Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 51South Africa
Transasia 444 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Mineral Resources and Others (10531/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 51 (3 February 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Transasia 444 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Mineral Resources and Others (10531/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 51 (3 February 2023)
Transasia 444 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Mineral Resources and Others (10531/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 51 (3 February 2023)
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sino date 3 February 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)\
Case
No: 10531/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
NO
3
February 2023
In the application
between:
TRANSASIA
444 (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
TRANSASIA
MINERALS (PTY) LTD
Intervening Applicant
And
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL
RESOURCES
First Respondent
THE DIRECTOR –
GENERAL: DEPT OF MINERALS
AND
ENERGY
Second Respondent
THE
REGIONAL MANAGER: KZN
REGION
Third Respondent
UMSOMBOVU
COAL (PTY)
LTD
Fourth Respondent
In
re:
UMSOMBOVU
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant
And
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL
RESOURCES
First Respondent
THE DIRECTOR –
GENERAL: DEPT OF MINERALS
AND
ENERGY
Second Respondent
THE
REGIONAL MANAGER: KZN
REGION
Third Respondent
Coram:
Millar J
Heard on
:
20 January 2023
Delivered:
3 February 2023 - This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email,
by being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system
of the GD and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down
is deemed to be 12H45 on 3 February 2023
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J
1.
On 28 February 2022 Umsobomvu Coal
(Pty) Ltd (“Umsobomvu”) brought an application in which
an order was sought against
the respondents for:
“
1.
Directing the Respondents to deliver all the records required in
terms of the Applicant’s notice
of appeal in terms of Section
96 read with Regulation 74 of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources
Development Act, 2002 (‘
MPDRA’
)
and Application for withdrawal of the decision in terms of Section
103(4)(b) and Application for suspension of the decision in
terms of
Section 96(2)(a) in respect of the decision made by the
Director-General concerning the application made by Transasia
Minerals 444 (Pty) Ltd (registration number 2011/003954/07)
(Transasia 444) for Ministerial consent in terms of Section 11 of the
MPRDA for the transfer of the mineral right with reference number
KZN30/5/1/2/2/10021MR in respect of the property Farm terrace
3707
Portion 8 of the Farm Winkel no 5054, Remainder of Portion 1 of the
Farm Eastkeal no 5138 of the Farm Lot W no. 8610, the
Farm Cosby Rock
no 11509, Remainder of Portion 3, Remainder of Portion 4 and Portions
12 and 15 of the Farm Hazeldene no 12649
(‘
Appeal’
)
in compliance with Regulation 74(8) of the MPRDA within 5 days of the
granting of the Order.
2.
…
3.
…”
2.
The order
sought was granted on 28 June 2022. Thereafter, Transasia 444 (Pty)
Ltd (“Transasia 444”) brought an application
for
recission of that order. The application for recission was premised
upon the fact that it was an interested party in the appeal
that
Umsobomvu sought to prosecute.
3.
The appeal was
against the grant of a consent for the transfer of a mineral right
and it was contended on behalf of Transasia 444
that besides the fact
that they ought in the first place to have been cited in the
application, its interest went beyond this because
the documents in
respect of which the order of 28 June 2022 had been granted included
confidential and proprietary information
which had been submitted to
the respondents which was not relevant to the prosecution of the
appeal.
4.
I
considered the application and had regard to the provisions of
inter
alia
s 96
of the
Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act
[1]
read together with
regulation 74(8)
in regard to appeals. The
regulation provides:
“
(8)
Upon receipt of the notice of appeal referred to in sub regulation
(1), but no later than 10 days thereafter,
the Regional Manager must
send copies of all records pertaining to the decision or decisions
which are the subject of the appeal
of the appellant, to all
identified affected persons, and to the Director-General or to the
Minister, as the case may be.”
5.
In its terms,
the regulation is clear and unequivocal that “all records”
“must” be sent to the parties referred
to in the
regulation. Umsobomvu is such a party.
6.
In my view
however, this was not the end of the matter. Notwithstanding the
obligation on the part of the respondents to furnish
all the
documents to Umsobomvu for the prosecution of its appeal, I was of
the view that there was merit to the contention that
confidential
proprietary information, not relevant to the appeal, may have formed
part of the record.
7.
The
approach adopted by Umsobomvu when it was argued on its behalf was
that in principle it had no objection to the exclusion from
the
appeal record of confidential proprietary and irrelevant information.
An approach in accord with that adopted in Crown Cork
& Seal Inc
and Another v Rheem South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2]
which is on point to the present matter was considered appropriate.
8.
In
consequence, I then granted an order on 29 August 2022 in the
following terms:
“
1.
By 5 September 2022 Third Respondent will deliver to the Applicant
and the Fourth Respondent a complete
index of all copies of all
documents pertaining to the Record of Decision concerning the
application made by the Applicant in terms
of section 11 of the
Minerals and Petroleum Resources Development Act, 2002 (“MPRDA”)(“the
Index”).
2.
By no later than 12 September 2022, the Applicant will instruct the
Third Respondent regarding
which documents contained in the Index and
the Record is / are confidential.
3.
The
documents so identified by the Applicant shall be produced by the
Third Respondent as part of the Record, but under a separate
folder
to be titled “Confidential Portion of the Record”, by no
later than close of business on 23 September 2022.
4.
For
avoidance of doubt, the confidential and non-confidential parts so
complied must contain a copy of each and every document in
the Record
in its original format (and may not be redacted).
5.
Only
the legal representatives of the Fourth Respondent and the experts
employed by the Fourth Respondent who sign the confidentiality
undertaking attached as Annexure “A” (“the
Confidentiality Undertaking”) hereto and submit the
Confidentiality
Undertaking to the Applicant’s attorneys, shall
be entitled to receive and inspect the Confidential Portion of the
Record.
6.
For
avoidance of all doubt, the Fourth Respondent and its directors and
shareholders and employees shall not be entitled to receive
or
inspect the contents of the Confidential Portion of the Record.
7.
Insofar
as the Fourth Respondent (acting on advice received from its legal
representatives and / or experts who have signed the
Confidentiality
Undertaking), wish to challenge the classification of a particular
document as a confidential document, the dispute
in this regard will
be referred to by the Fourth Respondent and the Applicant to a
retired judge who will be appointed by the parties
within 24 hours of
a dispute being declared. The retired judge so appointed will act as
an expert and not as an arbitrator; and
will decide his / her own
procedure, and whether or not evidence and argument is required and
if so how it is to be presented.
His / her decision on either of
these issues will be final and binding on the parties. If the parties
cannot agree to the identity
of the retired judge to be appointed
within 24 hours, the Chairperson of the Johannesburg Bar shall be
required to make such an
appointment and shall be requested to do so
on an urgent basis. The determination of the dispute will be treated
by the parties
and the expert as an urgent matter. Any issues
concerning the interpretation and / or application of the
Confidentiality Undertaking
which may arise shall be referred to the
retired judge on the same basis.
8.
All
submissions to the Minister making reference to the Confidential
Portion of the Record will be treated confidentially by the
Fourth
Respondent and submissions will be treated in the same vein as the
Confidential Portion of the Record.
9.
Costs
of two counsel from 15 July 2022 to the date of hearing (including
the date of hearing) are to be paid by the Applicant to
the Fourth
Respondent on a party and party scale”
And
the attached Confidentiality Undertaking referred to in paragraph 5.
“
In
terms of the Court Order under the above case number dated 29 August
2022 (“the Order”):
1.
I, the
undersigned _______________ hereby confirm that I am a ______________
engaged by the Fourth Respondent in the proceedings
instituted by the
Applicant in the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria under case No: 10531/2022.
2.
Accordingly,
in dealing with the Confidential Portion of the Record (as defined in
the Order) I undertake:
2.1
To keep
the Confidential information provided to me strictly confidential, as
it is not generally available or known to others;
2.2
Not to
use, exploit, permit the use of, in any manner whatsoever, or apply,
the Confidential Portion of the Record disclosed to
me pursuant to
the provisions of this undertaking for any purpose whatsoever other
than for the purpose for which it was disclosed,
being these
proceedings (including any litigation which may be brought in
relation thereto);
2.3
Not to
(in any manner or form, or to any extent whatsoever) divulge, or
cause the Confidential Portion of the Record to be divulged
to any
person, including the Fourth Respondent or any of its employees;
office bearers or officials or directors and/or other participants
in
these proceedings.
2.4
To at
all times keep the Confidential Portion of the Record, together with
all notes, summaries and/or annotations thereon for purposes
of these
proceedings (including any appeal), in a safe place and to ensure
that it is not available or accessible to any unauthorized
persons;
and
2.5
At the
conclusion of these proceedings (and any related appeal or review),
to destroy all documentation, including without limitation,
copies,
notes, CDs or other electronic formats, containing the Confidential
Portion of the Record, in my possession and thereafter
notify the
Applicant’s attorneys accordingly.”
10.
Transasia 444,
dissatisfied that the recission of the order of 28 June 2022 had not
been granted, then lodged an application for
leave to appeal the
granting of the order on 29 August 2022.
11.
The
application was followed by a number of further applications –
on the part of Umsobomvu an application in terms of s 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act and in the alternative an application to hold the
respondents in contempt for failure to comply with
the order of 28
June 2022. An application was also brought by Transasia Minerals
(Pty) Ltd (“Transasia Minerals”) to
intervene in the
present proceedings.
12.
For expedience
I indicated that I would hear the application for intervention and
the application for leave to appeal and it is
these two applications
that are the subject matter of this judgment.
13.
Insofar as any
of the other applications may require hearing in due course, these
must be set down in accordance with the usual
practice.
14.
It
is the case for Transasia Minerals that it has a “
.
. . direct and substantial interest in the outcome of the litigation,
whether in the court of first instance or on appeal”.
[3]
It was argued that Transasia Minerals interest was both historical
and present and that it also, has a direct material and substantial
interest in the same confidential and proprietary information which
forms part of the appeal record. Given the nature of this
information, it inapposite to deal with the specific type and content
of the information. It suffices for me to say that I am satisfied
that for the same reasons that I took the view that I did in respect
of Transasia 444, this is equally of application to Transasia
Minerals and on the same basis that Umsobomvu did not quibble with
the protection afforded by the order to be given to Transasia
444, it
did not behoove it to place this in issue for Transasia Minerals.
15.
In my view,
Transasia Minerals should be given leave to intervene in this matter
as an applicant and having regard to the order
of 29 August 2022, to
be in a position at the very least, to exercise its rights together
with Transasia 444
inter
alia
in
terms of paragraphs 2 and 7 of that order.
16.
After the
application for leave to appeal was brought, I raised with the
parties whether the order granted on 29 August 2022 was
an order that
was capable of appeal and whether or not the recission of the order
of 28 June 2022 had been refused or not. On this
aspect, both
Transasia 444 and Umsobomvu were ad idem – both took the view
that properly construed, the order granted by
me on 28 June 2022 was
a final order and that notwithstanding that it did not expressly
contain a provision refusing the recission
of the order of 28 June
2022, this was its effect.
17.
It was argued on behalf of Transasia
Minerals that the order granted on 29 August 2022, in its terms, was
not a final order and
was in fact a nullity. This was predicated on
the basis that the first paragraph of the order of 29 August 2022
purported to be
a repetition of paragraph 1 of the order of 28 June
2022.
18.
I
was referred to
Thobejane
& Others v Premier of the Limpopo Province & Another
[4]
in
support of this. I disagree. The first order compels the delivery of
“all records”. The second order compels the
delivery of
“complete index of all copies of all documents pertaining to
the Record of Decision”. They differ –
the first requires
an unqualified delivery of all documents, the second in paragraph 1,
the delivery of an index as a precursor
to the succeeding orders.
19.
It was also argued on behalf of Transasia
Minerals that the order of 29 August 2022 was not a variation of the
order of 28 June
2022, specifically in its terms. It was also argued
that the substance of the order was changed. I disagree. The second
order does
not vary the first order but serves, in conjunction with
the first order, to impose a regime in terms whereof the interests of
Transasia 444 (and also Transasia Minerals) could be represented and
protected – in the way that they would have been had
either
been before the court on 28 June 2022.
20.
In this regard, the contention by Transasia
Minerals that the order if 29 August 2022 had ‘interposed’
Umsobomvu’s
attorney into the matter in a way that they had not
been before is similarly without merit.
21.
What is made plain from the papers filed in
this matter is that the litigation between the parties is
acrimonious. It has reached
the point where the line between the
litigants and their representatives has become blurred. The order of
29 August 2022 is not
law firm specific and was formulated to address
what I regarded as legitimate concerns
inter
partes
.
22.
In
deciding whether a judgment is appealable or not, in
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
[5]
,
it was stated:
“
A
‘judgment or order’ is a decision which, as a general
principle has three attributes, first, the decision must
be final in effect and not susceptible
of alteration by the Court of first instance; second, it must be
definitive of the rights of the parties; and, third, it must have
the effect of disposing of at least a substantial portion
of the relief claimed in the main proceedings.”
23.
It
is apparent from the attributes set out in
Zweni
that a court’s mere ruling or an interlocutory order is not
appealable. However, these three attributes are not immutable
and
exhaustive as pointed out in
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd
[6]
.
24.
In
Liberty
Life Association of Africa Ltd Niselow
[7]
the
Nugent J held;
“
In
effect the question is whether the particular decision may be placed
before a court of appeal in isolation, and before the proceedings
have run their full course.
”
25.
In
Nova
Property Group Holdings v Cobbett
[8]
the
court was of the view that ultimately in deciding whether a decision
is appealable, the interest of justice is of paramount
importance:
“
It
is well established that in deciding what is in the interests of
justice, each case has to be considered in light of its own
facts.
The considerations that serve the interests of justice, such as that
the appeal will traverse matters of significant importance
which pit
the rights of privacy and dignity on the one hand, against those of
access to information and freedom of expression on
the other hand,
certainly loom large before us.”
26.
The
approach that has been taken by the courts recently has been flexible
and pragmatic.
[9]
The
courts have directed more to doing what is appropriate in the
circumstances than to elevating the distinction between orders
that
are appealable and those that are not to one of the principles, as
was the case in
Phillips
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[10]
27.
On consideration of the order of 29
August 2022, I am satisfied that it is final in effect. Having come
to this finding, I now turn
to the application for leave to appeal.
28.
The
test for the granting of leave to appeal pertinent to the present
matter is set out in section 17(1) of the Superior Courts
Act
[11]
as follows:
“
(
1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that
(a)
(i) the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success or
(ii) there is some
other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration”
29.
I have
considered the grounds of appeal and the respective arguments
advanced in support of the granting of leave to appeal and
for
refusing leave to appeal. The crisp issue is whether another court
would come to a different conclusion. The provisions of
the MPDRA Act
and regulations are clear and unequivocal. For an appeal in terms of
s 96 to proceed, a record must be furnished.
30.
The order made
on 29 August 2022, insofar as the recission of the order of 28 June
2022 was refused, accommodated, without objection
by Umsobomvu, the
rights and interests of Transasia 444 (and now Transasia Minerals
also).
31.
I am of the
view that no other court would come to a different conclusion and
additionally that there is no other compelling reason
for the
granting of leave to appeal. It is for these reasons that I intend to
make the order that I do.
32.
The last
aspect that I need to deal with is the question of costs. The parties
in the present matter, including Transasia Minerals,
have a history
of litigating against each other. They are all professionally
represented.
33.
The delay in
the hearing of this application was brought about in consequence of
the accommodation at different times of each of
the parties’
representatives and in part so that the intervention application
would be ripe for hearing.
34.
It is trite
that costs are eminently a matter that falls within the discretion of
the court. On consideration of the applications
before me, I am of
the view that there should be no order for costs.
35.
In the
circumstances it is ordered:
32.1
Transasia Minerals (Pty) Ltd is granted leave to intervene.
32.2 The
application for leave to appeal is refused.
32.3 There
is no order as to costs.
A MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
20 JANUARY 2023
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
3 FEBRUARY 2023
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
ADV B STOOP SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
HAMMOND-SMITH ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MS U HAMMOND
FOR
THE FOURTH RESPONDENT:
ADV
D FINE SC
ADV
A MILANOVIC-BITTER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
EDWARD NATHAN
SONNENBURGS INC
REFERENCE:
MR S MBATHA
FOR
THE INTERVENING APPLICANT:
ADV T NGCUKAITOBI
SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
E MABUZA ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR E MABUZA
NO
APPEARANCE FOR THE FIRST, SECOND OR THIRD RESPONDENTS
[1]
28
of 2002
[2]
1980
(3) SA 1093 (W)
[3]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) at
paragraph 85
[4]
(
1108/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 176
(18 December 2020) paragraph 5
[5]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
1993 (1) SA 523 (A)
at 532J–533A
[6]
Moch
v Nedtravel
(
Pty
)
Ltd
t/a American Express Travel Service
1996 (3) SA 1 (A)
at 10F See also
Absa
Bank Limited v Mkhize
and others and related matters 2014 1 All SA (SCA) at para 22-23.
[7]
(1996)
17 ILJ 673 (LAC) at 676 H.
[8]
(2016
(4) SA 317
(SCA) (12 May 2016) at para 9.
[9]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v King 2010 (2) SACR 146 (SCA)
[10]
2003
6 SA 447 (SCA).
[11]
10
of 2013
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