
dump, then and in that event:
7.2.1 Whether the mine
dump has acceded to the property; or
7.2.2 Whether the mine
dump is res derelict and therefore res nullius.
8.
As a starting point the term ‘mine dump’ is used to refer
to waste that is derived from or incidental to mining operations.
[4]
With this definition in mind, a mine dump is not a mound of waste
placed in a location simply by chance.
9.
It is placed in a location to serve the mining operations surrounding
it. There is no good reason why a mining company would
want to move a
mine dump when such mine dump was created consequential to, and in
order to serve the mining operations around it.
It is similarly not a
standard practice for mining companies to physically move dumps.
10.
In anticipation of the hearing the parties further proceeded to file
a chronology setting out the events to be the following:
[5]
10.1 During 1888, the
mine dumps forming the subject matter of the proceedings were
deposited by Princess Estates Gold Mining Company
Ltd. From 1888
-1920, Princess Estates Gold Mining Company Ltd. Gold mining
operations were conducted.
10.2 In the same year,
being 1920, Princess Estates Gold Mining Company Ltd ceased its
mining operations due to increased input
costs from the First World
War.
10.3 Thereafter 1923,
Durban Deep, a competing mining company in the same locale acquired
129 claims from Princess Estates Gold
Mining Company Ltd.
10.4 From 1923 –
1946, Durban Deep gradually acquired other neighbouring mines to
Princess Estates Gold Mining Company Ltd,
which included but not
limited to New Steyn Estates Gold Mining Company Ltd, Roodepoort
United Gold Mining Company Ltd and Kimberly
Roodepoort Gold Mining
Company Ltd, which is presently known as DRDGold.
10.5 Last year on or
about 10 May 2023, the applicant addressed an email to the Chief
Operations Officer of DRDGold requesting a
meeting for the purposes
of discussing a possible cession of the residue stockpile or mine
dumps to the applicant.
10.6 Around 19 May 2023,
DRDGold forwarded a response to the applicant, advising it that
Princess Gold Mining Dumps do not form
part of the DRDGold property
portfolio.
10.7 Thereafter on or
about 25 May 2023 the applicant addressed an email to the Regional
Manager, Gauteng Department of Mineral
Resources enquiring about any
records of ownership relating to the mine dumps in question. No
response to the enquiries was however
received.
10.8 Approximately, a
month thereafter around 14 June 2023 the applicant gave a Notice of
its intention to take possession of the
mine dump and it is from
around this date that the applicant alleges that it acquired
ownership of the mine dumps through appropriation.
COMMON
CAUSE FACTS
11.
It is common cause between the parties that the COJ is the lawful
owner of the property, i.e. the registered owner of the farm
Roodepoort 237/125 IQ over which the subject matter of this
application is located.
[6]
12.
Secondly that the COJ purchased the property from Princess Sandwerk
(Pty) Ltd, which transfer was registered in 1985.
[7]
Whether
the COJ is the lawful owner of the mine dump
13.
The fist question to be decided by this Court is whether the COJ is
the lawful owner of the mine dump. In this regard, the applicant
does
not dispute the fact that the city is the owner of the property upon
which the mine dump is located.
14.
In its Replying affidavit,
[8]
the applicant asserts that this court can accept that it is not in
dispute that the property is owned by the city and that the
applicant
has made it demonstrably clear that the city owned the property.
15.
It is however the applicant’s contention that the mine dump on
the property of the city is
res derelicta
and or
res
nillius
and therefore capable of being owned by the applicant.
16.
In its founding affidavit the applicant provides a brief background
of the history of the mine dump and its creation.
[9]
The history of the mine dump and its creation is however unknown to
the respondents.
17.
The applicant alleges that the mine dump was created by Princess
Estate Gold Mining Company Limited (“Princess Estate”)
which conducted gold mining operations until 1920.
[10]
No documentary evidence of its aforesaid narration has however been
annexed to the founding papers, but nothing really turns on
it, as
what is known to the respondents is that the mine dump was present on
the property at the time that the COJ purchased the
property from
Princess Sandwerke (Pty) Ltd in 1985.
18.
As mentioned earlier, the applicant has out of its own volition
deemed it necessary to verify the ownership of the mine dump.
In so doing, it first addressed correspondence to the first
respondent, who informed the applicant that it is not the owner of
the mine dump.
19.
Upon failing in its quest, to thereafter addressed correspondence to
the fifth respondent enquiring about any record of ownership
he may
possess relating to the mine dump in question. It never received a
response to its correspondence addressed to the fifth
respondent in
this regard.
20.
Having received no response from the fifth respondent, it as a result
concluded that the Department of Mineral Resources and
Energy
(“DMRE”) has no records of ownership of the mine dump and
absent any member of the public putting up a competing
claim to the
mine dump, it therefore asserts that the mine dump should be
considered
res
nullius
.
[11]
21.
What is telling from the founding affidavit however, is that after
being made aware that the COJ is the owner of the property
on which
the dump is situated the applicant does not address any
correspondence to the COJ enquiring from it as to whether it could
appropriate the mine dump situated on its land.
22.
On behalf of the applicant it was argued that the city has abandoned
the property where the mine dump is situated as it is not
fenced off
to control access and it is largely an open field which is used
collaterally as a dumping site by the members of the
public.
23.
In opposition, the respondents opposing alleges that when it
purchased the property from Princess Sandwerke Pty Ltd (“Princess”),
on which the mine dump is situated, its intent was clear, i.e. that
the property was to be utilized for dumping purposes, aligning
with
its operation needs at the time.
[12]
24.
In addition, and as per the title deed transferring ownership of the
mine, Princess willingly relinquished the property, surrendering
all
rights, title and interest to the COJ, including the mine dump
situated on the property at the time.
[13]
25.
Premised on this, the respondents had argued that the inference to be
drawn is that the alleged mine dumps were also transferred
to the COJ
alongside the property sale, given that Princess exhibited no
intention to retain ownership of the alleged mine dump
post-sale and
after transfer of the property.
[14]
In accordance with the abstract theory of the transfer of property,
the requirements for the passing of ownership in immovables
are also
twofold, namely delivery-which in the case of immovable property is
by registration of transfer in the deeds office-coupled
with a so
called real agreement.
[15]
26.
In response to the above argument advanced by the opposing
respondents, the applicant asserts that the respondents never
purchased
the property with the view to owning the mine dumps, but
that it merely purchased the property with a view to using the
property
as a dumping site.
[16]
27.
On this basis the applicant therefore, asserts is a demonstration
that the opposing respondents never had the intention of owning
the
mine dumps.
28.
The argument advanced by the applicant on this score with respect
holds no water. It matters not that the opposing respondents
had
purchased the property upon which mine dump is situated with the
intention to utilize the property as a dumping site. If the
dumping
site was a
res nullius
as argued by the applicant it precisely
negates the argument as to why the opposing respondents would pay a
consideration for the
property and have it registered into its name
at a cost, if indeed it belonged to no one.
29.
On the argument that the opposing respondents were buying the
property and not the chemically treated material on the property
itself, this argument likewise has no merit. If one becomes an owner
of a piece of land, on what basis would you not become the
owner of
what is situated on the land as at date of registration, whether
movable or immovable. In
casu
, the property was never purchase
by the applicant, it never paid a consideration for it, nor was it a
party when the sale of the
property was concluded.
30.
It further is of no moment that the dumping site was not fenced-off
at any point in time. The absence of any fence from a property
does
not give anyone permission to remove from it that which belongs to
another. The applicant having been made aware that the
dumping site
belonged to the COJ ought to have taken the steps to seek permission
from the COJ first before it removed any material
found on the
latter’s property. This, the applicant had failed to do,
and in essence removed material from the dumping
site without
authorisation from the owner of the property.
31.
Therefore, on the first issue to be decided by the Court as to
whether the COJ is the owner of the mine dump, this Court concludes
that the COJ indeed is the owner. Having concluded as
aforesaid, the other issues calling for my determination then fall
away.
32.
Consequently, the applicant cannot succeed with its request for a
declarator that it is the lawful owner of the mine dump through
appropriation, which mine dump is situated on the property of the
COJ.
ORDER
33.
For the above reasons the following order is made:
33.1 The application is
dismissed with costs.
33.2 The Applicant is to
pay the costs, including Counsel fees as per scale B.
C.COLLIS
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv. M.R. MAPHUTHA
Instructed
By:
PHUTI MANAMELA INC
ATTORNEYS
Counsel
for Second and Third Respondents: Adv. N. LOOPOO
Instructed
By
KUNENE RAMAPALA INC
ATTORNEYS
Date
of Hearing:
23 May 2024
Date
of Judgment:
26 September 2024
[1]
Notice
of Motion. CaseLines.
[2]
First Respondents’ Affidavit 02-2.
[3]
Joint Practice Note 04-2.
[4]
While not defined in the MPRDA, the MPRDA at Section 1 defines
‘residue stockpile’ as “any debris, discard,
tailing, slimes, screening, slurry, waste rock, foundry sand,
beneficiation plant waste, ash or any other product derived from
or
incidental to a mining operation…”
[5]
Chronology 06-1.
[6]
Founding
affidavit para 7; Answering affidavit para 7.
[7]
Answering
affidavit para 7.
[8]
Replying Affidavit 01-3 para 15-17.
[9]
Founding
affidavit paras 17 to 17.6.
[10]
Founding
affidavit paras 17 to 17.5.
[11]
Founding
affidavit para 29.
[12]
Answering Affidavit 03-2 para 8.
[13]
Answering Affidavit 03-2 para 9. See also Title Deed annexure TM3 at
03-104.
[14]
Answering Affidavit 03-2 para 10.
[15]
Legator McKenna Inc v Shea [2009] 2 ALL SA SA 45 (SCA);
2010 (1) SA
35
(SCA).
[16]
Replying Affidavit 01-3 para 23.
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