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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Highveld Honey Farms (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development (032973/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1322 (11 December 2024)
Highveld Honey Farms (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development (032973/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1322 (11 December 2024)
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sino date 11 December 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 032973/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
11 DECEMBER 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
HIGHVELD
HONEY FARMS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF AGRICULTURE, LAND REFORM
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
Respondent
Summary:
In an application for leave to appeal, the
applicant sought to overcome shortcomings in its papers in the main
application, by indicating
an intention to produce further evidence
on appeal. This application had no prospects of success as it
did not meet the test
for adducing new evidence. Failing this
attempt, the hurdle of a lack of prospects of success on appeal
regarding the issue
of mootness, which formed the basis for the court
refusing the initial review application and declining to grant a
declaratory
order, could not be overcome. Insufficient other
grounds were advanced as to why it would nevertheless be in the
interests
of justice to grant leave to appeal. Application for
leave to appeal was consequently refused and the conditional
application
to cross-appeal accordingly fell away. Costs
followed the event.
ORDER
1.
The application for leave to appeal is
refused, with costs.
2.
It is noted that the conditional
application for leave to cross-appeal accordingly falls away.
JUDGMENT
The
matter was heard in open court and the judgment was prepared and
authored by the judge whose name is reflected herein and was
handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file
of this matter on Caselines. The date of handing-down is deemed
to be 10 December 2024.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
In 2019 the
applicant applied for a rebate permit for the importing of natural
honey. That application was refused, and the
relief sought in
the applicant’s subsequent review application was also
refused. The reason for that refusal
was that an order
reviewing and setting aside the rebate permit refusal would have no
practical effect and the issue was accordingly
moot. The basis
for this was that the applicant’s review application only
disclosed importation of honey from Zambia,
in respect of which a
rebate permit would have been “superfluous” (the term
used by the decisionmaker in question)
as such importation was zero
rated.
[2]
In order to
boost its application for leave to appeal the refusal of the review
application on the basis of mootness, the applicant
had delivered an
“affidavit on mootness” and indicated therein that it
would apply to lead further evidence on appeal.
A
reminder of how the mootness issue arose
[3]
In
terms of Section 75(1) of the Customs and Excise Act
[1]
(the Customs Act), rebates of import duties may be granted in respect
of goods listed in Item 2 of Schedule 4 of the Act.
The
importing of natural honey is one of the class of goods provided for.
[4]
However, honey
imported from SADC countries, such as Zambia, may be imported free of
duty, i.e zero rated.
[5]
In paragraph
44 of the answering affidavit of the second respondent (the nominal
decisionmaker in the review application) it was
stated that “
upon
a thorough inspection of the SPS permits provided by the applicant …
the rebate permits will be superfluous as no rebate
will be payable
…
”.
This is because these documents referred to imports from Zambia.
[6]
In support of
this contention, the respondents annexed Annexures SA9 and SA10 to
their answering affidavits. In reply, the
applicant only
re-annexed the first portion of SA10 (as RA6), excluding the
corresponding SPS certificate of even date (19 November
2019), which
clearly indicated Zambia as the only country of origin.
[7]
Apart from the
fact that the abovementioned documents post-dated the applicant’s
initial application for a rebate permit,
the respondents’
contention that such a permit would be “superfluous” was
therefore not rebutted in reply.
Even on a conspectus of all
the evidence, let alone the application of the
Plascon-Evans-principle, the applicant could therefore
not overcome
the mootness issue.
[8]
The mootness
issue had been fully dealt with in paragraphs [56] – [62] of
the judgment in the review application.
Attempts
to cross this hurdle
[9]
The applicant
argued that the court was bound to the formulation of the disputes
set out by the parties in the joint practice note
filed on their
behalf in the review application. That note, however, offered
the following point up for adjudication: “
7.9
whether the decision of the second respondent taken on 13 April 2022
should be reviewed and set aside
”.
[10]
Not
only do I agree with the respondents that the above issue was
formulated wide enough to encompass the issue of mootness, but
this
issue was also exactly what had been decided by the Constitutional
Court in
Agribee
BEEF Fund Ltd v Eastern Cape Rural Development Agency
[2]
,
a decision I relied on in the judgment in the review application.
[3]
In that matter, the High Court dismissed the review application on
its merits. The SCA differed and granted the review
application, including an order of invalidity but the Constitutional
Court ultimately found that the issue was moot as the contract
in
question had expired.
[11]
The
above illustrates that the issue of mootness is inextricably bound up
with the consideration as to whether a particular administrative
act
should be reviewed and set aside or whether a declaration of
invalidity should be granted. It confirms that it would
be
absurd to expect a court to grant an order which would not have any
practical consequences
[4]
.
[12]
Faced with
this difficulty, the applicant, in its “affidavit on mootness”,
indicated that it intended applying for leave
to lead evidence on
appeal that it had in fact imported honey from other countries during
2019, to wit China, Italy and Uruguay
(it will be remembered from the
judgment in the review application that different tariffs applied to
these countries).
[13]
The
applicant’s intention to lead this evidence was however
qualified as follows in its “affidavit on mootness”:
“
14
… it remains, firstly, the applicant’s stance that it
was not necessary to have proved actual imports in the review
application …
”.
This argument misses the point: once the respondents have
contended that the granting of an order in favour
of the applicant
would be “superfluous” or have no practical effect, then,
when this statement had been left unchecked,
the issue of mootness
became conclusive, irrespective of the applicant’s “stance”.
[14]
It
is trite that, in order to succeed with an application to lead
further evidence on appeal, an applicant intending to do so, should
furnish a reasonably sufficient explanation for its failure to have
produced the evidence earlier
[5]
.
[15]
In
the present instance, the applicant had decided not to produce the
purported evidence, as a result of a conscious decision not
to do
so. This much is clear from the passage quoted above from the
new “affidavit on mootness”. Such a
conscious
decision is usually fatal to an application to later produce the
evidence
[6]
. This should
also be the case here. There was no “failure” to
produce the evidence and there is still no
“reasonably
sufficient explanation” furnished.
[16]
A further
reason for the lack of prospects of success for the application to
lead further evidence, is that the purported evidence,
spanning some
64 pages, would prejudice the respondents if they are precluded form
an opportunity to deal with it. Allowing
this “evidence”
would cause a re-opening of an already long delayed review.
[17]
This
would impair the “guiding principle” that there should be
finality to proceedings and a litigant should therefore
not, except
in exceptional circumstances, be allowed to adduce further
evidence
[7]
. This matter
is not one of those exceptional circumstances.
[18]
I therefore
conclude that neither the applicant’s “affidavit on
mootness” nor the proposed application to lead
further
evidence, have indicated a sufficient prospect of success on appeal.
Any
other compelling reason?
[19]
In
a last-ditch attempt at obtaining leave to appeal, the applicant
relied on section 17(1)(a)(ii) of the Superior Courts Act
[8]
,
by arguing that the whole of the honey importing industry “was
waiting” for an outcome of the declaration sought by
the
applicant and that this constituted a compelling reason to grant
leave to appeal.
[20]
The respondent was of the
opposite view. It is clear from the papers that circumstances
regarding the importing of honey may
change from year to year, and
different considerations might apply from time to time. There
is also nothing preventing the
respondents from publishing new
conditions or from, notionally, republishing the 2011 condition.
[21]
The contention that “the
whole industry” needed a decision on the issue raised by the
applicant, implied that the declarator
would not only be
case-specific but would have a wider impact. This revives the
spectre of non-joinder of other interested
parties, such as the
Minister of Finance and the Commissioner of SARS, who are involved in
the determination of rebates, as well
as the Minister of Trade and
Industry and ITAC as well as NAML and SABIO. Although
referenced in the applicant’s founding
affidavit, these parties
have not been cited nor joined in the review application. It
would be improper to grant leave to
appeal based on an argument
claiming a judgment which would impact on the interests of absent
other parties
[22]
I therefore
conclude that there is no other compelling reason justifying the
granting of leave to appeal.
Costs
[23]
In the order granted
in the main judgment it was ordered that each party pays its own
costs. The exercise of the discretion
to order costs in that
fashion was largely based on the more or less equal considerations
mentioned in paragraph [67] of the main
judgment. Those
considerations are not applicable to the unsuccessful application for
leave to appeal and I find no reason
to deviate from the customary
rule that costs should this time round, follow the event.
Order
[24]
Consequently, the following order
is made:
1.
The
application for leave to appeal is refused, with costs.
2.
It is noted
that the conditional application for leave to cross-appeal
accordingly falls away.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 05 December 2024
Judgment
delivered: 11 December 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:
Adv H. P Wessels
Attorney for the
Applicant:
Van Der Merwe &
Associates Inc,
Pretoria.
For the Respondent:
Adv H. C Jansen van
Rensburg SC
with Adv P
Nyapholi-Motsie
Attorney for the
Respondent:
State Attorneys,
Pretoria
[1]
91 of 1964.
[2]
2023 (6) SA 639 (CC).
[3]
In par [24].
[4]
See:
President
of the Republic of South Africa v Democratic Alliance
2020 (1) SA 428
(CC) at para [16].
[5]
Erasmus,
Superior
Court Practice
,
R53, 2024, D-141 and the list of cases quoted there.
[6]
Staatspresident
v Lefuo
1990
(2) SA 679 (A).
[7]
Joubert (red),
LAWSA
,
3
rd
Ed, Vol 4 at par 426.
[8]
10 of 2013.
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