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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2023] ZAGPPHC 757
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## Irene Farm Villages Homeowners' Association NPC v City of Tshwane Metropolitan and Others (A246/2022; 30675/2022)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 757 (28 August 2023)
Irene Farm Villages Homeowners' Association NPC v City of Tshwane Metropolitan and Others (A246/2022; 30675/2022)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 757 (28 August 2023)
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sino date 28 August 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEAL CASE:
A246/2022
CASE NO:
30675/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
28 AUGUST 2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
IRENE
FARM VILLAGES HOMEOWNERS’
Appellant
ASSOCIATION
NPC
and
THE
CITY OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN
First Respondent
RIAAN
VAN
WYK
Second Respondent
KARL
PETER MAURICE BOTMAN
Third Respondent
DIRK
JACOBUS VAN
AARDE
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
TLHAPI J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an appeal arising from a matter
heard in urgent court before Janse Van Neiuwenhuizen J over a number
of days in June 2022
and finally argued on 1 July 2022. Judgment was
handed down on 3 August 2022.
[2]
The appellant, who was the first applicant
in the court below, is Irene Farms Homeowners Association NPC (“Irene
Farms”).
The first respondent is the City of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality (“City”).
[3]
Irene Farms asked for the following relief
against the City:
“
2.
That the respondent immediately, but not later than 5 days of
the order commence with preventative measures to avoid further
damage
of the surrounding area by:
2.1
placing berm/s to divert water from the subsidence area;
2.2
testing the municipal services, specifically the main water line and
sewer line for possible
leaks;
3.
In the event of leaks being detected after the testing in paragraph
2.2 above has been conducted, that
the respondent immediately attend
to repairs and or remedying of leaking services;
4.
That the respondent commences with repair and reinstatement of the
road surface at the corner of Duke
Avenue and Queensway as the road
served as the storm water draining system;
5.
that the respondent furnishes the applicants with a formal plan of
rehabilitation of the area of the
subsistence within 20 days from
date of order;
6.
that the respondent takes preventative measures to ensure the
continued supply of services relating to
water, sewage, electricity
in the event of a sinkhole or further damage occurring on the site of
the subsistence.
7.
That the respondent be ordered to pay costs of this application.”
[4]
The City counter-applied and asked for the
following relief:
“
2.
The applicants are directed to submit a plan of action to the
respondent within five days of the date of this order
setting out
inter alia
the remediation of the stormwater drainage on the affected properties
of the Estate, and the repairs to the cracks in the boundary
walls of
various properties.
3.
The remedial work in the paragraph above shall be completed by the
applicants by 31 August 2022.
4.
The first applicant shall lodge its Dolomite Risk Management Strategy
with the respondent within 7 days
of this order.”
[5]
The court below made the following order:
“
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicants are liable for the costs incurred by the respondent
after the filing of the respondent’s
answering affidavit.
3.
The counterapplication is struck off the roll due to lack of urgency
with costs.”
[6]
Only Irene Farms appealed the order of the
court below.
# Relevant facts
Relevant facts
[7]
Irene Farm Villages Estate is a private
estate which falls under the jurisdiction of the City. It is common
cause that a subsidence
formed on the Estate. The epicentre of the
subsidence is in the intersection of two roads within the Estate,
Queens Way and Duke
Avenue, although it implicates three other
properties apparently owned by the second, third and fourth
respondents. Irene Farms
says that the City is obliged to take
measures to correct the subsidence and to prevent it from forming
into a sinkhole.
[8]
The remaining relevant facts are summarised
in the judgment of the court below, particularly at paragraphs 7 to
14. I draw particular
attention to the dispute of facts that emerges
from that factual narration, and that Janse Van Neiuwenhuizen J
identifies as such
later in the judgment. In short, the dispute
concerns the nature of the measures required to prevent further
damage to the
road surface in general, and to the feasibility of
placing berms to divert water from the subsidence area in particular.
[9]
The experts appointed by both parties
initially reached agreement on the issue:
“
The
emergency measure of the placement of a berm on the road to diver the
surface water away from the subsidence is not feasible
and will not
preclude further deterioration of the subsidence.”
[10]
However, after their expert expressed that
view, the applicants obtained a report from another expert, who found
that the berms,
if placed correctly, would divert the water from the
subsistence.
# In the court below
In the court below
[11]
The court below held that the matter was
urgent only insofar as immediate measures to prevent the subsidence
worsening is concerned
(para 4). The court also noted that, at the
time of the hearing of the matter, the City had complied with the
relief claimed in
paragraph 2.2 of the notice of motion (para 5).
In the circumstances, the court below isolated the issue for urgent
determination
as whether placing of berms to divert water from the
subsidence area would prevent further damage (para 6). This is the
relief
contained in prayer 2.1 of the notice of motion.
[12]
The court below characterised this issue –
correctly, in our view – as a dispute of fact which was
incapable of being
resolved on the papers. On that basis, the court
below dismissed the application (para 15).
[13]
With regard to the relief in paragraphs 4,
5 and 6 of the notice of motion, the court held that “I do not
deem the relief
urgent” (para 29), and did not give any
consideration to those paragraphs in the course of the judgment.
This, however, is
not properly reflected in the order, which
purported to dismiss the entire application, as if the court had
entertained all the
prayers.
[14]
Interpreting the order in the context of
the judgment, it is clear that the only prayer that the court
dismissed was prayer 2 of
the notice of motion. Prayer 2.1 was
dismissed because it involved a dispute of facts and prayer 2.2 was
dismissed because it had
been rendered moot.
[15]
With regard to the counter-application, the
court below similarly found that the relief sought was “premature
and manifestly
not urgent” (para 38).
[16]
The
court below dealt with costs at paragraphs 16 to 26 of the judgment.
In short, the court found that, in view of the fact that
the City
tested the main water line subsequent to the launching of the
application and made its stance in respect of the unviability
of the
berms known for the first time in its answering affidavit, the court
should award costs against the applicant only from
the moment after
the filing of the answering affidavit, when the applicants would have
been in a proper position to assess the
merits of their case (para
33). The court also found that the
Biowatch
[1]
principle
was not applicable to the facts of the case on the basis that,
although the applicants relied on their constitutional
right to
receive services from the City, the nature and importance of the
right were not the central issue in dispute and the City
did not deny
or challenge the applicant’s right in this regard. Accordingly,
the facts did not justify a deviation from the
normal costs –
that costs follow the result (para 32).
# Before this court
Before this court
[17]
The City brought an application to lead
further evidence in this court in response to a new case concerning
the ownership of the
roads around the properties affected by the
subsidence Irene Farms purported to introduce for the first time on
appeal. The City
disputed Irene Farm’s contentions with regard
to ownership.
[18]
Accordingly, before this court, there were
two disputes of fact, namely, the dispute regarding the efficacy of
the berms in addressing
the subsidence problem (as identified by the
court below) and the question of the ownership of the roads in the
vicinity of the
subsidence and the legal duties of the City in
circumstances where it does not own roads. Each of these disputes of
facts makes
it inappropriate for a motion court to determine which
party is responsible for the rehabilitation of the roads affected by
the
subsidence as well as whether the berms would be of any effect in
the rehabilitation process. Disputes of fact cannot be dealt with
by
a motion court, let alone in urgent court, and certainly not on
appeal.
[19]
Given this court’s agreement with the
court below that there is a dispute of fact (and the arising of
another set of disputed
facts on appeal, to the extent that the court
might consider the new evidence), it is unnecessary to deal with the
details of the
case any further than I already have.
[20]
In my view, the court below misdirected
itself only in one respect, namely by including prayers 4, 5 and 6
into the order dismissing
the application. It is evident from the
body of the judgment, and from paragraph 29 in particular, that the
court found that these
matters, like the counter-application, were
not urgent and therefore did not deal with them at all. The court
therefore ought to
have struck prayers 4, 5 and 6 from the roll with
costs.
[21]
With
regard to the costs order, a court of appeal will only interfere with
the costs order of the court below if it has not exercised
its
discretion judicially. The court of first instance has a wide
discretion to determine costs.
[2]
In my view, the court below did not misdirect itself in the
exercise of its discretion in this regard.
[22]
With regard to the City’s application
to adduce further evidence on appeal, although the application is
dismissed, there is
no reason to award costs against the City, as it
brought the application only in response to allegations Irene Farms
raised for
the first time before this court.
# Order
Order
[23]
The following order is issued:
(1)
“
The respondents’ application
to leave further evidence is dismissed.
(2)
The order of the court below is upheld save
for paragraph 1 which should be substituted as follows:
“
1.
The application in respect of prayer 2 of the notice of motion is
dismissed.
2.
The application in respect of prayers 3, 4 and 5 is struck off the
roll for want of
urgency”
(3)
The appellant is liable for the costs of
this appeal.”
TLHAPI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree
BAQWA J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree, and it is so
ordered
STEINBERG AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD
AND RESERVED ON: 18 JANUARY 2023
DELIVERED
ON 28 AUGUST 2023
Appearances
:
For
the Appellant: Adv S D Wagener SC (instructed by) BARNARD
INCORPORATED
For
the First Respondent: Adv G I Hulley SC with Adv U
Dayanand-Jugroop (instructed by) MB MABUNDA INCORPORATED
[1]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources and others
2009
(6) SA 232 (CC)
[2]
Fripp
v Gibbon & Co
1913
AD 354
at 363 and
Trencon
Construction v IDC
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC) par [85].
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