Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 303South Africa
Beeslaar and Another v Mokone and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 303; 2023/033278 (28 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
28 April 2023
Headnotes
in Luna Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another (t/a Makin’s Furniture Manufacturers),[1] that Rule 6(12) is undoubtedly the most abused Rule in this Division. In 2023, I can but agree with him. This abuse occurs in both the High Courts of this Division. It compelled the Deputy Judge President of the High Court in Johannesburg to issue a notice to all legal practitioners. This notice is equally relevant to the litigants in the Pretoria High Court. Sutherland DJP, amongst others, stated: ‘It has become apparent that the effective functioning of the Urgent Motion Court in Johannesburg is being imperilled by several
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Beeslaar and Another v Mokone and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 303; 2023/033278 (28 April 2023)
Beeslaar and Another v Mokone and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 303; 2023/033278 (28 April 2023)
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sino date 28 April 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023-033278
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED:
NO
In
the matter between:
VERMAAK
BEESLAAR
1
st
APPLICANT
SALOME
BEESLAAR
2
nd
APPLICANT
And
MASHOTO
JOSEPH MOKONE
1
st
RESPONDENT
MBUYANE
NOKUTHULA ESTELLE CASSANDRA MOKONE
2
nd
RESPNDENT
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
3
rd
APPLICANT
JUDGMENT
Van der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The
first and second applicants (hereafter collectively referred to as
Mr. Beeslaar) and the first and second respondents (hereafter
collectively referred to as Mr. Mokone) are neighbours in a
well-known and affluent residential area in Pretoria. On 3 April
2023,
Mr. Beeslaar returned home after a vacation. He noticed the
presence of construction workers at his neighbour’s property.
Sand and bricks had been delivered to Mr. Mokone’s property.
Later in the afternoon, Mr. Beeslaar saw his neighbour and asked
him
about the scope of the building work that they were undertaking. Mr.
Mokone told him that they were planning to extend their
property by,
inter alia
,
adding a second storey and entertainment area to the current
structure. Mr. Beeslaar was ‘completely shocked’ by the
Mokone’s plans to improve their property. In his opinion, the
building works would ‘disfigure the area, be unsightly
and
objectionable, would negatively affect the value of the joint
properties or endanger life or property and invade [their] privacy’.
[2]
Mr.
Beeslaar asked to be provided with the approved building plans. Since
Mr. Mokone did not provide him with the building plans
as requested,
Mr. Beeslaar sent an email to Mr. Mokone’s architect on 5 April
2023, again requesting the building plans.
He was subsequently
informed that the plans were approved in February 2022, more than a
year ago. Building commenced around 12
April 2023. On the same
day Mr. Beeslaar’s attorney of record sent a letter to Mr.
Mokone informing the latter of his
objection to the developments.
[3]
Mr.
Mokone did not respond to the letter, and Mr. Beeslaar and other
neighbours proceeded to lay three complaints with the third
respondent. On 14 April 2023 Mr. Beeslaar received a response from
the third respondent. He was informed that the approval of building
plans lapses after the expiry of 12 months. A letter was sent to Mr.
Mokone requesting him to seize all construction and building
activities. He was informed of the content of the communication
received from the third respondent.
[4]
The
building activities were not halted, and Mr. Beeslaar decided to
approach the urgent court for relief. The notice of motion
is dated
14 April 2023. An unissued copy of the application was served
electronically on the first and third respondents on Friday,
14 April
2023, at 16h09. Service of the issued application was effected
electronically and through the Sheriff of the High Court
on 17 April
2023 at 18h17, through affixing. The respondents were called
upon to file a notice of intention to oppose by
17 April 2023 before
17h00, and an answering affidavit by 19 April 2023. The matter was
enrolled for hearing in the urgent court
on 25 April 2023.
[5]
On
19 April 2023, Mr. Mokone’s attorney of record informed Mr.
Beeslaar’s attorney that construction has been halted
and that
Mr. Mokone undertakes not to proceed with construction or building
activities until a renewal application for the current
building plans
to be renewed, has been finalised. Mr. Beeslaar, however, was not
satisfied with this undertaking. He seeks an undertaking
that Mr.
Mokone will not proceed with any building work until any review, or
appeal process contesting the building plans has been
finalised. He
contends that the renewal process is merely an administrative process
that does not require consideration of whether
or not the plans
should have been granted in the first place.
Urgency
[6]
The
purpose of the urgent court is to provide expedient access to justice
to those litigants who will not be afforded substantial
redress in
due course if their matters are not promptly dealt with. The purpose
is not to deal with ‘important matters.’
Each litigant’s
matter is important to it, otherwise, the litigant would not have
resorted to seeking recourse in a court
of law. Neither is the
purpose of the urgent court to assist litigants to ‘save money’
or curtail future legal proceedings.
As stated, the purpose is
one-dimensional – to assist litigants who would not be afforded
substantial redress if the matter
is heard in the ordinary course,
four to six months down the line.
[7]
It
is trite that urgency is a reason that may justify deviation from the
times and forms the Rules of Court prescribes. In 1977
Coetzee J,
held in
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another (t/a Makin’s
Furniture Manufacturers),
[1]
that
Rule 6(12) is undoubtedly the most abused Rule in this Division. In
2023, I can but agree with him. This abuse occurs in both
the High
Courts of this Division. It compelled the Deputy Judge President of
the High Court in Johannesburg to issue a notice to
all legal
practitioners. This notice is equally relevant to the litigants in
the Pretoria High Court. Sutherland DJP, amongst others,
stated:
‘
It
has become apparent that the effective functioning of the Urgent
Motion Court in Johannesburg is being imperilled by several
undesirable practices by some attorneys and some counsel. This notice
addresses the most serious aspects. …
A much more disciplined
approach must be adopted by practitioners as to whether or not a
matter truly is urgent to justify its enrolment
in a particular week.
Non-urgent matters clutter up the roll and waste time that could be
devoted to truly urgent matters. Practitioners
must not be timid in
the face of anxious and bullying clients who demand gratification of
their subjectively perceived needs. The
era of ‘let us see what
the judge might think’ is now officially over.’
[8]
In
order to safeguard the sanctity of the urgent court, the first hurdle
a litigant approaching the urgent court needs to overcome
before his
application will be considered on the merits, is the question as to
whether the matter is indeed urgent. The determination
of urgency is
intertwined with the facts underpinning the litigation, and the
relief sought.
[9]
In
this application, the question of urgency looms large. Mr. Beeslaar
contends that Mr. Mokone’s failure to provide him timeously
with the required approved building plans, or an undertaking that
building works would be ceased on 13 April 2023, necessitated
the
launching of the application. At the time when the application was
launched, the respondents were illegally building, and this,
the
applicants contend, renders the application inherently urgent as an
illegal situation cannot be allowed to continue.
[10]
In determining whether this
application passes the urgency test, I also have to consider that the
applicants approached the court
on the basis of extreme urgency.
[11]
Counsel
for the applicants referred me to the judgment by Dlodlo J in
The
Camps Bay Residents Ratepayers Association and Others v Augoustides
and Others.
[2]
In
this case the court held, and correctly so, that interim relief
regarding the cessation of building works pending review proceedings
may be granted where the requirements for an interim interdict have
been met. The question as to whether the applicants made out
a case
for interim relief to be granted is, however, not the first question
to be considered in urgent motion court proceedings.
As stated at the
onset of this discussion, the question is whether the applicants will
be afforded substantial redress in due course
if the application is
not dealt with expediently.
[12]
Section
7(4) of the National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act
103 of 1977 (the Act) provides as follows:
‘
Any
approval granted by a local authority in accordance with
subsection
(1) (
a
)
in
respect of any application shall lapse after the expiry of a period
of 12 months as from the date on which it was granted unless
the
erection of the building in question is commenced or proceeded with
within the said period or unless such local authority extended
the
said period at the request in writing of the applicant concerned.’
[13]
The applicants stated that they were
‘informed’ by third respondent’s officials that the
renewal process is a
mere administrative process that does not
require the reconsideration of the approval. A plain reading of the
section, however,
leads to the interpretation that the extension must
be applied for, before the validity of the building plans has lapsed.
This
leads to the conclusion that
when
a building plan has lapsed, and no extension was applied for within
the twelve-month validity period, a full application will
need to be
resubmitted should the applicant wish to commence with the building
work.
[14]
I am, however, of the view, that even
the approval of the building plans can be extended through a simple
administrative process,
the issues involved in this application do
not render the matter urgent. The applicants did not succeed in
making out a case that
they will not be afforded substantial redress
in due course if this matter is not dealt with in the urgent motion
court.
[15]
Not only did Mr. Mokone undertake not
to commence with any building works before obtaining the third
respondent’s approval,
Mr. Beeslaar failed to indicate, on the
papers as it stands, how the applicants will be prejudiced if Mr.
Mokone continues with
the building once the building plans are
approved, pending further legal proceedings being instituted. Mr.
Beeslaar did explain
the prejudice he will suffer if Mr. Mokone
builds in accordance with the existing building plans. However, if
Mr. Beeslaar successfully
pursues legal avenues open to him to object
against the third respondent’s approval of the building plans,
once their validity
is confirmed again, Mr. Mokone may be ordered to
demolish any building works erected if the work is done in
contravention of approved
building plans, or without any approval.
The risk of continuing with the building project when the building
plans are re-approved
under the threat that the decision might be
overturned in the future, is a risk that only the respondents carry.
No case was made
out that the applicants will suffer any irreparable
harm if the building continues once the plans are approved, or the
approval
extended, and Mr. Beeslaar succeeds with either appeal or
review proceedings in due course.
[16]
The applicants abused the court’s
process to ‘jump the que’ and to receive preferential
treatment. This cannot
be countenanced. In addition, they afforded
the respondents very limited time periods within which to obtain
legal advice and file
answering papers. The applicants reported their
complaints to the third respondent, the appropriate authority, who is
empowered
to intervene and stop any building activities commenced
with in contravention of the Act. However, they did not afford the
third
respondent time to take any action before approaching the
urgent motion court.
[17]
This application thus stands to be
struck from the roll for lack of urgency. The respondents should not
be out of pocket for being
dragged before the urgent court. In the
result, a punitive costs order is appropriate.
ORDER
In the result, the
following order is granted
1.
The
application is struck from the roll with costs on an attorney and
client scale.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High
Court
Delivered: This
judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
For
the applicants:
Adv.
J. Henderson
With:
Adv.
J. Stroebel
Instructed
by:
Barnard
& Patel Inc.
For
the respondents:
Adv.
M.T. Shepherd
Instructed
by:
Strydom,
Britz Molahutsi Inc.
Date
of the hearing:
04/26/23
Date
of judgment:
04/28/23
[1]
1977
(4) SA 135
(W) 136C.
[2]
2009
(6) SA 190
(WCC).
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