Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1204South Africa
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Rochville Prop (Pty) Ltd and Others (48401/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1204 (19 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 November 2024
Headnotes
under Deed of Transfer T103624/2013 and known as Portion 106 (a portion of Portion 2) of the farm Swavelpoort 373 JR , Gauteng Province, in extent 12.3057 ha.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Rochville Prop (Pty) Ltd and Others (48401/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1204 (19 November 2024)
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Rochville Prop (Pty) Ltd and Others (48401/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1204 (19 November 2024)
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sino date 19 November 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 48401/2019
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED
In the matter between:
CITY OF TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
ROCHVILLE PROP (PTY)
LTD
ZWAVELPOORT
HOMEOWNERS’ ASSOCIATION
IGNA STEENKAMP
DENSA JANINE STEENKAMP
JACOBUS STEFANUS
VILLIERS JOUBERT N.O.
[In his capacity as
joint trustee of the VTS Business Trust (IT7098/2006)]
THERESA JOUBERT N.O.
[In her capacity as
joint trustee of the VTS Business Trust (IT7098/2006)]
First Respondent
Second Respondent
Third Respondent
Fourth Respondent
Fifth Respondent
Sixth Respondent
JUDGMENT
van
der Westhuizen, J
[1]
The applicant launched this application in terms of which it sought
to review and set aside the
decision of its Municipal Appeal Tribunal
(MAT), a so-called self-review in terms of section 1(c) of the
Constitution, read with
section172(1) thereof. It related to a
decision on a land development application taken on appeal by the MAT
against a decision
of the applicant’s Municipal Planning
Tribunal (MPT). The MPT refused an application by the first
respondent for consent
to use its property as a lodge, conference
venue and wedding venue. The decision of MAT is the subject of the
present review.
[2]
Both the applicant and the first respondent did not comply with the
requirements to file several
documents timeously and condonation was
sought. There was lateness in filing the notice of opposition, the
first respondent’s
answering affidavit and the applicant’s
replying affidavit. By agreement condonation was granted.
[3]
This review was premised upon the decision of the MAT allegedly
suffering from serious procedural
and substantive irregularities in
contravention of its powers. This is a so-called self-review of a
municipal planning decision.
[1]
[4]
During 2013, the first respondent became the registered owner of
immovable property held under
Deed of Transfer T103624/2013 and known
as Portion 106 (a portion of Portion 2) of the farm Swavelpoort 373
JR , Gauteng Province,
in extent 12.3057 ha.
[5]
Prior to the first respondent’s acquisition of the property and
thereafter, the property
had a farm description, and still has such a
description. Such description implies that the property has as of yet
not been subjected
to a township establishment process in terms of
either the 1965 Ordinance, the 1986 Ordinance, the Development Act,
67 of 1995
(DFA), the Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act,
16 of 2013 (SPLUMA), or the Land use By-Law. SPLUMA came into effect
on
1 July 2015.
[6]
The area where the property is situated, is a rural area. Various
agricultural holdings were established
on former farms that were
known as: Mooiplaats 367 J.R., Kleinfontein 386 J.R., Donkerhoek 365
J.R., Tiegerpoort 371 J.R., and
Barossa 742 J.R.
[7]
The property under consideration was zoned as “Undetermined”
in terms of the Per-Urban
Areas Town-Planning Scheme, 1975
(Peri-Scheme). In terms of that zoning description, the said property
could only be used for purposes
of “Agricultural Buildings”
and “Dwelling Houses”. Contrary to that zoning, the
director of the first applicant
proceeded to establish the
“
Monte De Dios Equestrian Wedding and Conference Venue”
on the property. The applicant alleges that the director of the first
respondent was a practising attorney. Allegedly, the property
was to
be used as a lodge with a wedding hall, a conference venue, guest
rooms, a chapel, associated infrastructure, parking facilities,
a
restaurant, a teagarden, children play areas, outdoor event areas,
staff accommodation and a store area. Such use, without consent,
was
a transgression of the aforementioned zoned use.
[8]
It was common cause between the parties that the first respondent
used the property in contravention
of the “Undetermined”
use zoning. In order to legalise its aforementioned unauthorised use,
the first respondent applied
during February 2014 to the applicant
for consent use in terms of clause 7 of the Peri-Scheme, but
continued its illegal use of
the property. The continued unlawful use
was met with a “Notice of Contravention of the Tshwane Town
Planning Scheme”.
That notice was served on the first
respondent on 13 September 2016.
[9]
Despite the said notice being received, the first respondent
continued with its unlawful use of
the property. It launched an
application in which it sought relief to have the contravention
notice suspended pending the review
and setting aside thereof. Events
subsequent to the launch of that application, and the initial hearing
thereof, effectively rendered
the application moot. In a written
judgment, the court per Dodson, AJ., dealt with the continuance of
that application and only
granted costs orders. Nothing turns on that
application.
[10]
Clause 7 of the Peri-Scheme prescribes the procedure to be followed
when applying to use the property for
purposes other than its primary
use. Prior to the application the publication of a notice of its
intention to make such application
is required. The notice was to be
published in an English newspaper, as well as in an Afrikaans
newspaper, both circulating in
the area. Simultaneous with the first
publication, it is required to post a similar notice, which is to be
maintained conspicuously
for a period of 14 days on some part of the
building or property. Together with such application, the applicant
shall lodge with
the local authority proof of such publication and
posting. The said notice and posting shall state that that any person
having
any objections to such erection of buildings, or to the
proposed use, shall lodge with the local authority such objections,
together
with the grounds therefor, within fourteen days after the
date of the last advertisement. The publication and the posting shall
indicate where the plans, if any, may be inspected.
[11]
The first respondent’s consent use application of February 2014
informed that the application was made
to use the said property as a
lodge with ancillary and subservient uses such as a wedding hall, a
conference venue, guest rooms,
a chapel, associated infrastructure,
parking facilities, a restaurant, a teagarden, children play areas,
outdoor event areas, staff
accommodation and a store area.
[12]
It is to be recorded that the consent application was to inform the
Public that the Title Deed contained
restrictive conditions and that
application was made for the Administrators consent as well, and that
final consent would be obtained
from the Department of Economic
Development after the approval of the proposed consent use
application. By the time when the first
respondent’s
application was lodged, the Administrator had been replaced by a
Premier. The application consequently had to
be submitted to the
Municipality as the authorised authority for the consent to the
restrictive title conditions. That application
was to be advertised
in terms of the Removal Regulations and was to be independently
considered by the MPT. Such application was
never made. It was
submitted by the applicant that the failure to apply for the consent
to the restrictive title conditions, precluded
the MPT from
considering any consent use application.
[13]
Attached to the application for consent use, was a motivation
memorandum, as well as a Site Plan. The applicant
further submitted
that it was the custom and practice for a town planner to attach a
proposed schedule of town-planning controls
and conditions to a
consent use application. Such practice provided that potential
interested and affected parties would have comprehensive
detail in
respect of what the consent use application seeks to achieve and how
that would impact upon their own properties and
the relevant
neighbourhood. Furthermore, it would also inform the applicant as to
the basis of the application that the applicant
was to consider and
further what conditions the applicant may consider to impose when
granting the consent use. It further reflects
the impact of the
proposed development on the services infrastructure of the
municipality. The applicant’s right to impose
conditions on
approval of a consent use application is permitted
inter alia
in clause 7 of the Peri-Scheme.
[14]
It is submitted by the applicant that the application for consent use
and the advertisements only informed
in broad and general terms that
the first respondent intended to apply for the establishment of a
lodge with ancillary and associated
infrastructure. Consequently,
interested and relevant parties were not properly informed as to how
the consent use would affect
their properties and the relevant
neighbourhood. In fact, the advertisements placed as required only
advised of the submission
of a consent use application and that a
copy thereof could be inspected at the offices of the town planner
who submitted the consent
use application. The advertisements further
omitted to mention that application was made for written consent in
respect of the
restrictive title conditions in the Title Deed of the
property.
[15]
Despite the aforementioned shortcomings, 28 objections were received
in respect of the consent use application.
On being advised of the
objections and being provided with copies thereof, the town planner
sought an extension of the period to
file a response to the
objections. The town planner never filed any response to the
objections. The only response by the town planner
was to submit a
letter and a Master Plan to the applicant. That stipulated, that
after the period for objections, an amendment
would be made to the
first respondent’s consent use application. There would
accordingly be no public participation in respect
of the consent use
application. Consequently, it was required to re-advertise. That did
not happen. A further amendment to the
consent use application was
sought by the town planner. The public was again not informed of the
intended further amendment.
[16]
During February 2015, the first respondent terminated its town
planner’s mandate and appointed a new
town planner. Its mandate
was to proceed with the consent use application and to apply for
further amendments thereto. On 10 March
2015, the new town planner
submitted an annexure by electronic mail to the applicant. That
annexure amended the number of guests
who would use the lodge and the
wedding venue. Needless to record, that annexure did not find its way
to the objectors for their
comment and neither was it published to
inform possible other objectors. For the first time that annexure
contained town-planning
controls, which that may impact upon the
properties of objectors or other possible objectors. The failure to
provide the existing
objectors with the said annexure, rendered
public participation nugatory.
[17]
On 19 August 2016, the new town planners were advised that the
applicant’s previous request for the
submission of outstanding
documents was still not complied with and that the first respondent’s
reply to the objections received
from the objectors was still
outstanding. The applicant further advised that the Municipality’s
Roads and Stormwater department
did not support the consent use
application. The first respondent was further advised that there had
to be compliance with the
outstanding documentation within 21 days
from the date of the letter, failing which, it would be recommended
that the MPT, dealing
with the said consent use application, should
refuse the consent use application. On 31 August 2016 the new town
planner submitted
a response to the initial objections received. It
did not deal with any of the amendments to the initial incomplete
application
for consent use.
[18]
On 12 October 2016, in a letter to the new town planner, the
applicant advised that the application cannot
be recommended in view
of various discrepancies set out in the said letter. Comment thereon
was invited within a stipulated period.
No response to that letter
was received from the first respondent. On 21 October 2016 the first
respondent launched the aforementioned
application to suspend the
notice of contravention.
[19]
From the foregoing, it is apparent that the first respondent was
remiss in responding adequately, or at all,
to the applicant’s
requests as enumerated above. The clear flaunting of compliance with
prescribed requirements was indicative
of the first respondent’s
attitude to legal procedures and requirements. A steamroller approach
by the first respondent was
followed throughout.
[20]
The first respondent’s incomplete and procedurally flawed
application for consent use was considered
by the MPT. The first
respondent, the then objectors and the applicant’s internal
service departments were present at that
meeting. From the minutes of
that meeting it is clear that the issues debated centred on the
alleged amendments to the consent
use application and whether
re-advertisement was required. No discussion took place on the merits
of the consent use application.
The MPT reserved judgment and
proposed that a site inspection be undertaken.
[21]
After the site inspection, the MPT reconvened and discussed the
issues. It then resolved to refuse the application
for consent use.
The reasons for the refusal included
inter alia
that no formal
amendment to the numbers of occupation of the lodge and the wedding
venue, as well as the failure to advertise the
increased number of
guests. On 23 February 2017, the new town planner of the first
respondent was accordingly advised of the refusal
by the MPT.
[22]
On 15 March 2017, the first respondent appealed the MPT decision to
refuse the consent use application and
directed the appeal to the
MAT. The MAT is the Municipal Appeal Tribunal established by the
applicant in terms of section 51(2)
of SPLUMA and Council Resolution
23 April 2015. It derives its powers in respect of appeals from
section 20 of the Land Use By-law,
2016. Section 20 of the Land Use
By-law provides as follows:
“
(1)
…
(2)
The Municipal Manager must within a prescribed period submit the
appeal to the Appeals Authority
established in terms of the Act or
any other law as may be determined by the Municipality read with
section 19 of the By-law.
(3)
The Municipal Appeals tribunal must consider the appeal and confirm,
vary or revoke the decision.
(4)
…”
[23]
It is clear from the provisions of section 20(3) of the By-law, that
the powers of the appeal tribunal, MAT,
on hearing an appeal are
limited to either confirm, or vary or revoke a decision from the MPT,
the tribunal of first instance.
[2]
Section 20(11)(d)(ii) of the By-law explicitly stipulates that the
appeal tribunal may not consider any new evidence on the land
development application that may negatively affect the respective
rights and obligations of interested and affected parties. It
follows
that the appeal tribunal is a tribunal of record. It is limited in
its decision to the record that was before the MPT.
The powers of MAT
on appeal is solely derived from its empowering authority, section 20
of the Land Use By-law.
[3]
[24]
The appeal was filed in terms of section 20 of the Land Use By-law.
Pending the finalisation of the appeal,
the first respondent
continued its unlawful conduct in its use of the property.
[25]
The appeal was heard by the MAT on 26 January 2018. At the hearing of
the appeal, the MAT allowed the leading
of new evidence on behalf of
first respondent. That evidence was not before the tribunal of first
instance, and accordingly did
not form part of the record before the
MAT. The permitting of the leading of new evidence on appeal was
contrary to the powers
of the MAT on appeal as recorded above, from
which it is clear that the appeal was not a wide and/or
de novo
hearing as contemplated by the first respondent. For this reason
alone, the MAT decision stands to be reviewed and set aside.
[26]
Nevertheless, after hearing the appeal, judgment was reserved.
Subsequently, on 11 May 2018, the MAT upheld
the appeal and decided:
“
1,
That the appeal succeeds with regard to the application for consent
use for a lodge and ancillary
uses including 10 rooms, i.e. that the
lodge be limited to 10 bedrooms, subject to the following directive:
2.
That the application be referred back to the Municipal Planning
Tribunal (MPT) for the sole
purpose of determining the conditions
referred to in section 7(3) of the Peri-Urban Town-Planning Scheme of
1975.
(section 7(3) provides
that … the local authority may , when application is made for
its consent to use land or to erect
and use a building in a use zone
where a building of the proposed description may only be effected and
used with the consent of
the local authority, grant or refuse consent
and in granting consent shall be entitled to impose such conditions
as in its discretion
may seem necessary for and appropriate to the
use of the land or the erection and use of such building: provided
that any concession
granted thus the local authority may at any time
be suspended and/or revoked after a ninety (90) day period of notice
if the conditions
subject to which approval was granted, are not
completed with satisfactorily after the consent use has been
exercised.)
3.
In determining the conditions, attached to the grant of consent use
as decided by the MAT,
the MPT shall consider the written evidence
submitted to the MAT, including the record of proceedings before the
MAT, and any other
written technical evidence deemed necessary by the
MPT to arrive at a just and equitable decision concerning the
conditions to
be attached to the consent use.”
[27]
Section 20(12) of the Land Use By-law provides that the Municipal
Appeals Tribunal in taking a decision in
terms of subsection (3),
read with section 51(3) of the Act, may impose any condition they
deem expedient.
[28]
The MAT has no delegating authority. Its powers are prescribed in
section 20(3) of the Land Use By-law as
recorded earlier. In terms of
section 20(12) of the Land Use By-law, it may self-impose conditions
it deems expedient.
[29]
It flows from the provisions of section 7(3) of the Peri-Scheme that
the granting of consent and the imposition
of conditions are not
divested. The tribunal considering the application for consent use
has the power to impose conditions subject
to the consent use. In the
present instance where the MAT considered the consent use application
on appeal, it was the tribunal
to impose conditions subject to
granting of consent use. However, the MAT contrary to its powers
under section 20 of the Land Use
By-law, delegated the imposition of
conditions to the MPT.
[30]
As recorded earlier in this judgment, the Title Deed thereof contain
restrictive conditions that impact on
the granting of consent use. It
is required that those restrictive conditions be addressed prior to
considering the grant of consent
use. The MAT failed to acknowledge
that fact at the appeal and nevertheless granted the consent use.
Consequently, the grant of
consent use in respect of the relevant
property was unlawful. In this regard, Bins-Ward, J., in
Ex
Parte Optimal Property Solutions CC
[4]
held that any alteration to or removal of restrictive title
conditions alters or terminates the contractual rights and
obligations
of the affected property owners
inter
se
and
alters or expunges, as the case may be, real rights in property.
[5]
[31]
It will be re-called that no separate application for the removal of
the restrictive title conditions was
launched by the first respondent
as required as recorded earlier. As a result, the whole exercise of
lodging the application for
consent use and the subsequent appeal was
futile in effect.
[32]
In addition the MAT failed to impose conditions subject to the
consent use. It follows that the MAT decision,
being null and void,
stands to be reviewed and set aside.
[33]
The consequences of all of the foregoing findings, resulted in the
whole appeal process being tainted and
of no cause or effect. It
follows that the decision of the MPT stands unaltered. The refusal of
the consent use application remained
refused.
[34]
The first respondent filed a counter-application in which it sought
that the applicant be compelled to impose
the conditions that were
directed by the MAT. In view of the findings recorded earlier, there
is no merit in the first respondent’s
counter-application. It
warrants no consideration and stands to be dismissed.
[35]
What relief stands to be granted in view of the foregoing, stands to
be considered. In this regard, the applicant
in its amended notice of
motion sought that the decision of the MAT taken on 11 May 2018 be
reviewed and set aside and that the
first respondent’s
counter-application be dismissed. The applicant further sought that
the joinder application of the fifth
and sixth respondents be paid by
the first, fifth and sixth respondents. The applicant further sought
that the first, fifth and
sixth respondents, jointly and severally,
bear all the costs, including those reserved earlier, on a punitive
scale.
[36]
In its belated answering affidavit, the first respondent pled that
the bondholders over the property should
be joined in the proceedings
in view of their possible interest in the proceedings. As obliged,
the bondholders were joined as
fifth and sixth respondents. A
conditional answering affidavit was filed on their behalf. The gist
thereof related to a possible
diminished value of the property should
it be found that the MAT decision was unlawful. They then sought that
the declaration of
invalidity did not result in the setting aside of
the MAT decision and that it should stand. That contention was
premised on the
length of time it took to move the main application
to finality. For what follows there is no merit in that contention.
The joinder
application would be attended to at the hearing of this
application. The joinder of the fifth and sixth respondents are ruled
to
be so joined.
[37]
It was recorded earlier that the first respondent throughout
dilly-dallied in responding to the requests
of the applicant.
Furthermore, no proper response was ever forthcoming from the first
respondent. The issue of the bondholder’s
joinder was only
raised 42 months after the launch of the main application, on or
about 17 March 2023. The conditional answering
affidavit was then
filed on 26 May 2023. No real interest in the proceedings were raised
in that affidavit. Only a possible financial
interest was mentioned.
That financial interest did not relate to the merits of the
application. Only an indirect interest possibly
arose. The fifth and
sixth respondents did not contribute to the consideration of any of
the issues raised in the application.
[38]
Furthermore, the land use rights that the bondholder sought to
retain, does not attach to the property permanently.
Any consent use
granted is of temporary duration. Such consent use is subject to any
revoking thereof at any time.
[6]
[39]
In so far as the provisions of section 172 of the Constitution are
relevant, those provide that the setting
aside of a decision remains
discretionary. A number of factors to be considered are set out in
section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution.
In view of the dilatory
conduct on the part of the first respondent as recorded earlier, any
discomfort or harm was self-inflicted.
It cannot benefit a third
party who has no real and substantial interest in the application and
the relief that may be granted.
In this regard the dicta in
Lester
v Ndlambe
[7]
is apt. The applicant has a statutory and moral duty to uphold the
law and to oversee due compliance its own town planning scheme.
[40]
The first respondent sought that no declaration of invalidity be
granted in respect of the MAT decision and
that it should not be set
aside. For all the aforementioned reasons there is no merit in that
contention. It was found that the
MAT lacked the power to accept new
evidence on appeal. Its subsequent findings were consequently
unlawful and suffered illegality.
Furthermore, it was not empowered
to delegate its own powers to another party as it did when referring
the imposition of conditions
to the MPT.
[41]
Under these circumstances, to adhere to the first respondent’s
contention would flout the principles
of law as discussed earlier. It
would not be in the public interest not to grant a declaration of
invalidity.
[8]
[42]
From all the foregoing, the applicant is entitled to have the
decision of the MAT of 11 May 2016 reviewed.
A declaration of
invalidity of that decision is warranted. It would follow that the
MAT decision stands to be set aside.
I
grant the following order:
1.
Condonation is granted in respect of the late filing of all
documents;
2.
The fifth and sixth respondents are joined as parties to this
application;
3.
The first, fifth and sixth respondents, jointly and severally, are to
pay the costs of the joinder on
an attorney and client scale;
4.
The decision of the MAT of 11 May 2016 is reviewed and declared to be
unlawful and invalid;
5.
The decision of the MAT of 11 May 2016 is set aside;
6.
The MTP’s refusal of the first respondent’s consent use
application stands;
7.
The first respondent is to pay the costs of the application on the
attorney and client scale, such costs
to include the costs of two
counsel where so employed.
C J VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
On
behalf of Applicant:
Adv
A Liversage
Adv
PC Swele
Instructed
by:
Diale
Mogashoa Attorneys
On
behalf of 1
st
, 5
th
and 6
th
Respondents:
Adv
M Rip SC
Adv
L Kotze
Instructed
by:
Jacques
Classen Inc. Attorneys
Judgment
reserved:
07
May 2024
Judgment
delivered
19
November 2024
[1]
Department
of Transport et al v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
2017(2) SA 622 (CC);
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd
2019(4) SA 331(CC) par [38]
[2]
Section
51 of SPLUMA
[3]
Fedsure
Life Assurance et al v Greater Johannesburg Transition Metropolitan
Council et al
1999(1) SA 374 (CC) at [58] – [59]; see also
AAA
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Micro Finance Regulatory Council et al
2007(1) SA 343 (CC) at [68]
[4]
2003(2) SA 136 (CPD) at [5]
[5]
Ibid at [19]
[6]
Clause 7.3 of the Peri-Urban Scheme
[7]
2015(6) SA 283 (SCA) at [27]; see also
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Grobler et al
2006(6) SA 61 (T) at [6], [9] and [12]
[8]
ibid
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