Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1103South Africa
Celliers and Others v Kleinfontein Aandeleblok (Edms) BPK and Another (Leave to Appeal) (4755/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1103 (31 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Celliers and Others v Kleinfontein Aandeleblok (Edms) BPK and Another (Leave to Appeal) (4755/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1103 (31 October 2024)
Celliers and Others v Kleinfontein Aandeleblok (Edms) BPK and Another (Leave to Appeal) (4755/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1103 (31 October 2024)
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sino date 31 October 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE NO: 4755/2022
(1)����� Reportable: No
(2)����� Of interest to other judges: No
(3)����� Revised: Yes
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
HENDRIK
PETRUS CELLIERS������������������������������������������ 1
ST
APPLICANT
PAUL
ERNEST MCMENAMIN�������������������������������������������� 2
ND
APPLICANT
IZAK
JACOBUS BOOYSEN����������������������������������������������� 3
RD
APPLICANT
JOHANNES
VENTER�������������������������������������������������������� 4
TH
APPLICANT
and
KLEINFONTEIN AANDELEBLOK (EDMS) BPK����������������� 1
ST
RESPONDENT
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY������ 2
ND
RESPONDENT
Coram
:�������� A Vorster AJ
Heard
:��������� 25 September 2024
Delivered:���
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties� legal representatives by email,
by
uploading the judgment onto
https://sajustice.caselines.com,
and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:00 on 31 October
2024.
ORDER: LEAVE TO APPEAL
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs
JUDGMENT: LEAVE TO APPEAL
A
Vorster AJ
Introduction
(1)
On 2
August 2024 I handed down one judgment in two matters under consideration. The
matters came before me on 21 April 2023, and
since the issues
to be decided in the two
applications overlapped,
the parties agreed that the matters should be heard simultaneously, and that
one judgment should be handed down in respect of both
applications.
(2)
A notice
of application for leave to appeal was delivered and directed against the
orders granted under case number: 4755/2022.
The applicant in the notice of application
for leave to appeal is the applicant in the main application, and the
respondents in
the notice of application for leave to appeal are the
respondents in the main application. I will refer to the parties as they are
referred to in the main application.
(3)
Leave to
appeal is sought to the Supreme Court of Appeal, alternatively to a full court
of the Division.� Leave is sought on the
bases that (i) �there are reasonable
prospects of success on appeal�; and (ii) �there are compelling reasons why
leave to appeal
should be granted�.
Issues for determination
(4)
Applications for leave to appeal are governed by rule 49(1) of
the
Uniform Rules of Court
and �� 16 & 17 of the
Superior Courts Act,
No.
10 of 2013.
(5)
In terms
of rule 49(1)(b) �when leave to appeal is required and it had not been
requested at the time of the judgment or order,
application for such leave
shall be made and the grounds therefor shall be furnished within fifteen days
after the date of the
order appealed against�.
(6)
In terms
of section 16(1)(a)(i) of the Act
an appeal against
any decision of a Division as a court of first instance lies, upon leave having
been granted if the court consisted
of a single judge, either to the Supreme
Court of Appeal or to a full court of that Division, depending on the direction
issued
in terms of section 17(6).
Section
17(6)(a) of the Act provides:
�If
leave is granted under subsection (2) (a) or (b) to appeal against a decision
of a Division as a court of first instance consisting
of a single judge, the
judge or judges granting leave
must
direct that the appeal be heard by a full court of that Division, unless they
consider-
(i)
that the decision to be appealed involves a question of law of
importance, whether because of its general application or otherwise,
or in
respect of which a decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal is required to
resolve differences of opinion; or
(ii)����������� that the administration of justice, either
generally or in the particular case, requires consideration by the Supreme
Court
of Appeal of the decision, in which case they must direct that the appeal be
heard by the Supreme Court of Appeal."
(7)
Section 17 makes provision for leave to appeal to be granted
where the presiding judge is of the opinion that either the appeal would
have a
reasonable prospect of success or there is some other compelling reason why the
appeal should be heard, including whether
there are conflicting judgments on
the matter under consideration.
(8)
Considering
the statutory and regulatory matrix, three questions for consideration arise in
the application for leave to appeal.�
These questions are not distinct but
interrelated. The first question is whether the applicant
filed
a proper notice of application for leave to appeal which concisely and
succinctly set out the grounds upon which leave to
appeal is sought. The second
question is whether
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success or whether
there are compelling reasons which exist why the appeal should
be heard such as
the interests of justice. The third question is whether the
application for leave to
appeal sets out expressly why the default position of an appeal to a full court
of the Division should
not prevail, as well as the
questions
of law or fact or other considerations involved which dictate that the matter
should be decided by the Supreme Court of
Appeal.�
Did the applicant file a
proper notice of application for leave to appeal
(9)
The
notice of application for leave to appeal must set out the grounds upon which
leave to appeal is sought.� The rules do not define
�grounds�, but a
uthorities
seem to agree that it should be an error of law or facts alleged by the
applicant as the defect in the judgment appealed
against upon which reliance is
placed to set it aside.
See for example
-
Xayimpi & others v Chairman, Judge White
Commission (formerly known as Browde Commission) & others
[2006]
JOL 16596
(E).
(10)
An appeal
may also lie against the exercise
of judicial discretion. See �
Knox D�Arcy Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
1996 (4) SA 348
(A) [also reported at
[1996] ZASCA 58
;
[1996] 3 All SA 669
(A)].
(11)
The first
enquiry is accordingly whether the notice clearly and succinctly set out in
clear and unambiguous terms the incorrect
findings of law or fact, or the basis
upon which it is contended that the court did not act judicially. For an
illuminating discussion
on the distinction between findings of law, findings of
fact, and judicial discretion see
Media Workers
Association
of South Africa and
Others v Press Corporation of South Africa Limited
[1992] 2 All SA 453
(A) at pages 457 �
459.
(12)
Incorrect
findings of fact cannot arise outside the record of proceedings because
, save in exceptional circumstances, an
appeal court will not permit disputes of fact or expert opinion to be raised
for the first
time on appeal. See -
Rail Commuters Action Group and Others v
Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail and Others
[2004] ZACC 20
;
2005 (2) SA 359
(CC) at 388F-389A.� An
applicant in an application for leave to appeal needs to show that
from the text of the decision appealed
against (ipsissima verba) that an accepted fact differs from a common
cause or undisputed
fact in the record of proceedings.
(13)
The
Constitution
, legislation, the common law, and customary
law are the laws of the Republic.� There is a clear hierarchy of laws, with the
Constitution
being the supreme law of the Republic
.� See � Section
2 of the
Constitution
. Common law and customary are subject to any
legislation, consistent with the
Constitution
, which specifically deals
with it. See -
Alexkor Ltd and Another v Richtersveld Community and Others
(CCT19/03)
[2003] ZACC 18
;
2004 (5) SA 460
(CC);
2003 (12) BCLR 1301
(CC) (14 October
2003) at par 51.
(14)
An applicant in an application for leave to appeal who relies on
an incorrect finding of law must clearly and succinctly identify
the incorrect
legal principle applied by the court, and the correct legal principle that
should have been applied. An appeal on
a question of law means an appeal in
which the question for argument and determination is what the correct legal
principle, or
correct interpretation of a legal principle is.
(15)
This is
however not the end of the enquiry, since an appeal can only be noted against
the judgment itself (i.e., the substantive
order), not the reasons for the
judgment, or the way the Court arrived at the judgment. See -
Cape
Empowerment Trust Ltd v Fisher Hoffman Sithole
2013 (5) SA 183
(SCA)
at 198I�J.� Even if an
applicant in an application for leave to appeal succeeds in convincing the
Court that it erred in fact
and / or in law, it must also show that the
judgment (substantive order) would have
been different if the Court applied the correct law or facts. The notice should
therefore
clearly specify what orders will be sought on appeal.
(16)
In the
context of a judgment, legal issues and factual issues can never truly be
separated and the question of fact must first be
answered before the court will
know which legal question must be dealt with.
(17)
To
determine whether the court acted judicially, a determination needs to be made
with reference to all the relevant facts and principles.�
If an application is
based on the contention that the Court failed to act judicially, the notice
should
clearly and succinctly
set out all the
relevant facts
and legal principles
which the applicant relies upon, and the decision which in the result should
reasonably have been made by
the Court properly directing itself.
(18)
Turning
to the matter under consideration, the applicants advanced 18 grounds in
support of their application for leave to appeal
(quoted verbatim with only letter case
and punctuation corrected)
:
�(i)����������� The court a quo erred in not granting the
relief sought by the applicants in the
notice
of motion.
(ii)
The
court a quo ought to have granted an interdict against the first
respondent, interdicting it
from commencing or continuing with activities that
are manifestly unlawful.
(iii)
The
court a quo should have granted a final interdict preventing the first
respondent from acting
unlawfully until such time as the first respondent has
procure the necessary
authorisations and approvals.
(iv)
Accordingly,
the court a quo erred in only granting an order against the second
respondent (�the
municipality�) in circumstances where an interdict against the
first respondent was justified.
(v)
In
circumstances where the first respondent acts unlawfully (in the absence
of the necessary approvals),
the court a quo should have found that it has no
discretion whatsoever but to grant the
interdictory relief as is sought by the
applicants.
(vi)
The
aforesaid is especially so in circumstances where the first respondent
conceded that the necessary
approvals are not in place.
(vii)
Accordingly,
the court a quo could have on the facts that were common cause,
granted an interdict against
the first respondent.
(viii)
The
Court a quo, after correctly finding that none of the legislative provisions
dealing with land use rights
have been complied with and thereafter correctly
finding that the provisions of the
National Building Regulations and Building
Standards Act had not been complied
with, should have found that the aforesaid
constitutes offences and that the court
a quo, in the circumstances, has no
discretion but to interdict the first
respondent from so acting.
(ix)
The
court a quo should have found that a deliberate flouting of the law should
not be countenanced.
(x)
The
court a quo erred in not finding that the applicants have a clear right to
seek interdictory relief
against the first respondent on the grounds set out in
the founding affidavit.
(xi)
It
was explained in the founding affidavit why the applicants are detrimentally
impacted upon and has a clear
right to prevent the first respondent from
continuing with its unlawful actions to
the detriment of the applicants.
(xii)
The
court a quo should thus have found that the applicants have demonstrated
a clear right worthy of
protection and that such requirement has been satisfied.
(xiii)
The
court a quo furthermore erred in seemingly finding that the applicants had
an alternative remedy
available that militates against the granting of a final
interdict.
(xiv)
The
court a quo should have found that the interdictory relief granted against
the municipality does not
constitute a satisfactory alternative remedy to the final
interdict sought by the
applicants against the first respondent.
(xv)
The
court a quo also erred in its finding on the �clean hands� doctrine, as the
absence of unclean hands was
clearly demonstrated in the papers.
(xvi)
There
is nothing in the papers that could possibly have justified a finding by the
court a quo of the
applicants� hands being �not merely �unclean� but dripping
with moral turpitude�.
(xvii)
The
court a quo should have found that it is abundantly clear from the papers
that the applicants were not
informed of the first respondent�s unlawful
activities when they took occupation in
Kleinfontein.
(xviii)
The
court a quo thus ought to have granted the interdictory relief as sought in
the notice of motion against
both the first respondent as well as the
municipality and should have ordered the
first respondent to pay the
applicants�
costs on the scale as between attorney and client.�
(19)
The
notice merely lists the purported errors, and in criticizing the Court�s
findings, the applicants woefully failed to identify
the facts clearly and
succinctly (with reference to the record) and legal principles (with reference
to the laws of the Republic)
underpinning these contentions. This means that
the grounds are
so widely expressed that if leave is granted it will be left open to applicants
to canvass almost every finding
of fact and ruling of law made by the Court.�
(20)
The peremptory requirement that an application for leave to appeal
must set out the
grounds upon which leave is sought is not met when incorrect findings are
merely listed. Since an appeal will not
lie against
the reasons for the Court�s
judgment but against the substantive order, whether a Court of Appeal will
agree with the reasoning
of this Court would be of no consequence if it cannot
be shown that the result would have been different. See -
Atholl Developments (Pty) Limited v Valuation Appeal
Board for the City of Johannesburg
[2015]
JOL 33081
(SCA) at paras 10 � 11. �
Several of the grounds are directed
at the reasons for the Court�s judgment and not the substantive order, it falls
short of the
requirement.
(21)
What compounds the criticism of the notice is that
it does not specify whether
the grounds are based on incorrect findings of fact or law, or whether the
attack is against the Court�s
failure to act judicially.
Even if the
grounds can be deduced from the notice, the defect is not cured because it is
not for the Court or the respondents to
have to analyze the notice to establish
what grounds the applicants intended to rely upon but did not clearly set out. The
rambling
notice of appeal falls woefully short of the requirement
that the notice must set out
the grounds upon which leave to appeal is sought.�
�See -
Songono v Minister
of Law & Order
1996 (4) SA 384
(E) at 385 E � I & 386A.
(22)
The
notice of application for leave to appeal does not correctly identify a
singular factual finding in the judgment which conflicts
with an established or
common cause fact as evidenced by the affidavits which served the function of
both pleadings and evidence.
It also does not, identify an established legal
principle which conflicts with the legal principles the Court applied to the
facts
of the case.
(23)
As most of the grounds are directed at the Court�s findings
(reasons) as opposed to the substantive order, and the grounds are not
clearly
and succinctly set out in the notice, there is no proper application for leave
to appeal before me and on this basis alone
the application should be
dismissed.
(24)
However, the merits of the application were fully argued before me
so notwithstanding my views on the notice of application for leave
to appeal, I
will nonetheless proceed to deal with the other issues for determination which
I�ve identified earlier in the judgment.
Reasonable prospect of success or compelling reasons why the
appeal should be heard
(25)
In considering the application for leave to appeal I am guided
by the criteria laid down in
Ramakatsa v African National Congress
[2021]
JOL 49993
(SCA) at par 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 section 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.�
(26)
As I�ve
already indicated the notice of application for leave to appeal does not
specify whether the Court erred in fact, or in
law, or failed to exercise a
discretion judicially.� The heads of argument delivered on behalf of the applicants
does very little
to improve the situation.� This leaves the Court in the
unenviable position that it must deal with every �ground� on the bases that
the
Court erred in fact, erred in law, or failed to exercise its discretion
judicially.
(27)
Most of
the grounds advanced approximate opinion, are inferential and abstract, and are
useless to the Court in determining whether
it erred in fact or in law, or
whether it failed to exercise its discretion judicially.
The grounds were so vaguely formulated as to be of little
or no assistance in meaningfully defining the bases of the intended appeals.
See -
Hing and Others
v Road Accident Fund
2014 (3) SA 350
(WCC).
(28)
On a very
liberal reading of the grounds, it would seem as if it were the applicants�
case that (i) the Court�s usual discretion
to refuse the grant of an interdict was
ousted when it was shown that the 1
st
respondent acted unlawfully,
and that the Court therefore erred in law when it refused to grant an interdict
under circumstances
where, on the common cause facts, the respondents were
acting unlawfully; alternatively (ii) that the Court failed to exercise its
discretion judicially when it refused to grant the interdict.
(29)
In as far
as the first ground is concerned, the applicants rely on
Lester v Ndlambe Municipality
(514/12)
[2013]
ZASCA 95
(22 August 2013) and
United
Technical Equipment Co (Pty) Ltd v Johannesburg City Council
1987(4) SA 343 (T)
.
In both these cases the court dealt with
public law remedies where the applicants were municipalities seeking the
enforcement of
a statutory right, flowing from a statutory contravention, which
also amounted to criminal offences. In both these cases it was
held that the
law does not afford the court a discretion to refuse to grant an order aimed at
enforcing the statutory right.� The
legal principle embedded in these cases is
that the courts have a duty to ensure that the doctrine of legality is upheld
and to
grant recourse at the instance of
public bodies
charged with the
duty of upholding the law.
(30)
What
distinguishes the matter under consideration is that the applicants sought to
safeguard private law interests, by relying on
statutory contraventions. The
applicants have no statutory right, flowing from a statutory contravention, to
safeguard private
law interests through the enforcement of the relevant laws
relating to planning and building regulation. The cases are not authority
for
the proposition that the court�s discretion to refuse an interdict, where an
applicant seeks a private law remedy, is ousted
when the conduct complained of
also amounts to a statutory contravention.
(31)
In as far
as the refusal to grant an interdict is concerned, the only avenue open to the applicants
will be to convince an appeal
court that the Court failed to exercise its
discretion judicially in applying the law to the facts. To determine whether
the applicants
will have reasonable prospects of success on appeal on this
basis, one needs to
consider the
standard of interference that an appellate court will be justified in applying.
(32)
The standard of interference and the test was authoritatively
discussed in the well-articulated judgment of
Khampepe J
in the matter of
Trencon Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development
Corporation of South Africa Limited and Another
(CCT198/14)
[2015] ZACC 22
;
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC);
2015 (10) BCLR 1199
(CC) (26 June 2015) at par 83 � 89:
[88]��������� When a lower court exercises a
discretion in the true sense, it would ordinarily be inappropriate for an
appellate
court to interfere unless it is satisfied that this discretion was
not exercised:
". . . judicially, or that it had been influenced
by wrong principles or a misdirection on the facts, or that it had
reached a
decision which in the result could not reasonably have been made by a court
properly directing itself to all the relevant
facts and principles"
(footnote omitted).
An appellate court ought to be slow to substitute its own decision
solely because it does not agree with the permissible option chosen
by the
lower court.
[89]��������� In Florence, Moseneke DCJ
stated:
"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."
(33)
I refused
to grant an interdict because (i) the applicants failed to demonstrate a clear
right; and (ii) I deemed the relief granted
against the 2
nd
respondent constituted an adequate alternative remedy.
(34)
The
applicants contend that the 1
st
respondent�s breach of statutory
provisions relating to planning laws and building regulation automatically
confers on them a clear
right to an interdict. I could not find support for
this proposition, and the authorities seem to suggest quite the opposite,
namely,
that the question as to whether the breach of a statutory provision
gives rise to a private cause of action, is one of construction
of the statute.
Before concluding that the statute gives rise to a private cause of action the
questions need to be answered whether
the operative statute anticipates,
directly or by inference such cause of action, whether there are alternative
remedies, whether
the object of the statute is mainly to protect individuals or
advance public good, etc. See -
Steenkamp NO v Provincial Tender Board of
the Eastern Cape
(CCT71/05)
[2006] ZACC 16
;
2007 (3) SA 121
(CC);
2007 (3)
BCLR 300
(CC) (28 September 2006) at par 42. None of the laws being contravened
anticipates directly, or by inference, that a breach should
give rise to a
private cause of action.� The fact that the laws expressly provide for public
law remedies, which are at the disposal
of local authorities, suggests quite
the opposite.
(35)
The
applicants contend that the mandamus against the 2
nd
respondent, namely,
to
immediately
take appropriate steps to enforce all relevant laws relating to planning and
building regulation, is not an effective
or adequate alternative remedy. The
only basis for this contention is that for many years the 2
nd
respondent failed to enforce the laws, and the applicants have a reasonable
apprehension that it will persist to do so.� �The applicants
did not make out a
case in the papers that the 2
nd
respondent will likely not comply
with an order compelling it to enforce the relevant laws. The fact that the
applicants sought
an order to that effect is inimical to the very notion that
they are doubtful whether the 2
nd
respondent is likely to enforce
the laws when compelled to do so through an order of court. The fact that the
legislature equipped
local authorities with public law remedies to address
statutory contraventions militates against a finding that such remedies, when
implemented by a local authority, are not effective or adequate.
(36)
In
paragraph 119 of the judgment, I expressly held as follows:
�
In deciding on an
appropriate enforcement mechanism, the COT is implored to consider
the extent of the breaches
that have occurred over the past 30 years. The shareholders and directors of
the KAEB are clearly a group
of individuals with an identified hierarchy
engaged in significant criminal activity. The directors and their predecessors
have
shown themselves capable of egregious and criminal behavior, insidiously
evading laws relating to municipal planning and building
regulation, and the
KAEB is eligible to be labelled a criminal enterprise.�
(37)
It is
therefore clear from my judgment that I considered the conduct of the 1
st
respondent and its members as not only unlawful, but illegal and a criminal
offence.� I was and remain in respectful agreement
with the authorities that
the law cannot and does not countenance
an ongoing illegality which is also a criminal offence. To do so would be to
subvert the
doctrine of legality and undermine the rule of law. I accept that
the Court had a duty to uphold the doctrine of legality, by refusing
to
countenance the ongoing statutory contraventions and criminal offences by the 1
st
respondent and its members, which includes the applicants. By granting a
mandamus against the 2
nd
respondent I did exactly that.
�
(38)
I am not
convinced that the way I exercised my discretion was at odds with the law. It
is arguable that another court would have
favored a different option but
unfortunately for the applicants that is not the test. I am not convinced that
the applicants have
reasonable prospects of success on appeal. �
(39)
In as far
as the compelling reasons are concerned, the applicants contend that my reasoning
contradicts what had been found in other
judgments, and a reconsideration would
serve the public interest in that it would be to the benefit of the occupiers
of Kleinfontein.
(40)
The
conflicting judgments are not dealt with in the application for leave to appeal
and in argument Counsel for the applicants referred
to
Lester
and
United Technical Equipment
referred to supra
. I�ve already indicated that
those judgments are distinguishable from the matter under consideration, and I
am not convinced that
my judgment is in conflict or contradicts any of those
judgments.
(41)
The
question whether a final interdict should have been granted was fact-specific
and did not raise a discreet issue of wider public
importance. The issues which
were decided were decided on the facts and circumstances of the case based on
well-known principles
applicable to final interdicts.
(42)
In
Swart v Heine and Others
(192/2015)
[2016] ZASCA 16
(14 March
2016) at par 13 the Supreme Court of Appeal held as follows:
�There
is a further disconcerting aspect to this appeal. The issues in this appeal are
simple and straightforward and do not involve
complicated or complex issues of
law. This is a case where leave to appeal should not have been granted at all�
Leave
to appeal should not be granted where there is no reasonable prospect of
success on appeal, or no compelling reason why an
appeal should be heard
─ s 17(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013.�
(43)
I
disagree that a reconsideration by a court of appeal would be for the benefit
of the occupiers of Kleinfontein, as the applicants
contend. The applicants
cannot speak on behalf of the other occupiers. They were not before Court and
were not joined. The applicants
did not make out a case in their founding
affidavit that they were acting in the interest or for the benefit of the other
occupiers
or shareholders, or in the broader public interest. Leave to appeal
would accordingly only serve the interests of the applicants.
Conclusion
(44)
Considering my finding that the applicants do not have reasonable
prospects of success on appeal and that there are no compelling
reasons why
leave to appeal should be granted, I do not propose to deal the question as to
whether leave should be to a full court
or the Supreme Court of Appeal.
(45)
On a
conspectus of all the issues raised I propose to dismiss the application for
leave to appeal with costs.
A.
VORSTER AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Date of hearing:������������������������ 25
September 2024
Date of judgment:����������� ��������� 31
October 2024
Counsel for applicant:���� ��������� Adv.
J.A. Venter
Instructed by: �������������������������� TC
Botha Incorporated
Counsel for first respondent:��� Adv. A.T.
Lamey���������������������������������
Instructed by:��������������������������� Hurter
Spies Incorporated
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