Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 10South Africa
Rainbow Junction Development and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (82434/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 10 (12 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 January 2022
Judgment
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## Rainbow Junction Development and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (82434/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 10 (12 January 2022)
Rainbow Junction Development and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (82434/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 10 (12 January 2022)
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sino date 12 January 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
12-01-2022
CASE
NO: 82434/2019
DATE:
12/01/2022
In the matter between:
RAINBOW JUNCTION
DEVELOPMENT
1
ST
APPLICANT
MAGAUTA TRADING 121 (PTY)
LTD
2
ND
APPLICANT
and
CITY OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
1
ST
RESPONDENT
THE MUNICIPAL PLANNING
TRIBUNAL: CITY OF TSHWANE 2
ND
RESPONDENT
EXECUTIVE MAYOR OF THE CITY OF
TSHWANE
3
RD
RESPONDENT
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
MUNICIPAL APPEAL TRIBUNAL:
CITY OF TSHWANE
4
TH
RESPONDENT
PIVOTAL FUND
LIMITED
5
TH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
PHAHLANE, J
[1]
This is a review
application in terms of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act
[1]
(“PAJA”) in which the applicants seek the review and setting
aside of the decision of the third respondent (“the Mayor”)
taken
on 12 July 2019, dismissing the internal appeal noted by the
applicants in terms of section 51 of the Spatial Planning and
Land-use Management Act
[2]
(“SPLUMA”) read with section 20 of the City of Tshwane Spatial
Planning and Land-use Management By-Law 2016
[3]
(the By-law). The appeal was lodged against the decision of the
second respondent to approve the application for the establishment
of
the township to be known as Annlin West Extension 48.
[2]
In the consolidated
practice note which all parties agreed to, the issue for
determination by this court as formulated in paragraph
4.1 thereof is
“whether upon proper interpretation, section 51 of SPLUMA read with
section 20 of the By-Laws grant the right to
appeal to parties who
did not participate in the township planning hearing from which the
right to establish a township was granted”.
[3]
The relevant background
for this review application can briefly be summarised as follows:
3.1
A township application for the establishment of Annlin West Extension
48 was submitted on or about
8 June 2009 in terms of section 96 of
the TownPlanning and Townships Ordinance 15 of 1986. As required by
the Ordinance, a notice
of that township application was published on
or about 10 June 2009 in the Provincial Gazette as well as in a local
newspaper. In
terms of section 96(3) read with section 69(7) of the
Ordinance, any person may within a period of 28 days from the date of
the first
publication of the said notice, lodge an objection or make
representations in writing to the Municipality in respect of the
township
application.
3.2
The applicants did not lodge any objection or make any written
representations in respect of the
township application within the
time period allowed for by the Ordinance.
3.3
It appears that during November/December 2014, the applicants
apparently became aware that the township
application was being
further pursued by the fifth respondent. It is important to note that
the applicants stated and conceded in
their founding affidavit having
had knowledge of the township application made by the fifth
respondent and opted not lodge an objection
or make representations
as required by the Ordinance. In this regard, they specifically
stated in the Founding affidavit that “
the
a
pplicant
s
took a conscious decision not to object to the application”.
3.4
The township application was approved by the first respondent on 25
August 2017 and no notice to
that effect was given to the applicants.
Consequently, on 15 September 2017, the applicants noted an internal
appeal in terms of
section 51 of SPLUMA read with section 20 of the
By-Law to the Municipal Appeal Tribunal. However, this internal
appeal was referred
to the Mayor being the appeal authority in terms
of SPLUMA, who on 12 July 2019 took a decision to dismiss the
internal appeal lodged
by the applicants, and resolved that the
applicants did not have a right to appeal in terms of section 51 of
SPLUMA, against the
decision to approve the township application, for
among other reasons that:
(a)
"The applicants were not objectors or interveners as
contemplated by legislation.
(b)
The appellants did not procure the right to directly or indirectly
participate in the application
proceedings, and as such, did not have
locus standi
in the subject application proceedings.
(c)
A person who is able to appeal is a person who initially participated
in the decision of the
municipality as an objector.
[4]
It is the applicant’s contention that the Mayor had in deciding
upon the admissibility of
the applicant’s appeal, incorrectly
interpreted section 51 of SPLUMA and section 20 of the Bylaws. In
this regard, advocate Grobler
appearing for the applicants argued
that since both sections are concerned with the right of appeal,
their procedural interpretation
is subject to constitutional scrutiny
and that constitutional imperative must be used when looking at both
sections because they
both deal with the fundamental right of access
to justice through a Tribunal and a fair administrative justice.
[5]
It was argued that the
exclusion of the applicants as interested persons who have missed the
28-days period from participation in
the procedure or a subsequent
appeal does not conform with the spirit of section 33
[4]
and 34
[5]
of the Constitution
[6]
and therefore harsh and unfair. Further that in interpreting both
SPLUMA and the By-laws, it is necessary to look at the shackles
of
the history of the old Transvaal or pre-constitutional legislation in
order to identify the problems which the new legislation
seek to
cure, and to have regard to the scheme of the new legislation to see
whether these ills infused by the preconstitutional
ordinance have
been addressed. Put differently, that it is important to look at the
historical issues to identify the problems that
has to be addressed,
-- being the exclusion of an interested party who missed the 28-days
deadline period from any participation
in the procedure or a
subsequent appeal which is harsh and unfair, and did not conform with
the provisions of section 33 of the constitution,
- having regard to
the fact that the applicants have the right in terms of section 34 of
the constitution. To this end, counsel insisted
that on the facts of
this matter, it would be wrong to conclude that the second
respondent’s opinion that the applicants did not
have an interest
in the decision was correct.
[6] I interpose
to state that the applicant’s submissions were mostly a reliance
upon the facts of this case.
What is however important is that in
terms of paragraph 5 of the consolidated practice note, the parties
have agreed that there are
no factual disputes. It follows that the
factual matrix is not relevant for the legal issue of
interpretation
[7]
.
On the other hand, save for the factual background of this matter, no
basis has been laid upon which this court should deviate from
the
agreement of all parties made in the consolidated practice note and
confirmed by all counsels in court, to consider the alleged
historical difficulty or preconstitutional ills which the applicants
allege serves to govern the purpose of SPLUMA or the By-laws,
and
which advocate Grobler submitted are a harsh and unfair treatment to
the applicants.
[7]
With regards to submission
that the procedure set out by both section 51 of SPLUMA and section
20 of the By-laws do not conform with
the spirit and purport of
section 33 and 34 of the constitution in as far as it relates to
denying the applicants access to participate
and appeal, I am
inclined to agree with advocate Oosthuizen’s submissions that the
merits of a township application do not fall
within the scope and
ambit of section 34 because a justiciable dispute dealing with the
planning tribunal and access to the planning
tribunal is not a
dispute that is justiciable by law under PAJA.
[8]
Turning to the crux of the
issues before this court, I have already indicated that the Mayor
dismissed the internal appeal lodged
by the applicants on the basis
that the applicants never qualified as objectors or interveners as
contemplated by legislation, and
therefore did not have
locus
standi
or rights in
the internal appeal.
[9]
Section 104(1) of the
Ordinance dealing with appeals in respect of Township applications
affords the right of internal appeal to the
applicant or an
"objector" who is aggrieved by the decision in question. An
objector is identified by the Ordinance as
any person who has within
a period of 28 days from the date of the first publication of the
said notice
[8]
,
lodged an objection in writing with the municipality in respect of
the township application, in terms of section 96(3) read with
section
69(7) of the Ordinance.
[10]
It was argued on behalf of
the applicants that even though the applicants did not previously
participate in the town planning process,
they nevertheless had a
right of appeal because section 20 of the By-laws does not take away
their right to appeal because an interested
person for purposes of
section 51(4)(c)
[9]
of the Act and section 20(4)(c)
[10]
of the By-law is a person having pecuniary or proprietary interest
and who is able to demonstrate that he/she will be adversely affected
by the decision of the land development application.
[11]
Advocate Grobler further
argued that the applicants qualified as interested persons who have
passed the test in terms of section 45(3)
[11]
,
irrespective of whether they have received a notice or not, because
their right of appeal still stands as they had pecuniary interest
in
the town planning process and were affected by the decision taken. He
insisted that this was a way in which the legislature was
creating an
internal remedy for the applicants, even where they were not a part
of an internal decision-making procedure and as such,
a notice of the
decision should have been sent to the applicants because the
municipality was aware that the applicants had an interest
in the
decision regarding the township application.
[12]
The
fundamental principle of statutory interpretation is that the words
in a statute must be read in their entire context and in their
grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the
Act, the object of the Act, and the intention
of
the legislature.
The
leading case on the interpretation of statutes is
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[12]
in
which the court articulated the following:
“
Interpretation is the
process of attributing meaning to the words used in a document, be it
legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or contract, having
regard to the context provided by reading the particular provision or
provisions in the light of the document
as a whale and the
circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence. Whatever the
nature of the document, consideration must
be given to the language
used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and syntax; the
context in which the provision appears;
the apparent purpose to which
it is directed and the material known to those responsible for its
production. Where more than one
meaning is possible each possibility
must be weighed in the light of all these factors. The process is
objective, not subjective.
A sensible meaning is to be preferred to
one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines
the apparent purpose
of the document. Judges must be alert to, and
guard against the temptation to substitute what they regard as
reasonable, sensible
or businesslike for the words actually used. To
do so in regard to a statute or statutory instrument is to cross the
divide between
interpretation and legislation…..The inevitable
point of departure is the language of the provision itself, read in
context and
having regard to the purpose of the provision and the
background to the preparation and production of the document”.
[13]
In
pointing
out that a contextual or purposive reading of a statute must remain
faithful to the actual wording of the statute, the constitutional
court in
Bertie
Van Zyl (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister for Safety and Security and
Others
[13]
also highlighted the correct approach to statutory interpretation and
stated that
“
The
purpose of a statute plays an important role in establishing a
context that clarifies the scope and intended effect of a law”.
See also: Cool Ideas 1186 CC v
Hubbard and Another
[14]
and Provincial Minister for Local Government, Environmental
Affairs and Development Planning, Western Cape v Municipal Council
of the Oudtshoorn Municipality and Others
[15]
[14]
The starting point in any
appeal proceedings is that a person will only be entitled to be heard
on appeal provided that he/she was
a party to the initial proceedings
leading to an appeal. It is worth noting that before SPLUMA was
enacted, it was settled that only
an objector who had participated in
the proceedings had the right to appeal. The word “appeal”
implicitly restricts this category
to people that have participated
in the previous process. The principle was applied by the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
City
of Cape Town v Reader & others
[16]
and confirmed in the matter of
JDJ Property CC v
Umngeni Local Municipality
17
where the court stated that:
“
It
appears to me that there are two reasons why s 9(1)(c) does not apply
to the appellants. The first flows from the reasoning in
Reader.
How can
a person appeal against a decision taken in proceedings in
which
he or she was not a party? The essence of an appeal is a rehearing
(whether wide or narrow) by a court or tribunal of second
instance.
Implicit in this is that the rehearing is at the instance of an
unsuccessful participant in a process. Persons in the position
of the
appellants cannot be described as unsuccessful participants in the
process at first instance and do not even have the right
to be
notified of the decision”.
[15] Both
section 51(1) of SPLUMA and section 20(1)(a) and (b) of the By-law
makes it very clear that that
the statutory right of appeal is given
to those persons who have given written notice of the appeal and the
reasons thereof within
21 days of the date of notification of the
decision to the municipal manager. The sections provide as follows:
# Section
51 of SPLUMA
Section
51 of SPLUMA
(1) A person whose rights are
affected by a decision taken by a Municipal Planning Tribunal may
appeal against that decision by giving
written notice of the appeal
and reasons to the municipal manager within 21 days of the date of
notification of the decision.
# Section
20 of the By-law
Section
20 of the By-law
(1) A person whose rights are
affected by a decision of a Municipal Planning Tribunal or Authorised
Official, may appeal against that
decision by:
(a) delivering
a notice of the appeal and reasons for the appeal to the Municipal
Manager;
(b) within 21
days of the date of delivery of written notification of the decision
on the land development application
as contemplated in the provisions
of this By-law or any other relevant legislation
[16]
There can be no doubt that the legislative intention from
abovementioned provisions was to limit the
right to appeal to only
those who had initially participated in the proceedings and have
delivered their written notice within 21
days. It is on this basis
that advocate Oosthuizen submitted, and correctly so, that the person
who is given a right of appeal in
terms of section 51 is, on a proper
contextual interpretation thereof, a person who was party to the
proceedings before the Municipal
Planning Tribunal.
[17] With
regards to the argument that the applicants are interested persons
for purposes of section 51(4)(c)
of the Act and section 20(4)(c) of
the By-law having interest and should have been sent notice of the
decision because the municipality
was aware that the applicants had
an interest in the decision regarding the township application,
advocate Oosthuizen argued that
there is no logical reason why the
third person, described in section 51(4)(c) of SPLUMA as an
interested person who may reasonably
be expected to be affected by
the outcome of the land development application proceedings, should
not also be constrained to a person
who has participated in the
initial application proceedings. He submitted that any contrary or
wide interpretation of section 51
of SPLUMA will have serious
ramifications and absurd consequences in practice in that a contrary
interpretation will open the door
for an abuse of the right of an
internal appeal as provided for in section 51 of SPLUMA.
[18] Advocate
Maritz shared the same sentiments and further argued that outsiders
who had not properly
objected and had not participated in the
proceedings, are not entitled to be notified of the decision because
it does not appear
in any of the provisions of SPLUMA and the By-law
that the legislature intended to give the right to appeal to persons
such as the
applicants who had taken a conscious decision not to
object and thus not to participate, as this will lead to an abuse of
the procedures
prescribed in terms of SPLUMA and the statutory time
periods attached thereto. Further that if that were to be the case,
it will
lead to an obstructive conduct that would be manifestly
contrary to the clear statutory purpose and contrary, in terms of
SPLUMA.
[19] The
provisions of section 45 and 51 of SPLUMA, as well as section 20 of
the Bylaws demonstrate the continuous
link in the application before
the municipal planning tribunal and the related appeal before the
appeal authority because all relates
to the procedure which the
applicants should have complied with, but neglected to follow after
taking a conscious decision not to
object as required by statute. The
common factor between these section is that while a person claiming
to be an interested person
in a land development application or an
appeal has the burden of establishing his or her status as an
interested person as contemplated
in section 45(3), section 51 and
section 20 dealing with appeals places the burden on a person whose
rights are affected, including
an interested person in terms of
section 51(4)(c) of SPLUMA to comply with the rules and procedure, by
first giving notice of the
appeal and the reasons thereto in writing
within the prescribed period. Consequently, an interested person for
purposes of section
45 must comply with the same requirements
mentioned in sections 51 of SPLUMA and 20 of the By-laws
respectively.
[20] The
applicants had the alternative process available to them in terms of
section 45, to apply
to intervene so that they can join in the
application proceedings, and this was not done. Of course, if
applicants who had taken
a conscious decision not to object and not
to participate, and who had not applied for leave to intervene could
be allowed to belatedly
appeal as of right, it would render the
provisions of section 45 completely meaningless. I therefore agree
with the respondents’
submission that it would be irrational for a
person to simply ignore the public participation procedures
prescribed in terms of SPLUMA
and the statutory time periods attached
thereto, and file a belated appeal demanding a hearing because if
that were to be allowed,
it would have been completely unnecessary to
have prescribed a public participation process and a process for the
granting of intervener
status.
[21] I am
of the view that the applicants’ contention that they are
interested persons who may reasonably
be expected to be affected by
the outcome of the land development application proceedings as
described in section 51(4)(c) of SPLUMA
and therefore entitled to a
statutory right of appeal, is misplaced and fatally flawed. In my
view, such an interpretation would
result in absurdity which would in
law not be permissible because when applying a purposive approach to
section 51 of SPLUMA, the
interpretation contended by the applicants
is not supported. On the other hand, the interpretation would render
redundant the entire
participation process prescribed in SPLUMA and
in the By-law.
[22] In
any event, if the legislature, by enacting SPLUMA, had intended to
change the existing legal position,
it would have explicitly stated
its intentions in a clear and unambiguous language, - and one would
have expected an unequivocal
provision to that effect. In the absence
of such, it must be assumed that the legislature did not intend to
change the existing legal
position. I am of the view that the
apparent purpose to which the statutory right to appeal in section
51(1) of SPLUMA and section
20(1)(c) of the By-laws is directed, must
be considered and adhered to.
[23] I
have seriously considered the circumstances of this case, as well as
the arguments and submissions
made by all parties. The fact that the
applicants did not have the right to appeal in terms of section 51 of
the SPLUMA and section
20 of the By-laws, it is my considered view
that their purported appeal was correctly dismissed. Accordingly, the
present application
falls to be dismissed.
[24]
In the circumstance, the following order is made:
1. The review application is
dismissed with costs, including the costs consequent upon
the employment of counsels, some
of whom are senior counsels.
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
# APPEARANCES
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicants
:
Advocate G L Grobler SC
Instructed
by
: IVAN PAUW & PARTNERS ATTORNEYS
448C SUSSEX AVENUE
LYNNWOOD, PRETORIA
Tel: (012) 369-9180
Email: pierre@ippartners.co.za
For
First to Fourth Respondent
: Advocate MM Oosthizen SC
Advocate I Hlalethoa
Instructed
by
: KUNENE RAMAPALA INCORPORATED
INFOTECH BUILDING
HATFIELD, PRETORIA
Tel: (012) 342-3578
Email:
mnyalungu@kr-inc.co.za
muller@kr-inc.co.za
For Fifth
Respondent
: Advocate MC Maritz SC
Advocate Venter
Instructed
by
: ADRIAAN VENTER ATTORNEYS & ASSOCIATES
LADY BROOKS BUILDING
MENLO
PARK, PRETORIA
Tel: (012) 346-1075
Email:
info@avatt.co.za
[1]
Act 2 of 2000
[2]
Act 16 of 2013
[3]
Published in the Provincial Gazette of 2 March 2016
[4]
Section
33(1): Everyone has the right to administrative action that is
lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair
(2)
Everyone whose rights have been adversely
affected by administrative action has the right to be given written
reasons.
(3)
National legislation must be enacted to give
effect to these rights, and must –
(a)
provide for the review of administrative action
by a court, or where appropriate, and independent and impartial
tribunal.
(b)
impose a duty on the state to give effect to the
rights in subsection (1) and (2) and (c) promote an efficient
administration.
[5]
Section
34: Everyone
has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the
application of law decided in a fair public hearing before
a court,
or where appropriate another independent and impartial tribunal or
form.
[6]
Act 108 of 1996
[7]
In Desert
Palace Hotel Resort
2007 (3) SA 187
(SCA) at para 7, the court
categorically stated that: “when interpreting a statute, the
factual circumstances of a case have
no bearing on the analysis. The
reason for this is that the same words in a legislative instrument
cannot be interpreted differently
under different circumstances.
In other words, the
interpretation of dissections does not take place within the factual
matrix of a specific case”; See also:
KMPG
2009 (2) ALL SA 823
(SCA) at para 39, where the court stated that: “interpretation is
a matter of law, and not of fact, and accordingly, an interpretation
is a matter for the court and not for the witness”.
[8]
The objector must have been notified in writing by the local
authority of the decision taken.
[9]
Section 51(4)(c) of the Act provides: A person whose rights are
affected within the provisions of subsection 1 includes – an
interested person who may reasonably be expected to be affected by
the outcome of the land development application proceedings.
[10]
Section 20(4)(c) of the By-law provides: A person whose rights are
affected as contemplated in subsection (1) read with section
51(4)
of the Act includes – an interested person who may reasonably be
expected to be affected by the outcome of the land development
application proceedings.
[11]
Parties to a land development application includes a person claiming
to be an interested person in a land development application
or an
appeal and has the burden of establishing his or her status as an
interested person.
[12]
2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)
[13]
[2009]
ZACC 11
;
2010
(2) SA 181
(CC);
2009
(10) BCLR 978
(CC) at
para 21.
[14]
[2014]
ZACC 16
;
2014
(4)
SA 474
(CC);
2014
(8) BCLR 869
(CC) at
para 28.
[15]
(CCT05/15)
[2015] ZACC 24
;
2015 (6) SA 115
(CC);
2015 (10) BCLR 1187
(CC) (18 August 2015).
[16]
In
City
of Cape Town v Reader & others
City
of Cape Town v Reader & others
[2008]
ZASCA 130
;
2009
(1)
SA
555
(SCA),
the court stated that an appeal is only available to an unsuccessful
applicant for planning permission, and not to a person
who was not
party to an application for planning permission.
17
2013 (2) SA 395
(SCA) par 43.
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