Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1075South Africa
Jaments (Pty) Ltd v Northern Coal (Pty) Ltd (2024-061972) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1075 (29 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 October 2024
Headnotes
no rights, none whatsoever, over the neighbouring land (Roetz). As it held no rights, Jaments could not be prejudiced.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Jaments (Pty) Ltd v Northern Coal (Pty) Ltd (2024-061972) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1075 (29 October 2024)
Jaments (Pty) Ltd v Northern Coal (Pty) Ltd (2024-061972) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1075 (29 October 2024)
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sino date 29 October 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2024-061972
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 29 October 2024
In
the matter between:
JAMENTS
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
NORTHERN
COAL (PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DE
VOS AJ
[1]
The
Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy
decided, in terms of section 96 of the Minerals and Petroleum
Resources Development Act 28 of 2002 (“MPRDA”), to
suspend
its previous decision to grant the respondent (“Northern
Coal”) consent in terms of section 102, to extend its mining
area. Northern Coal launched urgent review proceedings seeking
to set aside the Minister’s decision to suspend its
section 102
consent. The Court reviewed and set aside the Minister’s
suspension decision. The applicant (“Jaments”)
sought leave to appeal against the Court’s order. The Court
dismissed the application for leave to appeal. These are the
reasons
for dismissing the leave to appeal.
[2]
Jaments raised fifty grounds of appeal in its application for leave
to appeal.
Not all can be considered in depth and the Court
deals with the core basis on which Jaments sought leave to appeal.
[3]
Some context is required. Northern Coal mines coal on Farm Jagtlust
in Mpumalanga.
It has been doing so for years. In so doing, Northern
Coal creates jobs for about 500 people. Northern Coal’s mining
on Farm
Jagtlust could not sustain these jobs for much longer. To
ward off retrenchment, and no doubt motivated by the sustainability
of
its business, Northern Coal resolved to expand its mining
operations onto the neighbouring farm, Roetz. Northern Coal owns
Roetz
and had operated a prospecting license on Roetz for years.
In order to extend is mining area, Northern Coal required the
Minister’s consent in terms of section 102 of the MPRDA to vary
its existing mining right, over Jagltust, by extending the
mining
area, to include Roetz.
[4]
Northern Coal applied to the Minister in terms of section 102, to
extend the
area of its mining right on the current mining area
(Jagtlust), to include the neighbouring farm (Roetz). Section 102
permits the
variation of a mining right “by extensions of the
area covered by it”. The Minister granted Northern Coal
consent
to extend its area of mining to include the neighbouring farm
(“section 102 consent”). As a result of the section 102
consent, Northern Coal has been mining on the neighbouring farm and
has been able to keep the retrenchments at bay.
[5]
Jaments enters the arena by filing an application for a prospecting
right on
the neighbouring farm (Roetz) and its request to the
Minister to suspend Northern Coal’s section 102 consent.
[6]
Central to this dispute is the timing of Jaments’ application
for a prospecting
right. Jaments applied for the prospecting
right on Roetz well after Northern Coal had applied for consent to
vary the area
in which it may mine to incorporate Roetz into its
existing right over Jagtlust. However, the Minister took two
years to
make a decision on Northern Coal’s section 102 consent
application. It was during these two years, whilst Northern
Coal was waiting for a decision from the Minister, that Jaments
sought a prospecting right over Farm Roetz. There were two
applications over the same property: Northern Coal’s section
102 application for a variation and Jaments’ application
for a
prospecting right. Northern Coal’s application for variation
preceded Jaments’ application.
[7]
The Minister acceded to Jaments’ application and suspended
Northern Coal’s
section 102 consent (“suspension
decision”). The effect of the suspension decision is that
Northern Coal may no longer
lawfully mine on the Farm Roetz.
[8]
Northern Coal challenged the Minister’s suspension decision. It
raised
several grounds of review on which it attacked the Minister’s
decision. The Court was persuaded by Northern Coal’s challenge
and urgently reviewed and set aside the Minister’s suspension
decision.
[9]
Jaments defends the Minister’s suspension decision and contends
in the
application for leave to appeal that another Court will uphold
the Minister’s suspension decision.
[10] To
address the core of Jaments’ application for leave to appeal
requires a consideration of the
Minister’s decision. The
Minister’s reason is terse. The Minister’s reason
for suspending Northern Coal’s
consent and mining was that
Jaments faced “potential prejudice”. Jaments’
prejudice is not named or identified.
Nor is it, based on the
Minister’s express language, actual. The reason also contains
an error of law: Jaments held no rights,
none whatsoever, over the
neighbouring land (Roetz). As it held no rights, Jaments could not be
prejudiced.
[11] Worse,
the Minister’s reason for the suspension, the “potential
prejudice” does not
appear in Jaments’ suspension
application. The Minister’s reason has to be based on the
record which served before
the Minister at the time of making the
decision. The Court has been provided with the full record that
served before the Minister
before making the suspension decision. In
this record the “potential prejudice” the Minister
provides as a reason for
the decision, does not appear. At the time
the suspension decision was taken, there were no facts supporting the
alleged financial
prejudice which Jaments now before this Court
claims it would suffer. On this basis as well, the Minister’s
decision
is reviewable for being irrational and having taking
irrelevant considerations into consideration. The Minister’s
decision,
particularly its reason for the decision must be sourced in
information which appeared before him at the time.
[12] The Court
concludes that there is no prospect of Jaments succeeding in
convincing an appellate Court
that the Minister’s decision to
suspend Northern Coal’s section 102 consent was
administratively fair in circumstances
where it is based on an
unidentified potential prejudice which does not appear in the record
which served before the Minister.
Plainly, there was no basis
for the Minister to conclude Jaments would suffer prejudice –
as no such fact served before
the Minister and no such conclusion
could be drawn, as Jaments enjoyed no rights over the adjacent
property. On this basis
alone, Jaments’ application for
leave to appeal falls to be dismissed.
[13] Jaments’
faces another hurdle: the proper interpretation of section 102 of the
MPRDA. Northern
Coal attacks the Minister’s decision as it is
at odds with section 102. In suspending the section 102 consent, the
Minister
erred in law for failing to properly construe the nature of
an application in terms of section 102 of the MPRDA
[14] Section
102 deals with the extension of an existing mining right over the
first property to include
a second property. Jaments’
interpretation of section 102 is that in order to extend the existing
mining right enjoyed over
the first property, to cover the second
property, there must be a pre-existing right over the second
property. Jaments interprets
section 102 as requiring an existing
right on the extended area. Jaments’ central submission is that
Northern Coal could
only extend its existing mining right over
Jaglust to include Roetz, if it had a pre-existing right over Roetz.
Based on
this interpretation, Jaments defends the Minister’s
decision to suspend the section 102 consent.
[15] Jaments
reads in to section 102 that there must be a pre-existing right over
the extended area –
and that this is to be varied. There is
nothing in the language of section 102 which demands an existing
right over the adjacent/second
property. In fact section 102
contemplates a variation of an existing right: the variation being to
extend the area over which
the right is enjoyed. The language
of section 102 plainly does not require a pre-existing right on the
extended area. Jaments’
interpretation of section 102 not only
unduly strains the language but reads in an entire clause and
requirement which is not found
in the statute.
[16] There is
no requirement in either section 22 (relating to applications for
mining rights) or section
102 of the MPRDA that an applicant for a
mining right or an amendment/variation thereof must hold a
prospecting right or any other
right or permit over the property
which it intends to mine (i.e. the prospective mining area) before it
may apply for or be granted
a mining right or consent.
[17] Jaments’
interpretation also mislocates what the variation attaches to: it
attaches to the area
not to the type of right on the extended
property. Section 102, on its plain text, provides for the variation
of the
area
over which a mining right is enjoyed. The
variation section 102 offers relates to the
area
covered by
the mining right. The variation in section 102 does not relate to
converting an existing right on an extended area into
a mining
right. It is not the
type of right
over a property which
section 102 varies, but the
area
over which an existing mining
right may be exercised. As such, section 102 does not require that
there be an existing right on the
extended area – as the
variation goes to the area covered by the existing mining right.
[18] Jaments
contends that without this added, read-in requirement, section 102
may be open to abuse. At
the hearing for leave to appeal the central
thesis of Jaments’ submissions was that an application for a
mining right is
more onerous than an application for the variation of
an existing mining right. Therefore, someone may abuse the section
102 application
to obtain the right to mine through an easier process
than applying for a mining right. The submission was made for
the first
time in the application for leave to appeal and was not
expanded on. Assuming this was true – without making this
finding
as it was not pleaded or argued with substantiation –
it is not for the Court to read-in requirements where to do so
would unduly strain the language of the legislation. To do so
would be to extend into the realm of Parliament.
[19] In any
event, Jaments’ did not challenge the text of section 102 for
permitting such alleged
abuse or asked the court to interpret it in a
manner that would prevent such alleged abuse. There is no
prospect of Jaments
convincing an appellate Court to alter section
102 to include a requirement which would unduly strain the language,
particularly,
in the absence a pleaded challenge to section 102.
On this basis as well, the application for leave to appeal bears no
prospects
of success.
[20] Jaments
would also, in addition to the above, have to persuade an appellate
Court that its application
for a prospecting right over Roetz took
precedence over Northern Coal’s application for a variation.
There are no prospects
of success in this regard as Jaments demands
the principle first-in-time applies to its application for a right
over the adjacent
property and simultaneously demands that the
principle not apply to Northern Coal’s variation application.
The Court has
set out that this would be at odds with principles of
fair administrative action and the common law position of
first-in-time-first-in-right
which runs as a golden thread throughout
the MPRDA.
[21] To be
successful in an appeal, Jaments would have to persuade an appellate
Court to apply the principle
of first-in-time to only one party and
not another and would be doing so absent a legislative basis for such
an exclusion and in
conflict with the common law position.
[22] Northern
Coal submitted before this Court that the principle must find
application as:
a) The first-in-time
principle expressed by the maxim
qui prior est tempore potior est
jure
is based in equity (
Wahloo Sand BK en Andere v Trustees ,
Hambly Park Trust en Andere
2002 (2) SA 776
(SCA) at 788D)
b) Real rights are
stronger than personal rights and in the event of a conflict between
real rights, the maxim
qui prior est tempore potior est jure
applies (
Contract Forwarding (Pty) Ltd v Chesterfin (Pty) Ltd
2003 (2) SA 253
(SCA) at 258BC)
c) The
first-in-time principle is recognised throughout the MPRDA as the
orderly basis on which the DMRE
processes applications in respect of
the same land and for the same mineral;
d) Section 6 of the
MPRDA gives effect to the first-in-time principle in respect of other
applications as a reasonable
and procedurally fair manner in which to
process all applications under the MPRDA;
e) Section 6 of the
MPRDA is further subject to PAJA, including section 3(1) and 3(2)(a)
thereof, which requires
that administrative action must be
procedurally fair and that a fair administrative procedure;
f)
Interpreting section 102 in a manner that gives effect to the
first-in- time principle accords
with the Constitutional right to
administrative justice and administrative action which is
procedurally fair, the common law and
the objects of the MPRDA,
specifically:
i)
the promotion of equitable access to mineral resources;
ii) the
substantial and meaningful expansion of opportunities for
historically disadvantaged persons such
as Northern Coal;
iii) provides for
security of tenure in respect of mining operations (such as Northern
Coal’s existing mining
operations on the Farm Jagtlust); and
iv) ensures the continued
contribution of Northern Coal to the socio-economic development of
the area where it operates.
[23] In
addition, this interpretation further avoids a gap in the legislative
scheme and any absurdity or
repugnancy in the MPRDA where, for some
unknown reason, a later application takes precedence over Northern
Coal’s Section
102 Application. Such an assertion is
insensible, unbusinesslike and would lead to chaos in the processing
of applications.
[24] The Court
is persuaded by this submissions. Jaments would have to
overcome all these submissions
in order to persuade an appellate
Court that a later application for a prospecting right takes
precedence over a section 102 application
made years earlier. The
Court concludes that there are no prospects of success in this
regard.
[25] To
compound this, the Court held that consent in terms of section 102
creates a mining right or alternatively
a right akin to a mining
right. As such, section 6 of the MPRDA finds application which
expressly requires the application of the
first-in-time-first-in-right principle. Jaments would have to
convince a court of Appeal that the right conferred by section 102
to
mine on an extended area is not a mining right or a right akin to a
mining right. Jaments has provided no textual or
jurisprudential basis to upset this finding.
[26] In
addition, Jaments would have to do so in the face of the decision in
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Limited and Another v The Regional
Manager, Limpopo Region, Department of Mineral Resources and Others
(1109/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 157
where the Supreme Court of Appeal
confirmed that a prospecting right is not a pre-requisite for a
mining right (paragraph 54).
Rustenburg Platinum
held
that a prospecting right – which Jaments claims over Roetz –
is not a prerequisite for a mining right. Similarly
a
prospecting right is also not a pre-requisite for an application in
terms of section 102 which seeks to vary a mining right to
include
another property in the mining area of that right. On this score as
well, Jaments’ application for leave to appeal
bears no
prospects of success.
[27] It is
unclear where Jaments’ sources the requirement that there must
be a prospecting right over
Roetz in order for Northern Coal to
obtain section 102 consent. It cannot be sourced in section 102
of the MPRDA. It
also would be incongruent to not require such
a prospecting right – in general in order to mine – but
then to do so
in the context of a section 102 application.
There are no reasonable prospects of success of Jaments convincing an
appellate
Court of its interpretation.
[28] As to the
relief granted, this Court substituted the decision of the Minister
with a decision of the
Court. The Court had all the evidence which
served before the Minister, there were no disputes of fact and no
expert evidence or
technical knowledge that was required to make the
decision. It was purely an exercise of legal interpretation of
section 102 of
the MPRDA. It can hardly be contended that the Court
is ill-suited to make a pronouncement on the purely textual
interpretation
of section 102 of the MPRDA and ought to have remitted
this legal determination to be made by the Minister.
[29] In
granting the relief, the Court exercised its discretion in favour of
substituting the Minister’s
decision. In so doing, the Court
exercised a discretion in the “true” sense
(Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of
South Africa Limited and Another
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC) at para 9).
An appellate court is slow to interfere with such decision
(Trencon
paras 82-97). As stated by the Constitutional Court,
per Moseneke DCJ, in
Florence v Government of the Republic of
South Africa
2014 (6) SA 456
(CC) at para 111 as quoted in
paragraph 89 of
Trencon
:
“
Where a court is granted wide
decision-making powers with a number of options or variables, an
appellate court may not interfere
unless it is clear that the choice
the court has preferred is at odds with the law. If the impugned
decision lies within a range
of permissible decisions, an appeal
court may not interfere only because it favours a different option
within the range. This principle
of appellate restraint preserves
judicial comity. It fosters certainty in the application of the law
and favours finality in judicial
decision-making.”
[30] Jaments
would have to persuade an appellate Court that the appropriate relief
is to remit an exercise
in the interpretation of legislation to the
Minister in circumstances where there is no dispute of fact or
technical skill required.
The prospects in this regard are poor. The
prospects decrease where the Court enjoys a wide discretion, as it
did in this case.
For these reasons, there is no reasonable prospect
another Court would come to a different conclusion.
Costs
[31] Northern
Coal has successfully defended against the application for leave to
appeal. It is by
virtue of the ordinary rule entitled to its
costs. Jaments’ sole submission to oppose the granting of
costs is that
the
Biowatch-rule
does not apply. It
appears to the Court that Northern coal is entitled to its costs on
the normal principle that the costs
follow the result – even
absent the application of the
Biowatch-rule
. Whether the
Biowatch-rule
applies or not – does not alter this
position.
[32] The Court
dismisses the application for leave to appeal with costs on scale C
including the costs of
two counsel. The reasons for granting costs on
Scale C and the costs of two counsel is: the matter is complex, the
history dense,
the record rendered the application just shy of 2000
pages and the parties filed extensive and substantive submissions.
The involvement
of two counsel and on Scale C is justified also by
the interaction of multiple applications for different rights within
the
MPDRA. This justifies costs of two counsel and on Scale C.
Order
[33] The Court
orders:
a) The application
for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs on scale C including the
costs of two counsel.
I de Vos
Acting Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be emailed to the parties/their legal representatives.
Counsel for the applicant:
T Modise
Instructed by:
Moorosi Attorneys
Counsel for the respondent:
C Woodrow SC
JL Verwey
Instructed by:
Briel Inc
Date of the hearing:
4 September 2024
Date of judgment:
29 October 2024
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