Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1267South Africa
Fuel Retailers' Association and Another v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (2024-123240) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1267 (6 December 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Fuel Retailers' Association and Another v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (2024-123240) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1267 (6 December 2024)
Fuel Retailers' Association and Another v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (2024-123240) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1267 (6 December 2024)
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sino date 6 December 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 2024-123240
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2024-12-06
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
THE
FUEL RETAILERS’ ASSOCIATION
First Applicant
MOSAVAL
FUELS (PTY) LTD.
[REG.
NO.:
2018/444757/07]
Second Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
First Respondent
CONTROLLER
OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
Second Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR-GENERAL: DEPARTMENT OF
MINERAL
RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Third Respondent
SULNISA
GARAGES (PTY) LTD
[REG.
NO.:
2012/168775/07]
Fourth Respondent
MAYFIELD
PROPRTY INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
[REG.
NO.:
2015/056371/07]
Fifth Respondent
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
handing down is deemed to be 6 December
2024.
JUDGMENT
POTTERILL
J
The
parties.
[1]
The first applicant is the Fuel Retailers’ Association [the
Fuel Retailers], an association
of fuel retailers in all provinces of
the RSA representing 2 500 members having its own constitution
and having its main purpose
to “
inter alia
create and
sustain a peaceful and stable working environment in the fuel
retailers industry, to protect, secure and to promote the
interests
of all affiliates.” It asserts it has the capability in
law to sue and be sued. The second applicant
is Mosaval Fuels
(Pty) Ltd, with its principal place of business and its registered
address in Cape Town.
[2]
The first respondent is the Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy
[the Minister]. The
second respondent is the Controller of
Petroleum Products [the Controller] and the third respondent is the
Director-General:
Department of Mineral of Resources and Energy
[the DG]. The fourth respondent is Sulnisa Garages (Pty) Ltd
[Sulnisa] with
its principal and registered address in Cape Town.
The fifth respondent is Mayfield Property Investments (Pty) Ltd
[Mayfield]
with its principal and registered address in Cape Town.
[3]
The Minister, the Controller and the DG have filed a notice to
abide. Sulnisa and Mayfield
oppose the application.
The
relief sought.
[4]
This is an urgent application wherein a nutshell the applicants seek
the decision to issue a site
and retail licence to Sulnisa and
Mayfield to be reviewed and set aside, alternatively set aside.
Furthermore, the Controller
is to be interdicted from issuing a
retail licence to Sulnisa and Mayfield pending finalisation of the
Appeal. Sulnisa and
Mayfield must be ordered to return the
issued site and retail licences to the Controller and the Controller
is to cancel their
site and retail licences. Sulnisa and
Mayfield are to be interdicted from conducting the business of
selling petroleum products,
or products ordinarily sold by a garage
operator with a site and retail licence at the property described as
Erf 2[...], situated
at 2[...] M[...] Road, Observatory, Cape Town.
The
common cause facts.
[5]
Sulnisa and Mayfield started with the construction of the site on
March 2024. On 9 May 2024
the licences were granted. On
20 May 2024 the applicants wrote to the Controller informing them
that they would be appealing
the decision to grant the applicants’
licences and that in terms of the judgment of
Gensinger and Neave
CC and Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Another
2024 JDR 1553 (SCA) the appeal suspends the issuing of the
licences until the Minister has finalised the appeal. On 21 May
2024 the second applicant lodged the appeal against the granting of
the licence. On 10 June 2024 the Controller issued the
licences
to the respondents. The respondents responded to the appeal on
8 November 2024. The legal services of the
Department of
Mineral Resources and Energy on 18 October 2024 informed Sulnisa and
Mayfield that they may not continue to develop
the site or [sell]
retail petroleum products from the site pending the finalisation of
the appeals.
Points
in limine
raised by Sulnisa and Mayfield.
Urgency.
[6]
Much was made on behalf of Sulnisa and Mayfield that the matter was
not urgent. The argument
went that the application was issued
on the 28
th
of October 2024 to be enrolled on 12 November
2024. An amended notice of motion re-enrolled the matter for 26
November 2024
affording the respondents to file their opposing
affidavits now by 15 November 2024. This shifting of dates
already indicated
that the matter is not remotely urgent.
[7]
Furthermore, if there was any urgency then it was self-created,
because the site licence was granted
on 10 June 2024, some 5 months
ago. The applicants aver that in September 2024 they were
informed that the licences were
issued. They further aver that
they only learnt that the licences were collected on 22 October
2024. Sulnisa and Mayfield
did not know of the objection lodged
by the second applicant. The applicants also provided no detail
of how they were informed
the licences were provided. They knew
by 30 September 2024 that the site and retail licences had been
issued and that the
filling station plans to commence streaming by
the end of September 2024. There is no explanation why the
urgent application
was not before Court in October.
[8]
On behalf of the applicants it was submitted that the matter is
extremely urgent. This is
so because on 22 May 2024 the
applicants lodged an appeal against the approval of the licences
granted on 9 May 2024, despite the
objections of 8 August 2024 and 14
August 2024. Despite the Controller being informed by letter of
the SCA judgment and an
undertaking sought that the site and retail
licences would not be issued, no such undertaking was forthcoming.
[9]
The interim appeal was lodged by the second applicant and IRM as they
operated service stations
within the same catchment area and sharing
the same traffic. On 16 May 2024 a PAIA application was made.
To date no
document requested in terms of PAIA has been provided.
[10]
On 21 May 2024 a letter was sent to the Minister seeking an urgent
intervention and demands in an effort
to exhaust all its internal
remedies for the site and retail licences not to be issued.
Only a few days prior to the founding
affidavit being drafted did the
applicants hear and have it confirmed by the Controller (22 October
2024) that the licences were
issued, despite the pending appeal.
[11]
Prior to 22 October 2024 the second applicant wrote a letter to all
the respondents demanding an undertaking
that no trading will
commence until this application is finalised. The undertaking
had to be provided before 18 October 2024.
No such undertakings
were received and the application was launched on 28 October 2024.
Decision
on urgency.
[12]
An unlawful issuing of a licence by the Controller must be
interdicted pending the review and is inherently
urgent. This
is specially so as there is no provision in the Act or Regulations to
set aside or cancel an issued site and
retail licence. The
applicants’ submission that it will not be afforded substantial
redress at a hearing in due course
is correct; immediate
intervention is necessary to preserve the status quo and prevent
further prejudice to all the parties
concerned.
[13]
The applicants’ timeline in bringing this application did not
create its own urgency. They timeously
acted upon incidents
taking place and attempted to exhaust internal remedies and sought
undertakings, yet the respondents forged
ahead. The matter is
urgent and must be heard.
Points
in limine
raised by Sulnisa and Mayfield.
Lack
of jurisdiction.
[14]
It is common cause that the site is situated in Cape Town and Sulnisa
and Mayfield’s registered addresses
are in Cape Town. The
Controller, Minister and DG’s principal places of business are
located in the jurisdiction of
this Court. The licences were
granted in this jurisdiction and the appeal is to be heard in this
jurisdiction.
[15]
On behalf of Sulnisa and Mayfield it was submitted that the matter
should have been issued out of Cape Town
because the site is there
and it would alleviate the burden of this Court.
[16]
It could not be seriously argued that this Court lacks jurisdiction,
but only that it would have been more
convenient to be heard in Cape
Town.
Section 21(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
clothes this Court with jurisdiction. The Controller, Minister
and DG is in the area of this Court’s jurisdiction and
accordingly it also has jurisdiction over any person joined as a
party to any cause in relation to which such court has jurisdiction.
[17]
This Court has jurisdiction and this point
in limine
is
dismissed.
Locus
standi
of the applicants.
Locus
standi
of the Fuel Retailers.
[18]
It was submitted that the Fuel Retailers has no
pending appeal and thus cannot materially suffer if the
licences are
granted. Accordingly it does not have a clear right and
therefore no
locus standi.
[19]
On behalf of the Fuel Retailers it was submitted that it is a company
which represents the interest of proprietors
of filling stations
across South Africa. It is represented by the CEO of the
company with the second applicant being a member
of Fuel Retailers.
Although itself has no pending appeal it sets out that it received
more and more complaints from member
retailers that despite appeals
being lodged against decisions to approve site and retail licences,
the Controller ignores the appeals
and issues site and retail
licences that are subject to appeal. This trend has increased
over the last couple of months,
amounting to a national crisis and it
must be addressed. This is baldly denied by Sulnisa and
Mayfield. The Controller
is startlingly silent hereon as it did
not file opposition or an explanatory affidavit.
[20]
Furthermore, it was set out that in close proximity of the site of
Sulnisa and Mayfield are Total Energies
Observatory, Caltex
Observatory and Shell Salt River Circle, that are all members of the
Fuel Retailers. Instead of all these
members launching an
application, the Fuel Retailers, as its association, with the
authority and power to protect their rights
against unlawful
interferences is mandated and authorised to seek relief in protection
of their rights.
[21]
I am satisfied that the Fuel Retailers has standing. It has set
out adequate interest in the subject
matter of the litigation and has
a direct interest on behalf of its members. The interest to be
protected is actual and current.
It is not denied that contrary
to the SCA’s decision the Controller issues licences while
appeals are pending. The
Fuel Retailers has often been afforded
standing in litigation in our Courts.
[1]
Does
the second applicant have
locus standi?
[22]
In the answering affidavit no issue was taken with the
locus
standi
of the second applicant. In a supplementary
affidavit filed just prior to the hearing the
locus standi
is
now attacked on the basis of new facts that should be permitted in
the interests of justice. The fact is that the second
applicant’s right of tenure will be terminated within 60 days.
[23]
The second applicant had no opportunity to answer thereto, but in any
event it has
locus standi,
as it stands, before me now.
This point
in limine
is dismissed.
The
description of the site.
[24]
The applicants described the property as “Erf 2[…],
situated at 2[...] M[...] Road, Observatory,
Cape Town.”
It is common cause that the correct description is: “The
Remainder of Erf 2[…], situated
at 3[...] M[...] Road,
Observatory, Cape Town.”
[25]
The argument on behalf of Sulnisa and Mayfield went that the
amendment of the notice of motion to the correct
address is not for
the mere asking as Erf 2[…] does not exist in law as it has
been sub-divided. The problem is expanded
in that 2[…]
and 3[...] M[...] Road are two entirely different properties.
[26]
On behalf of the applicants it was argued that it relates to the
property of Sulnisa and Mayfield for which
the licence was approved.
[27]
I am satisfied that although the description is incorrect, it is
common cause between the parties that licences
were approved for the
property of Sulnisa and Mayfied and that the issues relate to that
property.
[28]
This point
in limine
is dismissed.
Is
the issuing of the licences reviewable?
[29]
In the
Gensinger
-matter the SCA found and ordered
inter
alia
as follows:
“
It is declared
that the applicants’ appeal in terms of
section 12A
of the Act,
against the decisions of the Controller of Petroleum Products to
approve the third and fourth respondents’ applications
for site
and retail licences and subsequently to issue those licences to them
suspends the Controller’s decisions pending
the finalisation of
such appeal.”
[30]
There is no doubt that the approval and the issuing of the licence is
a two-step process. The licences
could only be issued by the
Controller when the successful applicants have fulfilled the
conditions imposed by the Controller.
[31]
The argument on behalf of Sulnisa and Mayfield was that the
applicants should have internally appealed the
issuing of licences or
brought a judicial review thereof under PAJA.
[32]
This argument on the day of hearing was not seriously pursued, I
think, because it has no merit. The
Controller never had the
power to decide to issue the licences pending the appeal. But,
in any event, the decision to issue
the licences can only be taken
after approval was given; the approval must be appealed for the
issuing of the licence to
follow if so complied with, whatever
decision on appeal. On behalf of Sulnisa and Mayfield it was
submitted that when one
decision follows upon each other, application
must be made to set aside all the decisions and not only one.
In these circumstances
this argument is incorrect. The decision
to issue the site and retail licences can only follow after the
approval was granted.
If there is no approval granted no
decision to issue the site and retail licences can follow. In
terms of the SCA ruling
the decision is unlawful and must be set
aside pending appeal.
Prayer
6.
[33]
In oral argument counsel for Sulnisa and Mayfield placed much
emphasis on the requirement for an interim
interdict pertaining to
the balance of convenience as sought in prayer 6 of the notice of
motion. I was referred to
National Treasury and Others v
Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others (OUTA)
2012 (6)
SA 223
(CC) and reliance was placed on the reasoning therein that
when a court evaluates where balance of convenience exists, a court
must be aware that it is restraining statutory power exercised within
the exclusive terrain of the executive branch of government.
I
must accordingly exercise my discretion in terms of
section 172
and
take into consideration the money expended by Sulnisa and Mayfield
and in view thereof not grant prayer 6.
[34]
Prayer 6 seeks that pending finalisation of the appeal Sulnisa and
Mayfield “are interdicted and restrained
from forthwith
conducting the business of selling petroleum products, or any other
retail products that are ordinarily sold by
a garage operator with a
site and retail licence” at the property. I need not
consider the separation of powers balance
simply because I am only
confirming what the organ of state had instructed Sulnisa and
Mayfield on 18 October 2024, it had instructed
them not to continue
to develop the site or [sell] retail petroleum products from the site
pending finalisation of these appeals.
I can also not utilise
the remedy in
section 172
as this matter is not a constitutional
matter, but a review and setting aside of decision to issue licences.
[35]
On the one hand counsel for Sulnisa and Mayfield argued that the
effect of prayer 6 is final, but on the
other hand argued the balance
of convenience requirement of an interlocutory interdict. I am
satisfied that the applicants
have a
prima facie
right, though
open to some doubt. The harm herein is an irremediable breach
of the second applicant’s rights, as well
as the rights of the
retailers that Fuel Retailers are there to establish and maintain.
[36]
The balance of convenience was discussed above, but in view of the
SCA decision the balance favours the applicants.
Pending appeal
the licences could not have been issued and Sulnisa and Mayfield
cannot trade further.
[37]
There is no alternative remedy. The applicants can only on an
urgent basis seek to limit their harm.
[38]
I am satisfied that for the prayers seeking final relief the
applicants have proven that they have a clear
right, will suffer
irreparable harm and have no alternative remedy.
[39]
I am satisfied that in view of the SCA judgment and Sulnisa and
Mayfield expressing their commitment to continue
to trade to order
costs on a punitive scale.
[40]
I accordingly make the following order:
[40.1] The
application is enrolled as an urgent application and it is authorised
and allowed that this application be
heard by way of urgency,
and the rules, format, time period and service as envisaged in
Uniform
Rule 6(12)
are dispensed with.
[40.2] The second
respondent’s decision to “issue” the site and
retail licences (“the licences”),
pending finalisation of
the second applicant’s appeal lodged in terms of
section 12A
of
the PPA (“the appeal”) is set aside.
[40.3] The second
respondent is interdicted and restrained from issuing the licences
pending finalisation of the appeal.
[40.4] The fourth
and fifth respondents are ordered and interdicted to forthwith return
the licences to the second respondent.
[40.5] The second
respondent is ordered and directed to forthwith cancel the licences.
[40.6] The fourth
and fifth respondents are interdicted from conducting any business
associated with a fuel station at the
Remainder of Erf 2[...],
situated at 3[...] M[...] Road, Observatory, Cape Town (“the
site”).
[40.7] The fifth
respondent is interdicted and restrained from forthwith conducting
the business of selling petroleum products,
or any other retail
products that are ordinarily sold by a garage operator with a retail
licence and the fourth respondent is interdicted
and restrained from
conducting any business, at the property described as Remainder of
Erf 2[...], situated at 3[...] M[...] Road,
Observatory, Cape Town
(“the site”), pending finalisation of the appeal.
[40.8] In the event
that the fourth and/or fifth respondents are conducting any business,
at the site, then in that event,
the fourth and fifth respondents are
ordered to immediately cease conducting business, at the site,
pending finalisation of the
appeal.
[40.9] The fourth
and fifth respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this
application on the attorney client scale (scale
C).
S.
POTTERILL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO: 2024-123240
HEARD
ON: 27 November 2024
FOR
THE APPLICANTS: ADV. W.F. WANNENBURG
INSTRUCTED
BY: Tshepo Mofokeng Attorneys
FOR
THE 4
TH
AND 5
TH
RESPONDENTS: ADV. R. DU
PLESSIS SC
INSTRUCTED
BY: A Kock & Associates
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 6 December 2024
[1]
Fuel
Retailers Association of SA (Pty) Ltd and Others v Director-General,
Environmental Management, Mpumalanga and Others
2007
(2) SA 163
(SCA)
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