Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1933South Africa
Assmang Proprietary Limited v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (13164/2022;13165/2022;13166/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1933 (20 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
20 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Assmang Proprietary Limited v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (13164/2022;13165/2022;13166/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1933 (20 November 2023)
Assmang Proprietary Limited v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others (13164/2022;13165/2022;13166/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1933 (20 November 2023)
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sino date 20 November 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 13164/2022
13165/2022
13166/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 20
November 2023 s
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
CaseNo.13164/2022
ASSMANG
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND
FIRST RESPONDENT
ENERGY
REGIONAL
MANAGER: MINERAL REGULATION
NORTHERN
CAPE REGIONAL OFFICE
SECOND RESPONDENT
PPG
GEMSTONE AND EXPORT (PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
Case
No. 13165/2022
ASSMANG
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND
FIRST RESPONDENT
ENERGY
REGIONAL
MANAGER: MINERAL REGULATION
SECOND
RESPONDENT
NORTHERN
CAPE REGIONAL OFFICE
THE
TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING OF THE
THIRD
RESPONDENT
MATEBESI
FAMILY TRUST
Case
No. 13166/2022
ASSMANG
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
APPLICANT
And
THE
MINISTER OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND
FIRST RESPONDENT
ENERGY
REGIONAL
MANAGER: MINERAL REGULATION
SECOND RESPONDENT
NORTHERN
CAPE REGIONAL OFFICE
PITSOYAGAE
GABRIEL MATEBESI
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
This court is called upon to consider the three review applications
instituted
under the above case numbers simultaneously. The first and
second respondents (the state respondents, the second respondent to
be referred to as RM) correctly contend that all three review
applications relate to substantially the same questions of law and
fact, that the parties are the same, and that the decisions under
review, the annexures attached to the founding affidavits, and
the
records of decision are relevant to all parties.
[2]
The respective third respondents are collectively referred to as the
third
respondents. By agreement, the respective notices of motion
were served on the attorney firm representing the three third
respondents
in the s 96 appeals. None of the third respondents
entered a notice of intention to oppose.
Context
[3]
The applicant (Assmang) is the owner of the surface right to Portion
9
of the farm N’chawning 267, in the magisterial district of
Kuruman, Northern Cape (the property), and also the holder of a
mining right over,
inter alia
, the property. The applicant’s
mining right is a converted mining right in terms of Item 7 of
Schedule II to the Mineral
and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28
of 2002 (the MPRDA). The mining right authorises the mining of
‘manganese ore’.
The applicant operates the Black Rock
Mine.
[4]
The third respondents in the three applications, respectively, lodged
mining permit applications to mine the gemstone ‘sugalite’
in areas that fall within the applicant's mining area. The
applicant
contends that it was unaware of the mining permit applications being
lodged. The applicant lodged appeals in terms of
section 96 of the
MPRDA against the regional manager’s acceptance of the third
respondents’ mining permit applications.
These appeals are
pending, and do not form the subject matter of the review
applications before this court. The applicant also
lodged objections
in terms of s 10(2) of the MPRDA. Despite the s 96 appeals and s 10
objections, the regional manager granted
environmental authorisations
to the respective third respondents. The granting of environmental
authorisations to the respective
third respondents is the subject of
the three review applications.
[5]
In the review applications, Assmang seeks the following decisions to
be
reviewed and set aside:
i.
13164/2022: The regional manager’s decision to grant an
environmental authorisation
to PP Gemstone (Pty) Ltd taken on 30 June
2021;
ii.
13165/2022: The regional manager’s decision to grant an
environmental authorisation
to the Matebesi Family Trust taken on 17
June 2021;
iii.
13166/2022: The regional manager’s decision to grant an
environmental authorisation
to Mr. Matebesi taken on 28 May 2021.
Assmang
additionally seeks that the decisions to grant the respective
environmental authorisations should be substituted with a
decision to
refuse the environmental authorisations.
[6]
Assmang contends that it only became aware on 27 May 2021 that the
respective
third respondents lodged applications for mining permits
for gemstones (excluding diamonds) on a portion of the property, 16
months
after the lodgment of the applications. In terms of these
applications, the third respondents want to mine for sugilite. The
mining
permit applications came to Assmang’s attention when a
representative of the regional manager’s office and Mr.
Matebesi
arrived unannounced and without prior appointment at the
Black Rock Mine premises.
[7]
The regional manager granted environmental authorisations to the
respective
third respondents on the dates referred to above. The
environmental authorisations entitle the third respondents to
undertake specified
activities once the mining permits are issued.
[8]
The environmental authorisations were granted on the back of a basic
assessment
report (‘BAR’) and an environmental management
programmed report (‘EMPr’) submitted with the application
for each environmental authorisation. Assmang claims that the BAR and
EMPr are so fundamentally and fatally flawed that they taint
the
lawfulness and validity of the environmental authorisations that were
granted.
[9]
Assmang, amongst others, contends in this regard that:
i.
The BAR does not describe the nature, extent, and location of the
proposed operations
under the auspices of the mining permits applied
for. It is incorrectly stated in the BAR that the application area is
situated
over an area that is characterised by grazing and that the
area in question is a mountainous area where a lot of the gemstones
are exposed to the surface where the minerals are seen by the naked
eye, and that the mining operation will be an open cast type
of
mining operation. The correct position is that the proposed mining
area is for a part in the middle of an area where the applicant
is
conducting underground mining operations, the area is in the intake
ventilation and in the return airway, which is critical
for a
ventilating current and future mining of manganese ore by the
applicant, and there are no gemstones including sugilite in
the block
applied for. The average depth where sugilite is found is 398 m, and
the area cannot be accessed from the surface.
ii.
The impression is incorrectly created in the BAR and EMPR that the
area to be mined
by opencast methods is on the surface in an area
consisting of natural veld used for grazing.
iii.
It is incorrectly stated that there is no existing infrastructure on
the proposed
mining area except the road on the farm and which road
will be used to access the targeted area.
iv.
The BAR fails to comply with the NEMA principles and does not meet
the minimum statutory
requirements for a BAR prescribed in the NEMA
EIA Regulations. It does not enable the competent authority in a
position to meet
the peremptory statutory criteria prescribed in s 2
of NEMA and regulation 18 of the NEMA EIA Regulations.
[10]
Assmang claims that the third respondents failed and neglected to
consult with it when
the Bar and EMPr were compiled, or before the
environmental authorisation was granted. The statement in the BAR
that ‘The
surface/landowner and the direct host community were
consulted personally and through a letter that was given to them by
hand’
is devoid of the truth. Assmang explains that Mr.
Matebesi and a representative from the regional manager’s
office arrived
unannounced at the Black Rock Mine on 27 May 2021, and
demanded a meeting with Ms. Ravele. Ms. Ravele confirmed that the
applicant
had no knowledge of the third respondents or any of the
applications that had been lodged. Mr. Matebesi declined a suggestion
to
meet with the mine’s senior general manager and left. A
letter ostensibly sent by the environmental assessment practitioner
to Assmang’s postal address in Sandton did not come to the
attention of the senior personnel at the mine, neither did e-mails
sent to various general sales addresses, to a separate legal entity.
The public meeting that was allegedly held was held at a school
that
is approximately 80km from the mine. The applicant doubts whether a
notice was indeed placed at the entrance of the mine since
it is a
working mine and would have come to its attention.
[11]
As a result, Assmang contends it was not afforded any opportunity to
comment on the BAR
and EMPr. Assmang submits that the failure to
provide it with an adequate opportunity to comment on the BAR and
EMPr is in contravention
of the peremptory public participation
process required under Regulations 40 and 41 of the NEMA EIA
Regulations, and in violation
of its right to administrative action,
which is lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair.
[12]
Assmang claims that the respective third respondents’ mining
operations will severely
impact its environmental, health, and safety
compliance. Assmang contends that in light of the fundamental flaws
in the public
participation process and the material inadequacies of
the BAR, the competent authority was not placed in a position to
satisfy
itself that all the impacts have been adequately identified,
or that the identified environmental impacts, including cumulative
impacts, can be adequately mitigated.
[13]
Assmang submits that the decisions to grant the environmental
authorisations were procedurally
unfair and were made because
irrelevant considerations were taken into account or relevant
considerations were not considered.
Material and mandatory procedural
provisions were not complied with.
[14]
The state respondents filed one answering affidavit in all three
review applications. The
state respondents raised four points
in
limine
. The state respondents submit that:
i.
Assmang failed to exhaust its internal remedies when it failed to
appeal the regional
manager’s decision to grant the
environmental authorisations to the Environmental Minister as
provided for in s 43(1) of
NEMA;
ii.
Assmang failed to apply for an exemption from exhausting internal
remedies in terms
of s7(2)(c) of PAJA;
iii.
Assmang failed to apply for condonation for the late filing of the
review applications;
iv.
Assmang’s challenge to the regional manager’s decisions
to accept the
mining permit applications is premature.
v.
[15]
The state respondents submit that Assmang has no exclusive right to
mine gemstones discovered
on the property. The argument is
essentially that since the Black Rock converted mining right was
issued for ‘manganese ore’
only, Assmang had to obtain
the written consent of the Minister to add gemstones or any other
mineral discovered within the mining
area as one of the minerals
covered by its pre-existing mining right.
[16]
The property, Portion 9 of the farm N’chwanng 267, is a
subdivision from the remaining
extent. Assmang explained that it
subdivided or consolidated Portions 3 and 8 of the farm to create
Portion 9. In addition to claiming
that the exclusive right to mine
gemstones or minerals discovered within the mining area is not
accrued through the subdivision
of Portion 3, the state respondents
aver that the sub-division of Portion 3 and Portion 8 to create
Portion 9 required the written
consent of the Mineral Resources
Minister in terms of s 102 of the MPRDA. The consolidation of the
mining area without complying
with ss 22 and 102 of the MPRDA defeats
the object of the MPRDA. In addition, the state respondents contend
that Assmang contravened
s 12A of the Mining Titles Registration Act
16 of 1967 and the Spatial Planning and Land Use Management By-Law on
Municipal Land
Use Planning for the Ga-Segonyana Local Municipality.
[17]
In answer to Assmang’s contention that the EMPr and BAR
submitted in support of the
applications for environmental
authorisations provide inaccurate, false, or misleading information,
the deponent to the state respondents’
answering affidavit, the
second respondent, avers that he is advised that:
i.
The DMRE visited the mining area on 27 May 2021 to establish the
location of the mining
permit areas and was satisfied that the mining
permit areas applied for would not interfere with the Black Rock
Mining Right areas;
ii.
It is an offence to submit inaccurate, incorrect, or misleading
information when applying
for an environmental authorisation;
iii.
In terms of regulation 39 of the NEMA Regulations, the Environmental
Minister can
suspend and withdraw the environmental authorisation
after allowing the third respondents to make representations and
submit further
information;
iv.
In terms of s 47(1)(d), the Mineral Resources Minister may cancel or
suspend a mining
permit based on inaccurate, false, fraudulent,
incorrect, or misleading information.
[18]
The state respondents hold the view that Assmang’s contention
that the third respondents
failed to consult with it, the land owner,
and other interested and affected parties when applying for the
environmental authorisation,
is not borne out by the record of the
decision. They point out that the record of decision reflects the
following:
i.
The Bar and EMPr indicate that YADAH consulted with interested and
affected parties
when the Bar and EMPr were compiled. Views and
comments of interested and affected parties are captured in these
documents;
ii.
A public meeting was convened before the COVID-19 lockdown ensued;
iii.
During the COVID 19 lockdown, the third respondents ‘intended’
to place
an advertisement in the newspaper and invite interested and
affected parties to attend public meetings;
iv.
The regional manager accepted the mining permit applications on 13
July 2020 and advised
the third respondents to consult with
interested and affected parties;
v.
On 23 July 2020, YADAH wrote to Assmang, notified it of the mining
permit applications,
and invited Assmang to discuss the working
arrangement;
vi.
On 24 July 2020, YADAH issued emails to occupiers of the land
adjacent to Portion
9 and invited them to submit comments and views
of the applications;
vii.
On 28 July 2020, consultation letters were emailed to several state
departments,
the mayor of the Ga-Segonaya Local Municipality, and
Eskom.’
[19]
The state
respondents explain that further public consultation is required
before the mining permits are granted.
[1]
[20]
In reply, Assmang contends that the state respondents are conflating
two distinct administrative
actions in each of the respective review
applications, to wit, the decision to accept the mining permit
applications and the decision
to grant an environmental
authorisation. The latter is the subject matter of the review
applications dealt with in these applications.
[21]
Assmang contends that by the time it became aware of the granting of
the environmental
authorisations, it was past the statutory period
within which to appeal the decision to the Minister responsible for
the environment.
Section 47 CB(2) of NEMA precluded such an appeal.
As a result, there was no internal remedy to exhaust.
[22]
Assmang reiterated its averments relating to the correctness of
averments contained in
the BARs and EMPrs as contained in the
founding affidavit. The applicant points out that no
confirmatory affidavits accompanied
the answering affidavit.
[23]
Assmang claims that the review applications were timeously instituted
and within 180 days
of the date on which it gained knowledge of the
environmental authorisations being granted.
Discussion
[24]
The MPRDA regulates both the development of mineral resources through
reconnaissance, prospecting,
and mining, and the functional area of
environmental impact related to the authorised development of mineral
resources by issuing
environmental authorisations. In this regard, s
38A of the MPRDA provides that:
‘
(1) The Minister
is the responsible authority for implementing environmental
provisions in terms of the National Environmental Management
Act,
1998 (Act 107 of 1998) as it relates to prospecting, mining,
exploration, production or activities incidental thereto on a
prospecting, mining, exploration or production area.
(2) An environmental
authorisation issued by the Minister shall be a condition prior to
the issuing of a permit or the granting
of a right in terms of this
Act.’
[25]
The Minister of Mineral Resources is thus the responsible authority
for implementing environmental
matters in terms of, amongst others,
NEMA. The Minister’s regulatory power to grant the necessary
authorisation to develop
mineral resources through reconnaissance,
prospecting, and mining is derived from the MPRDA. The Minister’s
regulatory power
to deal with the functional area of environmental
impacts related to the authorised development of mineral resources is
derived
from NEMA. The manner in which environmental approvals will
be approached and granted is determined through the provisions of
NEMA.
[26]
Dale
et
al.
,
[2]
explain that s 38A(1) is worded in such a way as to ensure that all
activities
taking place on a mining area, either being the activity of mining
itself, or an activity incidental thereto found within
the listing
notices, will fall to be considered in the relevant environmental
authorisation application. The totality of these
activities needs to
be covered in an environmental authorisation, issued by the Minister,
and the environmental authorisation needs
to be in place before the
permit can be issued or the right granted.
Points
in limine
[27]
Section 43(1A) of NEMA, provides that any person may appeal to the
Minister responsible
for the environment against a decision made in
terms of NEMA by the Minister of Minerals and Energy or any person
acting under
the Minister of Minerals and Energy’s delegated
authority.
[28]
Regulation
4 of the National Appeal Regulations
[3]
prescribes that an appellant must submit the appeal to the appeal
administrator, and a copy of the appeal to the applicant, any
registered interested and affected party, and any organ of state with
interest in the matter ‘
within
20 days from the date that
the
notification of the decision
for an application for an environmental authorisation
was
sent to the registered interested and affected parties by the
applicant
.’
(My
emphasis).
[29]
This regulation is distinctly different from regulation 74 of the
MPRDA regulations, which
deal with appeals against administrative
decisions in terms of s 96. Regulation 74(2) prescribes that the
notice of appeal must
be submitted ‘
within 30 days
of
the date the appellant became aware of the decision
in
respect of which the appeal is lodged.
’ (My emphasis).
[30]
In casu
, it is the applicant’s undisputed contention
that it only became aware of the fact that environmental
authorisations were
granted to the third respondents on 9 September
2021 when it received the record of decision pertaining to the second
respondent’s
decision to accept the third respondents’
mining permit applications for purposes of the s 96 appeals. Copies
of the granted
environmental authorisations were attached to the
records of the decision. Although the granting of the environmental
authorisations
came to the applicant’s knowledge on 9 September
2021, the applicant never received notification of the decision sent
to
it by the applicant.
[31]
The
respective third respondents’ failure to send notifications of
the decisions to grant environmental authorisations to
the respective
third respondents to Assmang, resulted in the exclusion of NEMA's s
43-appeal procedure as an internal remedy. Neither
the third
respondent nor the competent authority notified Assmang of the
decision regarding the environmental authorisations. The
third
respondents’ failure to send the required notifications to
Assmang to notify it that the environmental authorisations
were
granted, distinguishes these applications from instances where the
period for exercising an internal remedy lapsed, as referred
to in
Koyabe
and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and Others.
[4]
As a result, there was no effective internal remedy that had to be
exhausted.
[32]
The review applications were, in turn, issued on 3 March 2022 and
served on 7 and 8 March
2022, respectively. The review applications
were instituted within the period provided for in s 7(1)(b) of PAJA.
Having regard
to the process followed by Assmang in appealing the
acceptance of the mining permit applications and the undue delay
experienced
regarding the filing of answering affidavits, the review
applications that are the subject matter of the applications before
this
court were instituted without unreasonable delay, and within the
period prescribed in PAJA.
[33]
If regard is had to the fact that the decision to accept a mining
permit application and
the decision to grant an environmental
authorisation are distinct and separate administrative decisions, the
state respondents’
contention that the review applications
before this court are premature does not hold water. All the points
in limine
are found to be without substance.
Grounds
of review
[34]
Assmang raised several grounds for review and, in general, contends
that the environmental
authorisation was obtained through
non-disclosure of material information or misrepresentation of
material facts. The aspect
that renders the decisions to grant
environmental authorisations reviewable is Assmang’s undisputed
contention that it was
not consulted when the BAR and EMPr were
compiled, or informed of the application for environmental
authorisation. The third respondents’
applications for
environmental authorisations reflected that such consultations, did
in fact, occur. The latter is not confirmed
under oath in these
proceedings. I find that the representation that Assmang was
consulted, constitutes a misrepresentation
of material facts that
justifies the review and setting aside of the environmental
authorisation.
[35]
The overall goal of requiring environmental authorisation is to
protect human health and
the environment. Where mining activities are
already occurring on a property, it is imperative to invite the
existing right holder
to consult and ensure such consultation occurs.
The existing right holder who is conducting mining operations is not
to be considered
akin to a landowner who needs to be consulted
because the prospective mining operations might limit the exercise of
his entitlements
as a landowner. Only through effective consultation
with the existing mining right holder who is actively mining will a
prospective
miner be able to determine the extent of existing
activities, consider the cumulative effect of multiple mining
operations occurring
simultaneously on the same mining area, and be
able to plan accordingly. This is why further consultation after
granting an environmental
authorisation can never rectify the lack of
consultation before the environmental authorisation was granted.
Consequently, it would
have been impossible for the decision-maker to
assess the impact of the proposed mining projects on the environment
without considering
the extent of the existing mining operations.
[36]
Assmang’s claim that it was not consulted when the BAR and EMPr
were compiled, or
at any time before the environmental assessment was
granted, was only met by the state respondents’ unsubstantiated
hearsay
– ‘but we were informed you were consulted’.
The third respondents’ absence and silence speak louder than
words. It likewise renders the granting of the environmental
authorisations reviewable and necessitates it being set aside.
[37]
In addition, the failure to consult with Assmang before the
environmental authorisation
was granted, renders the administrative
action procedurally unfair in depriving Assmang of an opportunity to
comment on the BAR
and the EMPr.
Just
and equitable relief
[38]
Assmang submits that s 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa) of PAJA affords the courts
with a wide discretion
to grant ‘any order that is just and
equitable’ once an administrative decision is set aside. This
includes the discretion
to substitute or vary the administrative
action or correcting a defect in exceptional circumstances.
[39]
When the RM was informed that Assmang denies that it was ever
consulted as the respective
third respondents contend, he should have
actively investigated the averments. Instead, technical points that
are irrelevant regarding
the decisions to grant environmental
authorisations, are raised. The need for an environmental
authorisation is to ensure that
the environment is protected. When it
became apparent that the cumulative impact of existing and proposed
mining operations might
not have been canvassed sufficiently, the
environmental authorisation should have been suspended. The question
now arises of whether
this constitutes sufficient reason for the
court to step into the decisionmaker's shoes?
[40]
I think
not, because it is not the RM or even the Minister of Minerals and
Energy that is the final decision-maker regarding granting
environmental authorisations, but the Minister responsible for
environmental matters. The doctrine of separation of powers is
entrenched in the Constitution. I am not of the view that any
exceptional circumstances exist that allow the court to step in at
this juncture.
[5]
Had the
applicant cited the relevant Minister as a party to these
proceedings, I would have ordered that the Minister responsible
for
environmental matters consider the applications for environmental
authorisations. Since the relevant Minister is not a party
to these
proceedings, it would be futile to grant such an order since the
Minister cannot be bound by a court order in proceedings
if it was
not cited as a party.
[41]
In the result, I am of the view that it is just to both the applicant
and the respondents
to refer the matter back to the RM for
consideration. However, before the RM can reconsider the application,
the third respondents
are obliged to consult with the applicant, and
the applicant must make itself available for such a consultation.
Consultation
minutes, signed by both parties, must accompany the
application for environmental authorisation when it is re-submitted
for consideration.
Costs
[42]
The general principle that costs follow success applies. The
applicant stated in the notice
of motion that it would seek a costs
order against any respondent opposing the relief. The respective
third respondents did not
enter the fray. In the result, the costs of
this application, which costs include the costs of two counsel, are
to be paid jointly
and severally by the first and second respondents.
ORDER
In
the result, the following orders are granted:
Case number:
13164/2022
1.
The decision of the second respondent with environmental
impact assessment reference number NC 30/5/1/3/2/10809 EM, dated 30
June
2021, which environmental authorisation was granted to the third
respondent is reviewed and set aside;
2.
The application for an environmental authorisation is referred
back to the second respondent for reconsideration subject thereto
that the third respondent must consult with the applicant; the
parties are to sign a consultation-minute, which consultation-minute
is to supplement the third respondent’s application for an
environmental authorisation before its reconsideration;
3.
The first and second respondents are ordered to pay the costs
of this application, including the costs of two counsel, jointly and
severally, the one to pay the other to be absolved.
Case number:
13165/2022
4.
The decision of the second respondent with environmental
impact assessment reference number NC 30/5/1/3/2//1081 EM, dated 17
June
2021, which environmental authorisation was granted to the third
respondent is reviewed and set aside;
5.
The application for an environmental authorisation is referred
back to the second respondent for reconsideration subject thereto
that the third respondent must consult with the applicant; the
parties are to sign a consultation-minute, which consultation-minute
is to supplement the third respondent’s application for an
environmental authorisation before its reconsideration;
6.
The first and second respondents are ordered to pay the costs
of this application, including the costs of two counsel, jointly and
severally, the one to pay the other to be absolved.
Case number:
13166/2022
7.
The decision of the second respondent with environmental
impact assessment reference number NC 30/5/1/3/2//1080 EM, dated 28
May
2021, which environmental authorisation was granted to the third
respondent is reviewed and set aside;
8.
The application for an environmental authorisation is referred
back to the second respondent for reconsideration subject thereto
that the third respondent must consult with the applicant; the
parties are to sign a consultation-minute, which consultation-minute
is to supplement the third respondent’s application for an
environmental authorisation before its reconsideration;
9.
The first and second respondents are ordered to pay the costs
of this application, including the costs of two counsel, jointly and
severally, the one to pay the other to be absolved.
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.
It will be emailed to
the parties/their legal representatives as a courtesy gesture.
For the applicant:
Adv. E. Eksteen
With:
Adv. R. Molefe
Instructed by:
Werkmans Attorneys
For the first and
second respondents:
Adv. L. Gumbi
With:
Adv. S. Kunene
Instructed by:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
Date of the
hearing:
12 October 2023
Date of judgment:
20 November 2023
[1]
The
state respondents’ averment that ‘Assmang is still
required to consult with interested and affected parties’
is
clearly a typographical error.
[2]
At
para 242.
[3]
GNR.993
of 8 December 2014.
[4]
2010
(4) SA 327
(CC) at para [47].
[5]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Ltd and Another
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC);
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of S/4 and Another: In re Ex Parte
President of the RSA and Others
[2000] ZACC 1
;
2000
(2) SA 674
(CC) at para
[90]
.
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