Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1241South Africa
Matabicho (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Provincial Liquor Board and Others (111703/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1241 (29 November 2024)
Headnotes
on the 8th of September 2022 at their offices located in Randfontein, Gauteng.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Matabicho (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Provincial Liquor Board and Others (111703/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1241 (29 November 2024)
Matabicho (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Provincial Liquor Board and Others (111703/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1241 (29 November 2024)
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sino date 29 November 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
CASE
NUMBER: 111703-2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
29//11/24
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
MATABICHO
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
THE
GAUTENG PROVINCIAL LIQUOR BOARD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
and
ANDREW
ANGELO COUVARAS
SECOND
RESPONDENT
and
MICHAEL
COMNINOS
THIRD
RESPONDENT
and
HELGA
TSOUMBRIS
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
and
SAAPA
SOUTH AFRICA
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
JUDGEMENT
DU
PLESSIS, AJ
1.
This
is an application brought for the review of a Decision by the First
Respondent, handed down on 2 October 2022 in which an application
for
the grant of a Grocers' Wine License the Applicant, was refused.
The
Second to Fifth Respondents have not opposed the review application
and has not filed opposing papers.
2.
The Applicant has set out
a number of grounds on which the review is sought, primarily relying
on the grounds in Section 6(2) of
PAJA.
3.
The Applicants are the
owners of and operate an Okay Bazaar’s Mini Market that are
located on the premises of a petroleum
filling station. Despite what
the Respondents say about the location, from the papers filed, the
Mini Market is located in a separate
building, but on the same
premises.
4.
The premises is located
on Drift Boulevard, Muldersdrift, in the District of Gauteng.
The area where the filling station and
the OK Mini Market are
located, are typical of the businesses developed over the years on
both sides of Drift Boulevard, as is
apparent from the application as
submitted by the Applicant to the Gauteng Liquor Board in terms of
Section 28(1)(b)(iii) read
with Section 23 of the Gauteng Liquor Act
2 of 2003 (“
the Act
”).
5.
The Applicant filed its
application for a Grocers’ Wine License with the Local
Committee of the First Respondent at Randfontein,
Gauteng, on 4 June
2022 in terms of the provisions of Section 23 of the Act, as read
with Section 28 of the Act.
6.
A copy of the application
is attached to the Review Application as an Annexure and it was
prepared by the Attorney specialising
in applications for Liquor
Licenses, Mr HG Aucamp, the Applicant’s current Attorney of
Record in these proceedings.
7.
After lodging the
application, the Second to Fifth Respondents filed objections on 24
June 2022 in terms of Section 25 of
the Act, against the
granting of the Applicant’s Grocers’ Wine License .
8.
Copies of these
objections as well as the Applicant’s responses thereto, are
also attached to the Applicant’s Review
Application.
9.
Having received the
application, as well as the four objections, the Local Committee
arranged for an “
Objection Hearing
” held on the
8
th
of September 2022 at their offices located in
Randfontein, Gauteng.
10.
At the “
Objection
Hearing
”, all interested parties had an opportunity to
address the Local Committee and comment on not only the application,
but also
for the Applicant to comment on the objections of the four
objectors.
11.
After the “
Objection
Hearing
”, the Local Committee considered the application in
terms of Section 30(1) of the Act and as required, referred their
recommendation
to the First Respondent for their consideration.
In their recommendation, the Local Committee recommended that the
Applicant’s
application for a Grocers’ Wine License be
approved.
12.
Approximately one year
later, on 14 September 2023, the First Respondent responded for the
first time and called for and conducted
another “
Objection
Hearing
”. Although the Applicant submits that the Act
does not make provision for this second hearing, no objection is
raised
and nothing turns on this. Again according to the
Applicant, all the interested parties had the opportunity to address
the
First Respondent on the Applicant’s application, as well as
the objections thereto. From what I could determine from
the
documentation of the Review Application, as well as the oral
submissions of Counsel on behalf of the Applicant at the argument
of
the matter, no new information were submitted to the First
Respondent. From the documentation available in the Review
Application, there is no indication that any further and/or new
arguments were advanced at the second “
Objection Hearing
”.
13.
On 2 October 2023, the
First Respondent informed the Applicant in writing that:
“
...the
application was declined by the board on the basis that it is not in
the public interest to grant a liquor license in the
filling
station.”
14.
From the Record of the
Review, it is apparent that the First Respondent considered and had
before it, the written objections from
the objectors as the only
evidence of an opposition against the granting of the Liquor License.
15.
The recommendation of the
Local Committee included all the statutory requirements, and it
appeared that the application, apart from
the objections, complied in
all material respects, with an application in terms of the provisions
of Section 23 of the Act for
a Grocers’ Wine License.
16.
Attached to the
Applicant’s application, the Applicant submitted a written
motivation in support of the application, as is
required in terms of
Section 23(1)(a) of the Act.
17.
The South African Police
Service’s Clearance Certificate pertaining to the Directors of
the Applicant, the South African Revenue
Service’s Clearance
Certificates, a Certificate of Membership with the South African
Liquor Trader’s Association, as
well as photos and the layout
plan of the proposed premises accompanied the application.
Finally, a letter from the Local
Municipality (Mogale City), wherein
it is indicated that: “
the property has business rights that
includes a supermarket and a Grocers’ Wine License is supported
on the property
”.
18.
In short, one can accept
that apart from the objections submitted by the Second to Fifth
Respondents, the Applicant’ members
and the premise’s
Statutory Compliance, qualified the Applicant to be granted a
Grocers’ Wine License.
19.
The Second Respondent
(First Objector) appears to be the sole member of the Liquor City
Express Muldersdriftt that is located 125m
(according to other
documents 140m) from the Applicant’s proposed facility.
20.
The Third Respondent
(Second Objector) owns certain properties near the filling station
where the OK Mini Market is located.
On the Third Respondent’s
properties (known as the Comninos Properties CC), certain businesses
are located, including the
Drift Country Inn (on site consumption
liquor licence) (140 meter from the Applicant’s premises), the
Food & More Liquor
Store (off-consumption liquor and Grocers’
Licence) (950 meter from the Applicant’s premises) and the Mama
Kasi and
Animal Rescue Facility, as well as a Charity Shop. The
Third Respondent also refers to Ultra-Liquors located 3.5 km from
Applicant's location.
21.
The Fourth Respondent
(Third Objector) is a tenant on Drift Boulevard where the Applicant’s
property is located. The
Fourth Respondent, in her objection,
confirms that the owner of the Liquor City Express Muldersdriftt (the
Second Respondent),
has had his liquor outlet for 27 (twenty seven)
years in the community and that the community have supported him for
the entire
time.
22.
From the objections, it
is common cause that both the Second and Third Respondents are Liquor
Traders located in the same vicinity
as where the premises of the
Applicant are located.
23.
Although the Second and
Third Respondents’ Liquor Outlets are not similar to the
License applied for by the Applicant, in
that their Liquor Outlets
are not located within a Mini Market facility, they clearly also sell
wine to the public for off-premises
consumption. The only similar
outlet is the Food & More Liquor Store (off-consumption liquor
and Grocers’ Licence) located
950 meter from the Applicant’s
premises, but they did not object.
24.
The area where the
Applicant’s OK Mini Market is located on Drift Boulevard Road,
already has a business character.
It is common cause that the
OK Mini Market is located next to a service station and that this
service station services the various
residential developments in the
area. Directly behind the filling station, these residential
developments are located.
The residential areas include a
church and a school still to be registered.
25.
The objection of the
Muldersdrift Liquor Store CC refers to the Applicant’s outlet
to be an OK Mini Market and that as such,
the Applicants are
operating a franchise operation and would have an unfair advantage
over the Objector’s Liquor Store, as
the bulk buying of wine by
the Franchisee, enables the Franchisor (the Applicant) to be able to
sell their wine at an unfair discount,
a discount that cannot be
matched by non-franchise holders. It is submitted that: “
this
grossly unfair competition results that a harmful monopolistic
condition
” would be created.
26.
In addition, the First
Objector also indicated that his own Liquor Outlet is located only
some 130 meters from the Applicant’s
Outlet, although his
Outlet is not a Grocers’ Wine Liquor License premises.
27.
The First Objector for
the first time refers to the possibility that the Grocers’ Wine
License, if approved, might have a
negative influence on a Place of
Worship located 120 meters from the Applicant’s facility. The
First Objector also
refers to the fact that there are already further
Supermarket Outlets in the immediate vicinity. He refers to a
Food and
More Supermarket located approximately 950 meter away, and
although not in the immediate vicinity of the Applicant’s
location,
a large Checkers, as well as a large Pick-n-Pay, far bigger
than that of the OK Mini Market of the Applicant, also available to
the public at large.
28.
The First Objector also
refers to a Liquor City located in Muldersdrift, but there is no
indication as to the distance that this
is located from the
Applicant’s premises.
29.
The application of the
Applicant is considered by the Respondents in terms of Section 30 of
the Gauteng
Liquor Act 2003
and apart from the approval or dismissal
decision that the Respondents may take, Section 30(3) of the Gauteng
Liquor Act, determines
in
Section 30(2)
, that:
“
When
considering an application for a license, the Board shall grant an
application for any license if: -
(a)
the premises are, or will, on completion, be suitable for purposes
for which they will be
used under the license;
(b)
the applicant concerned is of good character and is otherwise fit to
be the holder of the
license;
(c)
the granting of the license is in the public interest;
(d)
the possibility does not exist that the granting of the application
may cause a harmful
monopolistic condition to arise or be aggravated;
or
(e)
the premises, accommodation, equipment and facilities in respect of
which the license if
to be issued, are, or will be, if the applicant
is licensed, in compliance with this act and regulations.
(3)
The board shall grant an application in the case of premises not
situated within a radius
of 500 (five hundred) meters in the vicinity
of a place of worship, educational institution, similar licensed
premises, public
transport facility, or such further distance as the
board may determine or as may be prescribed from time to time
.”
30.
From the application and
the objections of the Second and Third Respondents, it appears that
at least one off-site and one on-site
liquor outlets (although not
similar) are located within the 500 (five hundred) meters circular
determined distance, a similar
outlet within 950meters and a further
dissimilar outlet still further away at 3 km.
31.
The Place of Worship
mentioned appears to include Kings School – an education
facility – both of which are located 120
meters from the
Applicant’s proposed premises.
32.
The Applicant responded
to the objection of the Second Respondent (owner of Muldersdrift
Liquor Store CC) and in paragraph 1.3 of
his response, he submits as
follows:
“
The
existing ministries Muldersdrift consists of a church and school,
operating from the same premises. Apparently the same
person is
in charge of both, namely a Pastor Craig Rowe.
Consequently the
reference by Applicant to the community ministries Muldersdrift, at
number 8 of the Applicant’s notice, includes
both the church
and the school.
On the said
institution’s website, mention of a school is made, but it is
stated, that it is still in the process of registration
as a school.
Applicant
submits with respect that there was not prejudice or potential
prejudice suffered by any party
.”
33.
In the response, the
Applicant submits that the proximity of the Objector’s liquor
store is irrelevant, as it is not a similar
business and the
Applicant’s supermarket is much more convenient for clients to
buy their groceries and wine at one location,
that to visit two
separate shops.
34.
In the response, the
Applicant refers to
Argus Printing and Publishing Company Limited
v Darling’s Art Ware (Pty) Ltd 1952 (2) SA
and
Lester
Properties (Pty) v Farran
1996 SA 492
(DCL)
, where it was decided
that the public is better served, if it is more convenient to buy at
the proposed liquor outlet, than other
existing outlets. This
conclusion is however not justifiable to this matter and
circumstances.
35.
The instruction in
Section 30(3)
submits that an application for any license shall be
granted, but the proviso is that there not be a place of worship, an
educational
facility or a similar licensed outlet within a radius of
500 (five hundred) meters.
The applicant has also
deposed to an affidavit, stating that there is no similar licensed
premises within a radius of 500 meters
from the proposed premises.
An affidavit by the
applicant’s Mr De Andrade reads:
“
Matabicho
(Pty) Ltd is the owner of OK Minimarket, and is situated at the
Remaining Extent of Portion 68 (a Portion of 44) of the
farm Rietvlei
No. 180, situated at 68 Drift Boulevard, Muldersdriftt, Krugersdorp,
Gauteng, 1739. I hereby confirm that there is
no similar licensed
premises within a radius of 500m from the above premises.”
Although two liquor
outlets are located approximately 140 meters from the Applicants’
outlet, the one is a liquor store and
the other an on-site
consumption outlet.
36.
In paragraph 2 of the
response of the Applicant to the five hundred meter radius concern,
the Applicant submits as follows:
“
It
is the Applicant’s submission, that the supermarket, with a
Grocers’ Wine License, will not negatively affect the
church /
school situated within a 500 meters radius from the Applicant’s
premises.
It is ironic, that the
objector objects on this ground while his own liquor store entrance,
is directly next to the entrance to
the same church / school.”
This last remark remains
unchallenged by the Respondent.
37.
The
reference to the church and the school warrants two remarks. The
distance to the church and school and similar outlets
should be
properly explained by both parties. From the Applicant's
documentation, it’s virtually impossible to determine
exactly
where the church is located. It is not clear if it is located
within the residential development. In the response,
the
Applicant submits the following about the church’s location:
“
while his own liquor store
entrance, is directly next to the entrance to the same church /
school.”
The submission is that
the school and the church are located on the same premises. Although
it is the Applicant’s submission
that the supermarket with a
Grocers’ Wine license will not negatively affect the church /
school, something more is required
than just such a bold allegation.
Section 30(3)
requires a consideration of the location of the
premises, any history of adverse consequences, comment by the public
or the police,
or even the church themselves. The Police raised
no concerns nor did the Local Committee. On the contrary, the
Local
Committee recommended approval of the Grocers wine License.
38.
The
reference
to the nearby liquor outlets
however misses the point. The five
hundred meters prohibition appears not to be directed at necessarily
the location of existing
similar
outlets,
but rather to the creation of further outlets within that five
hundred meter location. It is common cause that the
Liquor
Outlet of the Objector has already been at the same location for the
past twenty-seven years. This is long before
the creation
and/or the establishment of either the church or the school or the
residential developments.
Whatever the factual
position is, it remains the obligation of the Applicant to submit
sufficient evidence to the respondent to
enable the Respondent to
consider the possible impact of a further liquor outlet in close
proximity to the school and or church.
39.
The
Applicant refers to the negative influence on Places of Worships and
submitted that the activities at the Minimarket will not
impact
negatively on the place of worships, especially if it is taken into
account that most have their services on Sunday mornings
when trade
only starts at 9:00 and services usually ends by latest at 12:00.
The reality is that Drift Boulevard
Road
creates a business character, as almost all businesses in the area
are situated next to this road. The residential area
is
situated, directly behind these businesses, including the listed
church. It remains unchallenged that the church is located
next
to the entrance of the First Objector’s liquor store.
40.
The second Objector
submitted that the selling of alcohol at a petrol station will
increase the incidents of drunken driving, violence,
and crime and is
against the interests of the businesses and the residents of the
Muldersdriftt community.
He submits that the area
is already well served by similar licenced establishments, namely:
40.1.
Liquor City Express Muldersdriftt – 130 m
from Applicant's location;
40.2.
Food & More Liquor Store (off-consumption
liquor and Grocers’ Licence) 950 m from Applicant’s
location;
40.3.
Ultra-Liquors - 3.5 km from Applicant’s
location;
40.4.
Drift Country Inn (on-consumption Liquor Licence)
– 140 m from Applicant’s Location.
41.
Without providing any
detail , the Second Objector submits in his objection, that there are
a number of schools, charities and places
of worship in the area
which will not be best served with the addition of a liquor outlet
located at a petrol station and submitting
that alcohol at a petrol
station will increase drunken driving, violence and crime:
The applicant replied
(righty so) that:
“
There
is no proof or any statistics which show, that Liquor sold from an
outlet in close proximity to a petrol station, contribute
to drunk
and irresponsible driving, violence or crime.”
I agree , such
allegations need to be supported by proper evidence.
42.
All of these objections
and replies thereto about the similar and dissimilar liquor outlets,
the place of worship and the proposed
education facility located
within the 500 m radius referred to in Section 30(3) of the Act does
not appear to have being properly
considered by the First Respondent.
43.
This is confirmed in the
First Respondent’s answering affidavit as follows:
“
In
amplification of my denial, I aver that irrespective of the
objections, the Board was going to reach the same conclusion, as
selling of alcohol in the filing station is a thorny issue and under
the spotlight within the Liquor Board.”
The Respondents’
suggestion in Paragraph 63 does not save the day:
“
The
Liquor Board considered all the information at its disposal and
exercised its discretion in terms of Section 30(2)(c), to come
up
with a just decision to decline the applicant's liquor license
application.”
The Respondent then
returns to the real reason for refusing the licence:
“
It
is undesirable for the filing station to sell alcohol as it will
create an opportunity for road uses to buy and consume alcohol
while
driving and cause accidents.”
And:
“
Approving
of the said liquor
licence
will only create opportunity for motorists and/or road users to buy
liquor at a filling station which has adverse consequences”
And finally:
“
The
public interest should not be confined to the local community, it
must include the Gauteng population and beyond, "road
users".
Hence the first respondent contends that it will not be in the public
interest to grant the liquor license to the
applicant as it has
adverse consequences”
44.
The Applicant relies on
the following provisions of section 6(2) of PAJA:
44.1.
Section 6(2)(e)(ii): “
The
action was taken for an ulterior purpose or motive
”
;
44.2.
Section 6(2)(e)(iii): “
The
action was taken because irrelevant considerations were taken into
account or relevant considerations were not considered
”
;
44.3.
Section 6(2)(e)(vi): “
The
action was taken arbitrarily or capriciously
”
;
44.4.
Section 6(2)(f)(i): “
The
action itself is not authorised by the empowering provision
”
;
44.5.
Section 6(2)(f)(ii): “
The
action itself is not rationally connected to:
(cc) the information
before the administrator; or
(dd)
the reason given to for it by the administrator
”
;
44.6.
Section 6(2)(h): “
The
exercise of the power or the performance of the function authorised
by the empowering provision, in pursuance of which the administrative
action was purportedly taken, is so unreasonable that no reasonable
person, could have exercised the power or performed the function
”
;
44.7.
Section 6(2)(i): “
The
action is otherwise unconstitutional or unlawful
”
.
For the reasons hereunder
the ground raised in Section 6(2)(f)(ii) that “
The action
itself is not rationally connected to the information before the
administrator, the reason given to for it by the administrator
”,
and in Section 6(2)(e)(iii): “
The action was taken because
irrelevant considerations were taken into account or relevant
considerations were not considered
”; justifies that the
review must succeed.
45.
On the question of public
interest, the three factors to be considered, namely the Applicant,
the premises and the public interest,
should not be considered in
isolation. The definition of “
public interest
”,
particularly with reference to Liquor Applications, must be
understood with reference to the changes in the approach of
authorities to the supply and distribution to liquor as well as the
amendments to the Liquor Legislation, which have been affected
over
the years.
46.
In the present case, the
Board was persuaded that the grant of a Grocers’ Wine License
would not be in the public interest,
because the approving of the
Liquor License will create opportunities for motorists and/or road
users to buy liquor at a filling
station, which will have adverse
consequences.
47.
In addition hereto, the
Board submitted that there are three other outlets (of liquor) in
close proximity within five hundred meters
that sells wine. The
Board then added that it is undesirable for the filling station to
sell alcohol, as it will create opportunity
for road users to buy and
consume alcohol while driving and causing accidents. No proper
consideration of the nearby liquor
outlets or the 500 meter Section
30(3) appears in the reasons or the answering affidavit.
48.
It would therefore appear
that the interests of motorists in general, as well as those persons
living in close proximity to the
filling station, was in effect
elevated to the public interest.
49.
While motorists in
general, as well as the public living near to the filling station,
are part of those whose interest can be said
to make up the public
interest, the Board erred, in my view, in basing its decision in
effect on only their interests.
50.
It is clear that in
considering the public interest, the nature of the area where the
filling station is located and where the Applicant
proposes to
operate the OK Mini Market, must also be taken into account when
assessing whether the public interest will be served.
51.
It is not unreasonable
and is in fact common practice in the retail business, that filling
stations, particularly at or near business
developments and/or next
to busy roadways, include an OK Mini Market or something similar.
52.
It is also not
unreasonable that food outlets and/or grocers stores, include outlets
for the sale of wine and wine sections are
common in many of these
food outlets. This was in any event the evidence that was
placed before the Board. Importantly
also, is that the type of
business which the Applicant intends to operate, was overlooked by
the Board. It is the Applicant’s
case that it intends to
operate a
bona fide
well known upmarket general store, for
which a Grocers’ Wine License would be ideal. It is for
this very reason that
the category of a Grocers’ Wine License
was created.
53.
Although the objectors
refer to the close proximity of similar liquor outlets, they are not
in fact similar.
54.
On the contrary, the
liquor outlets differ in nature from that of the Applicant.
55.
This was not challenged
by the Respondent, but the Respondent nevertheless accepted that
concerns of the Objectors relating to the
sale of liquor at a filling
station.
56.
Although the objectors
referred to a Gauteng Liquor Board Policy of 2016, this appear to not
have been promulgated and the amendment
to the
Liquor Act that
prohibits the sale of liquor at a filling station, has not been
signed and is not in effect.
57.
Although the general view
might be that it is undesirable that liquor be sold at/or close to a
filling station or at least on the
same premises, this in itself,
taken together with all the other factors, just not justify the
conclusion that it would necessarily
lead to an increase in alcohol
consumption in motor vehicles.
58.
The sale of liquor at a
grocer’s store is not uncommon and taking the design of
the grocer’s store in relation
to the filling station into
consideration, the Board erred in considering the grocer’s
store to be in such a close proximity
to the filling station, that
the one could be the other. Although I do not share the
submission of the Applicant that the
reference to “
in a
filling station
” is indicative of the Board’s
misconception on the location of the grocer’s store in relation
to the filling
station, I do accept that the Board erred in not
evaluating the exact location of the grocer’s store.
59.
A more thorny issue not
properly dealt with by any of the parties (the Applicant as well as
the Respondent), are the close proximity
of the church. On
careful scrutiny of the objection to the application by some of the
objectors and the response thereto
by the Applicant before the Board,
it is clear that the church, are located next to or in very close
proximity of tan existing
liquor store of at least the one objector.
Had this created a problem in the past, it would have been raised by
the objector
or evidence would exist that it creates a problem.
60.
The Board have not made
much about this locality.
61.
I accept that the
locality of the church in relation to the Applicant’s suggested
outlet, will not cause prejudice to the
church and/or the residents
of the residential area. The Objector Owner of this liquor store
(maybe for obvious reasons) himself
does not view this as a negative
influence.
62.
The Applicant submitted
that the Board took irrelevant considerations into account and failed
also to take relevant considerations
into account when coming to a
decision. It failed to take into account that problems with
similar licensed premises, has
not caused or has caused an increase
in either drunken driving or the use or alcohol at or close the
filling station. This
statement concerning the Board’s
experience with regard to problems with the sale of liquor from
filling stations, are problematic.
There is no information
before the Court as to what statistics and what general information
the Board refers to when making the
allegation that it increases the
use of alcohol in motor vehicles.
63.
It is unfortunate that
the Board gave very little reasons for the refusal of the Applicant’s
application and utilised the
answering affidavit to the application
to expand on his ruling. It seems clear that the Board had
access to factors which
have been dealt with satisfactorily by the
Applicant in his response to the objections. It however was not
indicated in the
ruling of the Board that those factors were indeed
considered.
64.
I have accordingly come
to the conclusion that the application for a review must succeed.
65.
The next question is
whether the application should be referred back to the Board for
reconsideration or whether it can be said
that this is an exceptional
case which justifies my substituting the administrative action taken
by the Board (Section 8(1)(c)
of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act).
66.
I am of the view that
this is an exceptional case, for the following reasons:
66.1.
The matter has been delayed for a long time and
the application was already lodged in 2022 and the Applicant has
already started
doing business from the filling station, but more
particularly from the grocer’s store, at least from 2022.
66.2.
There is no evidence that indicate that the
grocer’s store is not successful or viable, or not supported by
the community.
66.3.
The objections and the reply thereto have been
fully canvassed by both parties before the Court and all the facts
are before Court.
66.4.
Conditions normally attached to a Grocers’
Wine License are fairly standard.
66.5.
The Respondent has in any event indicated that
they would have taken the same decision irrespective of the
objections and that the
application would have been refused, based on
the location of the Grocers’ Wine License.
67.
I accordingly grant an
order in the following terms:
67.1.
The Decision of the First Respondent to refuse the
application of the Applicant for a Grocers’ Wine License is
reviewed and
set aside;
67.2.
The First Respondent is directed to grant the
application of the Applicant for a Grocers’ Wine License and to
issue a Certificate
subject to the general conditions normally
granted and imposed by the First Respondent and in particular to
apply those conditions
that:
67.2.1.
Indicate the days and hours between which wine may
be sold.
67.3.
The First Respondent is ordered to pay the
Applicant’s costs on scale B of the amended Rule 69 of the
Uniform Rules of Court.
DU
PLESSIS AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GUATENG
DIVISION , PRETORIA
Date
of hearing
: 19 November 2024
Judgement
delivered on : 29 November 2024
APEARANCES
Counsel
for Applicant
: Adv L Pienaar
Instructed
by
: HG Aucamp Attorneys
Counsel
for First Respondent: Adv S.T Seshoka
Instructed
by :
State Attorney
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