Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 145South Africa
Masuku and Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Others (25764/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 145 (10 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
10 March 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPPHC 145
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Masuku and Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Others (25764/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 145 (10 March 2022)
Masuku and Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Others (25764/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 145 (10 March 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2022_145.html
sino date 10 March 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: Yes
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
(3)
REVISED.
CASE
NO:25764/2019
In
the matter between :
GRACE
MASUKU
First Applicant
MADIMATLE
COMMUNITY
Second Applicant
KARA
HERITAGE INSTITUTE
Third
Applicant
CALFSHELF
INVESTMENTS 171 (PTY) LTD
Fourth Applicant
CALFSHELF
INVESTMENTS 172 (PTY) LTD
Fifth Applicant
CALFSHELF
INVESTMENTS 173 (PTY) LTD
Sixth
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF MINERAL RESOURCES
First Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
: DEPARTMENT
OF
MINERAL
RESOURCES
Second Respondent
REGIONAL
MINING DEVELOPMENT AND
ENVIRONMENTAL
COMMITTEE LIMPOPO REGION
Third Respondent
MOTJOLI
RESOURCES (PTY)
LTD
Fourth Respondent
MOTJOLI
REAL ESTATE (PTY)
LTD
Fifth Respondent
AQUILA
STEEL (SOUTH AFRICA) (PTY)
LTD
Sixth Respondent
AQUILA
STEEL THABAZIMBI (SA) (PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN HERITAGE RESOURCES
AGENCY
Eighth Respondent
THE
HEAD OF DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT,
ENVIRONMENTAL AND
TOURISM,
LIMPOPO
PROVINCE
Ninth Respondent
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE:
DEPARTMENT
OF ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT,
ENVIRONMENT,
TOURISM, LIMPOPO PROVINCE
Tenth Respondent
MOTJOLI
IRON ORE (PTY) LTD
Eleventh Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
matter has been heard in terms of the Directives of the Judge
President of this Division dated 25 March 2020, 24 April 2020 and
11
May 2020. The judgement and order are accordingly published and
distributed electronically. The date and time of hand-down is
deemed
to be 14h00 on 10 March 2022.
LENYAI
AJ
[1]
This is an application wherein the applicants seek the review and
setting aside
of the following decisions taken by the
first respondent , the Minister of Mineral Resources:
(a)
the decision, taken on 25 April 2018, to award Aquila Steel
(South Africa) Ltd, the sixth respondent,
the mining right in terms
of Section 23 (1) of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development
Act 28 of 2002 ( MPRDA);
(b)
the decision, taken on 26 April 2018, to transfer the mining right
granted to Aquila Steel (South
Africa) (Pty) Ltd to the eleventh
respondent, Motjoli Iron Ore (Pty) Ltd in terms of Section 11 of
MPRDA;
[2]
The applicants further seek an order declaring that the Waterberg
District Municipality
and the Mopani District Municipality are
bio-critical and biodiversity regions not suitable for mining and
mining related activities
in accordance with the Provincial Gazette
No 2966 published on 4
th
January 2019.
[3]
There are six applicants in this matter. The first applicant, Grace
Makgotha Meki Masuku, is a
social activist and environmentalist
residing at Lekutung Section, Lesetlheng Village, Moruleng,
Rustenburg.
[4]
The second applicant, the Madimatle Community, is a community
comprising of the Manaiwa, Mosuwe,
Molwantwa and Moima families who
fall under the definition of a community as defined in
section 1
of
the
Restitution of Land Rights Act No 22 of 1994
as amended.
[5]
The third applicant is the KARA Heritage Institution established in
1982 under the leadership
of Dr Mathole Motshekga, for the purpose of
restoring the African cultural heritage and building a nation of
African communities
and people, through its research, educational
campaigns, enterprise development and advocacy.
[6]
The fourth applicant is Calfshelf Investments 171 (PTY) LTD, a
private company incorporated
in terms of the company laws of South
Africa with registration number 2007/019859/07. Fourth applicant is
the registered owner of
Portions 6 and 9 Buffelshoek, 446 KQ, Limpopo
located
1.5 km
from the Madimatle
Mountain and Cave.
[7]
The fifth applicant is Calfshelf Investments 172 (PTY) LTD, a private
company incorporated
in terms of the company laws of South Africa
with registration number 2007/019866/07. Fourth applicant is the
registered owner of
Portion 6 Donkerpoort 488, Full Extent of Leopard
Cave 715, Full Extent of Dassiesrand 447, Portions 10, 11, 12, 13,
14, 15, 16,
and 17, of Buffelshoek 446, Limpopo located
1.50
km
from the Madimatle Mountain and Cave.
[8]
The sixth applicant is Calfshelf Investments 173 (PTY) LTD, a private
company incorporated
in terms of the company laws of South Africa
with registration number 2007/019818/07. Sixth applicant is the
registered owner of
Portions 19, 20, 21, 22 and 23 Buffelshoek
446 KQ, Limpopo located
1.50 km
from the
Madimatle Mountain and Cave.
[9]
There are eleven respondents in the matter. The first respondent is
the Minister of Mineral Resources,
cited in his official capacity as
a member of cabinet vested with public authority and duty to oversee
and implement the
Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act
(MPRDA
).
[10]
The Second respondent is the Director-General: Department of Mineral
Resources, cited in
his official capacity and exercises delegated
authority in terms of
section 103
of MPRDA.
[11]
The third respondent is the Regional Mining Development and
Environmental Committee Limpopo Region, established
in terms of
section 64
(10) of the MPRDA, responsible for making recommendations
to the Minister amongst other things on granting of mineral rights
and
objections raised thereto, regard being had on environmental
issues.
[12]
The fourth respondent is Motjoli Resources (Pty) Ltd, a private
company incorporated in terms of the
company laws of South Africa.
The fourth respondent wholly owns the fifth and eleventh respondents.
[13]
The fifth respondent is Motjoli Real Estate (Pty) Ltd, a private
company incorporated in terms of the
company laws of South Africa, is
the registered owner of the mining property described as the
remainder of the Farm Randstephne 455
KQ situated within the
Thabazimbi Local Municipality in the Waterberg District Limpopo
Province.
[14]
The sixth respondent is Aquila Steel (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd, a
private company incorporated in
terms of the company laws of South
Africa.
[15]
The seventh respondent is Aquila Steel Thabazimbi (South Africa)
(Pty) Ltd, a private company incorporated
in terms of the company
laws of South Africa.
[16]
The eighth respondent is the South African Heritage Resources Agency,
a statutory organisation established
in terms of
section 11
of the
National Heritage Resources Act No 25 of 1999
as amended, responsible
for amongst other things, the protection of South African’s
cultural heritage.
[17]
The nineth respondent is the Head of Department of Economic
Development Environmental and Tourism, Limpopo
Provincial Government,
responsible for implementing amongst other things, the
National
Environmental Management Act No 107 of 1998
, as amended ( NEMA) and
other related legislation in the Limpopo province.
[18]
The tenth respondent is the Member of the Executive Council for
Economic Development, Environment and
Tourism Limpopo Provincial
Government, responsible for the implementation of amongst other
things, the
National Environmental Management Act No 107 of 1998
, as
amended ( NEMA) and other related legislation in the Limpopo
province.
[19]
The eight, nineth and tenth respondents are not participating in this
matter save for filing a record
of their decision.
[20]
The eleventh respondent is Motjoli Iron Ore Company (Pty) Ltd, a
private company incorporated in terms
of the company laws of South
Africa, is the holder of the mining right which is the subject of
this review.
[21]
The applicants contend that this application involves the
balancing of constitutional rights that the
Minister ought to have
considered prior to granting the mining right to the sixth respondent
and subsequent transfer of the right
to the
eleventh
respondent.
[22]
The applicants further contend that the third respondent had
initially declined to approve the mining
right based on environmental
issues but later reviewed its own decision and recommended the
approval of the mining right. They aver
that this application pivots
on whether the first and second respondents exercised their
discretion properly and lawfully when they
approved the mining right.
[23]
The mining right was originally granted to Aquila Steel, the sixth
respondent on the 25
th
April 2018 and was ceded to
Motjoli
Iron Ore the eleventh
respondent the next day on the 26
th
April 2018. The property over which the mining right was granted is
home to the Maletse Mountain and the Gatkop Cave. The Mountain
is
informally known as Madimatle, being a name given to it by the
local community. It is a Setswana name meaning beautiful
blood in
English. The Manaiwa family have their ancestral graves located on
the Madimatle Mountain.
[24]
The first, third and sixth applicants have jointly submitted an
application to SAHRA, eighth respondent,
nominating the property to
be graded and protected as a grade 1 national heritage site.
[25]
The respondents on the other hand contend that the review application
is directed against the two decisions
to grant the mining right and
subsequently transfer it. They are of the view that this is a rehash
of the objections the applicants
raised in various administrative
adjudications why they think mining on the Madimatle Mountain would
be a bad idea and should have
upheld their objections.
[26]
The respondents aver that the applicants have failed to appreciate
that the standard on review is not
whether the court would have made
a different decision, but whether a reviewable irregularity had
occurred.
[27]
The respondents have raised several points
in
limine
in their answering affidavits.
[28]
The Fourth to seventh and eleven respondents (the Motjoli entities)
raised a point
in limine
whether the court should entertain
the application in circumstances where the applicants have not
exercised their internal remedies.
[29]
The Motjoli entities aver that the applicants seek that the decision
of the first applicant (the minister)
to grant a mining right to the
fourth respondent be reviewed and set aside. They then further seek
that the decision of the minister
to transfer the mining right
to the eleventh respondent be reviewed and set aside.
[30]
The Motjoli entities contend that these decisions were not made by
the minister but were rather made
by the second respondent, the
Director – General of the Department of Mineral Resources (DMR), by
virtue of delegated powers conferred
on him by the minister in terms
of
section 103
of MPRDA. Almost a year later, on the 19
th
April 2019, the applicants instituted the review application without
first exhausting their internal remedies in terms of
Section 96(1)
and (3) of the MPRDA as well as
section 7(2)(a)
and (c) of
PAJA.
[31]
The applicants aver in their founding affidavit that because of the
delegation granted to the DG, the
dubious decisions were actually
those of the minister. They said that
section 96
of MPRDA therefore
does not apply to them because it does not provide for an appeal
against the decisions of the minister.
[32]
The respondents aver that this justification made by the applicants
in their founding papers, is the
real reason why they failed to lodge
an appeal to the Minister.
[33]
Section 96
of MPRDA deals with internal appeals :
“
(1)
Any person whose rights or legitimate
expectations have been materially and adversely affected or who is
aggrieved by an administrative
decision in terms of this Act may
appeal in the prescribed manner to –
(a)
the Director-General, if
it is an administrative decision by a Regional Manager or an officer;
(b)
The Minister, if it is an
administrative decision by the Director-General or the designated
agency.
(2)
An appeal in terms of subsection (1) does not suspend the
administrative decision, unless
it is suspended by the
Director-General or the Minister, as the case may be.
(3)
No person may apply to court for the review of an administrative
decision contemplated in
subsection (1) until that person has
exhausted his or her remedies in terms of that subsection.
( 4)
Sections 6, 7(1) and 8 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act, (Act No 3 of 2000), apply to
any court proceedings contemplated
in this section.”
[34]
Further to the above section, Section 7 of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, ( Act No 3 of
2000) (PAJA) states the
procedure for judicial review as follows:
“
(1)
Any proceedings for judicial review in terms
of section 6 (1) must be instituted without
unreasonable delay and
not later that 180 days after the date -
(a)
Subject to subsection (2) (c),
on which any proceedings instituted in terms of internal remedies as
contemplated in subsection (2)
(a) have been concluded; or
(b)
Where no such remedies exist, on
which the person concerned was informed of the administrative action,
became aware of the action
and the reasons for it or might reasonably
have been expected to have become aware of the action and the
reasons.
(2)
(a) Subject to paragraph (c), no court or tribunal shall review an
administrative
action in terms of this Act unless any internal remedy
provided for in any other law has first been exhausted.
(b)
Subject to paragraph (c), a court or tribunal must, if it is not
satisfied that any internal remedy referred to in
paragraph (a) has
been exhausted, direct that the person concerned must first exhaust
such remedy before instituting proceedings
in a court or tribunal or
judicial review in terms of this Act.
(c) A court or
tribunal may, in exceptional circumstances and on application by the
person concerned, exempt such person from the
obligation to exhaust
any internal remedy if the court or tribunal deems it in the interest
of justice.
……
.”
[35]
In the matter of
Bengwenyama Minerals (Pty) Ltd v Genorah
Resources (Pty) Ltd
2011 (4) SA 113
(CC) para 44-45
, the
Constitutional Court found that the appeal is available to the
Minister from a decision of the Deputy Director- General
exercising
powers delegated by the minister under section 103 of MPRDA. The
court held that the exercise of a delegated power
is a decision by
the delegate and not the delegator.
[36]
Turning to the matter before me, it is common cause between the
parties that the Director-General had
delegated power conferred on
him by the Minister in terms of Section 103 of MPRDA and the
applicants abandoned this argument in their
heads of argument.
[37]
In the matter of
Koyabe and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and
Others
(
Lawyers for Human Rights as
Amicus Curiae)
[2009] ZACC23;
2010 (4) SA 327
( CC );
2009 (12) BCLR 1192
( CC )
,
the Constitutional Court emphasised the importance of internal
remedies as follows:
“
Internal
remedies are designed to provide immediate and cost-effective relief,
giving the executive the opportunity to utilise its
own mechanism,
rectifying irregularities first, before aggrieved parties resort to
litigation. Although courts play a vital role
in providing litigants
with access to justice, the importance of more readily available and
cost effective internal remedies cannot
be gainsaid.
First,
approaching a court before the higher administrative body is given
the opportunity to exhaust its own existing mechanisms undermines
the
autonomy of the administrative process. It renders the judicial
process premature, effectively usurping the
executive
role and function.
The scope of
administrative action extends over a wide range of circumstances, and
the crafting of specialist administrative procedures
suited to the
particular administrative action in question enhances procedural
fairness as enshrined in our Constitution. Courts
have often
emphasised that what constitutes a ‘fair’ procedure will depend
on the nature of the administrative action and circumstances
of the
particular case. Thus, the need to allow executive agencies to
utilise their own fair procedures is crucial in administrative
action.”
[38]
The applicants further contend in their heads of argument that they
had on numerous occasions requested
not only the state respondents
but also the Aquila Steel entities as well as the Motjoli entities,
confirmation of the details pertaining
to the mining right and the
subsequent transfer thereof. In the replying affidavit the applicants
state that they only got to know
about the information per chance at
a meeting convened by South African Heritage Resources Agency
(SAHRA), the eight respondent.
They further aver that the Aquila
Steel entities as well as the Motjoli entities refused to provide
them with the relevant information
that would have enabled them to
launch any appeal in terms of MPRDA. The applicants aver that the
respondents did not assist by filling
the Rule 53 record in a
piecemeal fashion. The record was filed on three separate occasions
being the 21
st
June 2019, 13
th
November 2019
and 4
th
September 2020. Only upon receipt of the final
piece of the record did they have knowledge of the MEC’s decision
to grant Aquila
Steel entities application in terms of section 24G of
NEMA. The applicants contend that given the time at which they knew
about the
decision, they could not have lodged an appeal against the
MEC’s decision. Similarly they aver that the contention of Aquila
Steel
and Motjoli entities that they failed to exhaust internal
remedies in terms of section 96 of MPRDA is disingenuous as they
withheld
critical information from them.
[39]
The respondents on the other hand aver that the argument is wrong in
fact and in law, in that firstly,
section 96 (1) does not require an
applicant in an internal appeal to have a copy of the mining right or
to have the full facts.
All it requires is for an applicant to be
aware of the administrative decision and then launch the appeal
within 30 days of such
awareness. The respondents further aver that
to the extend
that
the applicants required further information regarding the
decisions, they had remedies under the
Promotion of Access to
Information Act, No 2 of 2000
.
[40]
Secondly, the applicants’ various versions are incorrect that they
only “definitely” knew of the
mining right when the
Rule 53
record was filed, or at the earliest, when they were advised at a
meeting with SAHRA on 27 February 2019, as stated in their heads
of
argument. The respondents aver that, the applicants’ attorneys
confirmed in a letter dated 26 February 2019 that the applicants
obtained information from the Motjoli’s website that Motjoli Iron
Ore holds a mining right over the mining property, this letter
was
one of the annexures in the replying affidavit.
[41]
Thirdly, the respondents aver that a mining right is a real right
over a property which is registered
in the mining titles registration
office. Similar to the deeds registry, the mining titles registration
office is open for public
scrutiny. Both the mining right and the
cession of the mining right to Motjoli Iron Ore, were registered in
the mining titles registration
office.
[42]
Fourthly, the respondents aver that in appropriate circumstances, the
Minister may condone a failure to launch
the internal appeal within
the 30 day period set forth in
section 96(1)
of MPRDA. The applicants
were aware that a decision had been made by the Director-General
prior to launching the review, which
is evidenced by the
argument they made out in their founding papers that the decisions
taken by the Director-General were actually,
in law, those of the
Minister.
[43]
Lastly, the respondents aver that the applicants could not simply
proceed to institute judicial review
because they were out of time
with the internal appeal in terms of MPRDA.
[44]
In the context of mining law, the importance of exhausting internal
remedies provided for in
section 96
of the MPRDA was confirmed by the
Constitutional Court in the matter of
Dengetenge Holdings (Pty)
Ltd v Southern Sphere Mining & Development Co Ltd
2014 (5) SA 138
( CC).
The court held at para 115 that it is compulsory for an
aggrieved party to exhaust internal remedies before approaching a
court for
review unless such party is exempted from this duty by a
competent court.
At para 116 the court further held that:
“
A review
application that is launched before exhausting internal remedies is
taken to be premature and the court to which it is brought
is
precluded from reviewing the challenged administrative action until
the domestic remedies are exhausted or unless an exemption
is
granted. Differently put, the duty to exhaust internal remedies
defers the exercise of the court’s review jurisdiction for as
long
as the duty is not distinguished.”
[45]
In my view the argument of the applicants cannot be sustained.
Section 96(1)
of MPRDA states that, any person whose rights or
legitimate expectations have been adversely affected or who is
aggrieved by any
administrative decision may appeal within 30 days of
becoming aware of such decision. The applicants became aware from the
26 February
2019 of the decisions of the Director-General which were
granted on the 25
th
and 26
th
April 2018
respectively and elected not to launch an internal appeal against
both decisions. The constitutional court in
Dengetenge supra
,
has emphasised the importance of internal remedies in resolving
complex factual issues so as to benefit from the structured
involvement
of a decision-maker with expertise in the field.
[46]
Furthermore, the duty to exhaust internal remedies
before launching a review application is not a mere formality
which
may be ignored by litigants. It is peremptory and failure to comply
may render any judicial process premature with disastrous
consequences for the affected parties.
[47]
The applicants further contend in their heads of argument that Aquila
did not have an environmental authorisation
issued to them in terms
of section 24G of the National Environmental Management Act No 107 of
1998 (NEMA) at the time they
were granted the mining right,
which rendered the granting of the mining right unlawful. They aver
that Aquila had “
rightfully
applied for an Environmental Authorisation and they were forewarned
by the competent authority (LEDET) that they could
not commence with
the intended development of the mine until the Environmental
Authorisation had been issued. The 2010 Environmental
Impact
Assessment Regulation , R543 and the listed activities and notices
were always applicable. This informed the application that
was made
by Aquila Steel.”
(para
152-153 , 014-72)
[48]
The applicants contend that what makes the situation worse insofar as
the Environmental Authorisation
is concerned , is that section 11
which deals with the transfer of mining rights states that transfer
can only be granted in the
event that the requirements of section 17
and 23 have been complied with. Section 23(1)(d) of MPRDA requires
that there should be
an Environmental Authorisation prior to the
granting of a mining right and this was not the case when the
transfer took place.
[49]
The applicants further aver in their founding documents and heads of
argument that when transfer took
place, the One Environment System
(OES) was in place and had been so for four years and it had to be
complied with. The OES sought
to streamline the application process
so as to ensure that an applicant for mining rights did not have to
comply with environmental
processes controlled by separate
governmental departments.
[50]
The respondents on the other hand aver that the
applicants’ contention that an environmental authorisation
had to
be in place before the mining right could be issued and subsequently
transferred is based on an incorrect appreciation of
the transitional
arrangements to the One Environmental System.
[51]
To be able to unravel the conundrum between the
parties it is prudent to explore the law before and after
the One
Environmental System came into force, being the 8
th
December 2014.
[52]
The respondents contend that at the time when Aquila lodged its
mining rights application (26 July 2013)
two authorities regulated
the activities related to mining that affected the environment, the
Department of Mineral Resources (DMR)
and the Department of
Environmental Affairs. DMR which administers MPRDA had to assess the
environmental impact that the mining activities
would have on the
mining property.
[53]
Section 22 (4) of MPRDA reads as follows :
“
If
the Regional Manager accepts the application, the Regional Manager
must, within 14 days from the date of acceptance, notify the
applicant in writing-
(a)
To conduct an
environmental impact assessment and submit an environmental
management programme for approval in terms of section 39;(as
it read
before 8 December 2014) and
(b)
To notify and
consult with interested and affected parties within 180 days from the
date of the notice. (as it read before 8 December
2014)
[54]
DMR had to assess whether the mining by Aquila would not result in
unacceptable pollution, ecological
degradation or damage to the
environment. In order to make the assessment, DMR had to consider
Aquila’s environmental impact assessment
and environmental
management programme. In terms of the MPRDA the Regional Manager had
14 days after accepting the application to
notify Aquila to conduct
an environmental impact assessment and to submit an environmental
management programme for approval in terms
of section 39 of MPRDA.
The respondents aver that it is common cause between the parties the
Regional Manager had notified Aquila
on the 26
th
September
2013 to conduct an assessment. This notification is contained in the
Rule 53 Record, Volume 1.
[55]
Section 39 of MPRDA has been
repealed by section 33 of Act No
49 of 2008. However before 8 December 2014, the said section required
that an applicant for
a mining right conducts an environmental impact
assessment and submit an environmental management programme within
180 days on which
he or she is notified by the Regional Manager to do
so. Section 39(3)(b) prescribed extensive requirements for the
environmental
impact assessment report and the environmental
management programme, which included requirements to set out
mitigation of any environmental
harm or negative effects on the
heritage estates.
[56]
The respondents aver that Aquila
Steel complied with the provisions
of section 39 by providing an environmental management programme on
the 10
th
October 2014 and further submitted a revised
environmental management programme on the 11
th
July
2014.
[57]
In terms of section 39(4), the
Minister must approve an environmental
management programme, if it complies with the requirements of the
MPRDA, the applicant has
made financial provision for the
rehabilitation or management of negative environmental impacts and
the applicant has the capacity
or has provided for the capacity to
rehabilitate and manage negative impacts on the environment. However
although the mining right
could be granted, it would not come into
effect until the date on which the environmental management programme
is approved .
[58]
Section 39(5) permitted the Minister
to call for additional
information from the applicant and may direct that the environmental
management programme or environmental
management in question be
adjusted in such a way that the Minister may require.
[59]
Section 40 of MPRDA also repealed
by 33 of Act No 49 of 2008,obliged
the Minister to consult with any state department which administered
any law relating to matters
affecting the environment.
[60]
Section 23 of the MPRDA deals with the granting and duration of a
mining right:
“
(1
)
Subject to subsection (4), the Minister must grant a mining right if
–
(a)
the mineral can be mined optimally in accordance with the mining work
programme ;
(b)
the applicant has access to financial resources and has the technical
ability to conduct the
proposed mining operation optimally;
(c)
the financing plan is compatible with the intended mining operation
and the duration thereof;
(d)
the mining will not result in unacceptable pollution, ecological
degradation or damage to
the environment (as it read before 8
December 2014)
(e)
the applicant has provided for the prescribed social labour plan (as
it read before 8 December
2014);
(f)
the applicant has the ability to comply with the relevant provisions
of the Mine Health
and Safety Act No 29 of 1996;
(g)
the applicant is not in contravention of this Act; and
(h)
the granting of such right will further the objects referred to in
section 2 (d) and (f) and
in accordance with the charter contemplated
in section 100 and the prescribed social and labour plan.
(2)
The Minister may, having regard to the nature of the mineral in
question, take into consideration
the provisions of section 26.
(2A)
If the application relates to the land occupied by a community, the
Minister may impose such conditions as
are necessary to promote the
rights and interests of the community, including conditions requiring
the participation of the community.
(3)
The Minister must, within 60 days of receipt of the application from
the Regional Manager,
refuse to grant a mining right if the
application does not meet the requirements referred to in subsection
(1). (as it read before
8 December 2014)
(4)
If the Minister refuses a mining right, the Minister must, within 30
days of the decision,
in writing notify the applicant of the decision
and the reasons.
(5)
A mining right granted in terms of subsection (1) comes into effect
on the effective date.
(6)
A mining right is subject to this Act, any relevant law, the terms
and conditions stated in
the right and the prescribed terms and
conditions and is valid for the period specified in the right, which
period may not exceed
30 years.
[61]
NEMA conferred extensive powers on the Department of Environmental
Affairs to regulate activities which
impacted on the environment. Up
until 8
th
December 2014, section 24 of NEMA as read with
the 2010 NEMA EIA Regulations regulated the position on activities
which impacted
on the environment. Section 24F(1)(a) of NEMA
prohibited the commencement of listed activities in the absence of an
environmental
authorisation to do so.
[62]
There is a significant debate whether before the advent of the One
Environmental System on 8
th
December 2014, a holder of a
prospecting or mining right was required to comply with both the
extensive environmental requirements
under MPRDA and also obtain and
comply with environmental authorisations under NEMA or whether
compliance with MPRDA’s environmental
provisions including
obtaining the environmental management programme was sufficient.
Different divisions of the High Court have
come to different
conclusions on the issue.
Global Environmental Trust v Tendele
Coal Mining (Pty) Ltd [2019] 1 All SA176 (KZN) ; Mineral Sands
Resources (Pty) Ltd v Magistrate
for the District of Vredendal,
Kroutz NO
[2017] 2 All SA 599
(WCC).
[63]
In the matter of
Global
Environmental Trust v Tendele Coal Mining (Pty) Ltd ( Centre
for Environmental Rights and others as
amici
curiae)[2021]
2 All SA 1
(SCA) para 1
,
the court in
dismissing the appeal held that the appellants failed to plead
essential facts demonstrating that Tendele was conducting
listed
activities that would require an environmental authorisation in terms
of NEMA. The court concluded that it was unnecessary
to
interpret the provisions of NEMA. The minority judgement concluded
that holders of a prospecting or mining right had to comply
with both
MPRDA and NEMA, but it does not suggest that the grant of an
environmental authorisation is a prerequisite for the grant
of the
mining right. Schippers JA held as follows at para 55, “
the
requirement of an environmental authorisation does not take away or
impair Tendele’s mining right or EMP under the MPRDA.”
[64]
On 8
th
December 2014 the One
Environmental System (OES) came into operation. The essence of
the OES is that the prospecting, mining
and exploration
applications, production or activities incidental thereto would now
be assessed under the requirements set
by NEMA. Section 38A which
replaced repealed sections 38 and 39 of MPRDA, states that the
Minister of DMR is the responsible authority
for implementing the
environmental provisions of NEMA in respect to mining and
that an environmental authorisation is
a pre-condition to the
granting of a mining right or permit, with the Minister
responsible for the environment being the final
appeal authority.
[65]
In the matter of
Minister of Mineral Resources v Stern NO
[2019] 3
All SA 684
(SCA) para 21
, the court described the changes as
follows:
“
An
agreement entered into between the Environment Minister, the Minerals
Minister and the Minister responsible for water affairs,
constituted
a paradigm shift in respect of the management of environmental
impacts of activities under the MPRD. The agreement was
entitled the
One Environment System. Its main import is set out in section 50A(2)
of NEMA:
‘
Agreement for
the purpose of subsection (1) means the Agreement reached between the
Minister, the Minister responsible for water affairs
and the Minister
responsible for mineral resources titled One Environmental System for
the country with respect to mining, which
entails –
(a)
That all
environmental related aspects would be regulated through one
environmental system which is the principal Act and that all
environmental provisions would be repealed from the Mineral and
Petroleum Resources Development Act, 2002;
(b)
That the
Minister sets the regulatory framework and norms and standards, and
that the Minister responsible for Mineral Resources will
implement
the provisions of the principal Act and the subordinate legislation
as far as it relates to prospecting, exploration, mining
or
operations;
(c)
That the
Minister responsible for Mineral Resources will issue environmental
authorisations in terms of the principal Act for prospecting,
exploration, mining or operations, and that the Minister will be the
appeal authority for these authorisations; and
(d)
That the
Minister, the Minister responsible for Mineral Resources and the
Minister responsible for Water Affairs agree on fixed time
frames for
the consideration and issuing of the authorisations in their
respective legislation and agree to synchronise the time
frames.’
Thus,
the implementation of the One Environmental System would establish
NEMA as the only environmental statute and the Environment
Minister
as the ‘lead’ minister.”
[66]
The OES was brought into force when the National
Environmental Management Laws Amendment Act, 2014 came into
force on
2
nd
September 2014 and was only implemented on 8
th
December 2014. This means that mining applications
submitted after 8
th
December 2014 are regulated by the
amended MPRDA. Section 22 (1) of the amended MPRDA now provides
that:
“
any
person who wishes to apply to the Minister for a mining right
must
simultaneously apply for an environmental authorisation”.
Furthermore,
[section 22(4)(a) of MPRDA now provides that, should the Regional
Manager accept a mining application, the applicant
must be notified
to:
“
submit
the relevant environmental reports, as required in terms of Chapter 5
of the
National Environmental Management Act, 1998
, within 180 days
from date of the notice.
”
In the past this section
required submission of the environmental management programme under
the now repealed
section 39
of The MPRDA.
[67]
Section 23
(1) (d) of the amended MPRDA now provides that the
Minister must only grant the mining right if “
it
will not result in unacceptable pollution, ecological degradation or
damage to the environment
and
an environmental authorisation is issued.”
[68]
The introduction of the OES made provision for transitional
arrangements for a seamless and efficient
management of transactions
that were already in the pipeline. These transitional
arrangements are contained in both the
MPRDA Amendment Act, 2008 and
the NEMA Amendment Act , 2008.
[69]
Section 12(7) of NEMA Amendment Act, 2008, which
had been introduced into that Act by section 26 of the National
Environmental Management Laws Amendment Act, 25 of 2015 with effect
from 2
nd
June 2014 reads as follows:
“
An
application for a right or permit in relation to prospecting,
exploration, mining or production in terms of the
Mineral and
Petroleum Resources Development Act, 2002
that is pending on the date
referred to in
section 14(2)(b)
of the
National Environmental
Management Amendment Act, 2008
,
must
be dispensed of in terms of that Act as if that Act had not been
amended.”
[70]
The date referred to in
section 14(2)(b)
of the
National
Environmental Management Amendment Act, 2008
, is accepted as being
the 8
th
December 2014. This line of reasoning was also
adopted by the courts in the matters of
Mineral Sands supra.
[71]
Similarly a transitional provision was included in the 2014
Environmental Impact Assessment Regulations,
which came into effect
on 4
th
December 2014. Regulation 54(1) reads as follows :
“
An
application submitted in terms of the previous MPRDA regulations and
which is pending when these regulations take effect must despite
the
repeal of those regulations be dispensed with in terms of those
previous MPRDA regulations as if those previous MPRDA regulations
were not repealed.”
[72]
The Interpretation Act, 33 of 1933 also provides assistance on this
issue. Section 12(2)(c) provides
that
“
Where
a law repeals any other law, then unless the contrary intention
appears , the repeal shall not … affect any right, privilege,
obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under any law
so repealed; or … affect any investigation, legal proceeding
or remedy in respect of any such right, privilege, obligation,
liability, forfeiture or punishment as is in this subsection
mentioned,
and any such investigation, legal proceeding or remedy may
be instituted, continued or enforced … as if the repealing law had
not
been passed.
[73]
Section 2(2) applies when one law repeals another. The Constitutional
Court in the matter of
Chagi
and Others v Special Investigation Unit
2009 (2) SA 1
(CC) para 31
has described
the purpose of this section as controlling “
the
consequences
of
the repeal of a law so as to ensure that the dislocation and
unfairness that might follow upon the repeal would, if not altogether
avoided, be kept to an absolute minimum.”
The
court further held at para 32, that section 12(2)(c) is
concerned with amongst other things, rights accrued and liabilities
incurred under the repealed law. It specifically provided that these
rights and liabilities remain unaffected by the repeal of the
law. In
other words, they must be dealt with as if the law concerned had not
been repealed.
[74]
Turning to the matter before me the applicants contend that the
granting of the mining right to
Aquila Steel was unlawful in
that it needed to be assessed in terms of the One Environmental
System which came into force on the
8
th
December 2014.
[75]
The respondents aver in the answering affidavit of the Motjoli
entities that Aquila Steel’s mining
application had already been
submitted and accepted by DMR on 26
th
July 2013. The One
Environmental System(OES) only came into operation on the 8
th
December 2014. The assessment of the mining application therefore
could not be done in terms of the OES, the laws that were
applicable and in force at the time of the mining application and
acceptance by DMR are the ones that must be applied.
[76]
It is settled law that applications which were pending when an
amending enactment was implemented should
be decided without regard
to such enactment. At the time that the One Environmental System came
into operation, Aquila Steel’s
mining application had already been
submitted and accepted by the Regional Manager. The Regional Manager
had already notified the
Aquila to submit its environmental
management programme.
[77]
The MPRDA prior to the OES came into operation, did not require that
the environmental authorisation
had to be approved before an
applicant could be granted a mining right. The requirement was that
an environmental management programme
had to be approved. Taking into
consideration the MPRDA prior to the advent of the OES, the
Interpretation Act, the Constitutional
Court and Supreme Court of
Appeal cases of
Tendele, Stern and Chagi
, the date the mining
right was submitted and accepted, the Director-General was correct
and within the law in assessing the mining
application without taking
into consideration the amended MPRDA and the OES. Section 23(1)(d)
prior the OES, only provided that the
Minister must grant a mining
right if the mining will not result in unacceptable pollution,
ecological degradation or damage to the
environment.
Furthermore the grant of the mining right in issue was made subject
to the condition that Aquila Steel should
comply with other laws
prior to commencing with any mining activities.
[78]
The respondents further aver that the applicants
have not alleged any deficiencies in regard to the
Regional
Manager’s decision to approve Aquila Steel’s environmental
management programme. The applicants have not challenged
the decision
to approve the environmental management programme in this review
application. In my view this decision remains valid
and binding until
it is reviewed and set aside in a legally proper forum. This
principle was clearly established in the
Oudekraal Estates (Pty)
Ltd v City of Cape Town
2004 (6) SA 222
(SCA)
and further
crystallised by the Constitutional court in the matter of
MEC for
Health, Eastern Cape v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a Eye and
Lazer Institute
2016 (1) SA 481
(CC).
[79]
The applicants further contend that the Director-General failed to
exercise his discretion properly,
acted irrationally and unlawfully
when he approved the mining right application which should have
been refused because :
(a)
Aquila Steel failed to consult adequately;
(b)
REMDEC unlawfully reviewed and reversed its decision not to recommend
approval of Aquila Steel’s
environmental management programme;
(c)
The Director-General failed to consider the environmental and
cultural significance of the
mining property.
[80]
The applicants in their heads of argument aver that :
(a)
“
The volte
face by the third respondent is inexplicable, unscientific and
clearly nonsensical. It is submitted that the volte face
was
arbitrary and irrational. It also points to the fact that the
ultimate decision to approve the mining application of Aquila Steel
was equally irrational, biased and influenced by an error in law.”
(
para
132, page 014-60)
(b)
“
The
land is not suitable for mining from an ecological, environmental,
cultural and heritage perspective. Therefore, the decision
to grant
the mining right is irrational and unlawful, was merely influenced by
an error in law and was not rationally connected to
the purpose of
the MPRDA, NEMA and the Constitution.” . (
para 148, page 014-67)
(c)
“
The
decision is also not rationally connected to the information before
the first and/or second and/or third respondents. These respondents
ought to have realised that mining is not compatible with the
properties. Therefore, on this score, the granting of the mining
right
falls to be reviewed and set aside.”
(
para 14, page 014-67)
[81]
Our courts have set a high bar for a rationality review. Rationality
basically means that a decision
must be supported by the evidence and
information before the administrator, as well as the reason given to
it. It must be objectively
capable of furthering the purpose for
which the power was given and the purpose for which the decision was
purportedly taken. ( Prof
C Hoexter : Administrative Law in South
Africa, 2
nd
Ed : at p 340.)
[82]
However, under PAJA, a low bar has been set for the rationality test.
In the matter of
Bapedi Marota Mamone v Commission on Traditional
Leadership Disputes and Claims
2015 (3) BC;R 268
( CC) para 78
,
the Constitutional Court explained the rationality test as follows :
“
Before
considering the factual basis for the applicant’s contentions, it
is necessary to sound a note of caution. Our right to just
administrative action and PAJA, the legislation enacted to give
effect to that right, require rigorous scrutiny of administrative
decisions. But neither asks courts to substitute their opinions for
those of administrative bodies. It is not required that a decision
of
an administrative body be perfect or, in the court’s estimation,
the best decision on the facts. And this is particularly so
for
rationality review under PAJA. Hoexter notes that
“
[a]
crucial feature [of rationality review under PAJA] is that it demands
merely a rational connection - not a perfect or ideal
rationality. In a different context Davis J has described a rational
connection test of this sort as ‘relatively deferential’
because
it calls for ‘rationality and justification rather than the
substitution of the Court’s opinion for that of the tribunal
on the
basis that it finds the decision … substantively incorrect.”
[83]
The Constitutional Court has confirmed that a low threshold
exists in the case of rationality outside
of PAJA.
(a)
The court held in the matter of
New
National Party of South Africa v Government of the Republic of South
Africa
[1999] ZACC 5
;
1999 (3) SA 191
( CC) para
,
that the rationality review is a “
differential”
standard of review.
(b)
In the matter of
Democratic
Alliance v President of South Africa and Others 2013 (1) SA 248
( CC) para 42
,
the court held that the rationality standard “
by
its very nature prescribes the lowest possible threshold”.
(c)
In the matter of
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of SA:
In re Ex parte President of the Republic of South Africa 2000
(2) SA 674 ( CC)
para 90
, the court held that a finding of
irrationality is likely to be made rarely. A court cannot in the name
of irrationality review,
strike down a law merely because it
disagrees with it or considers that it is inappropriate or
unreasonable.
(d)
In the matter of
Ronald
Bobroff & Partners v De La Guerre
2014 (3) SA 134
( CC )
,
the court held that rationality is “
a
less stringent test than reasonableness”.
[84]
Prior to the advent of the One Environmental System, the DMR was the
only authority tasked with the assessment
and approval of
environmental impact assessment reports and environmental management
programmes. In my view the Director-General
and the Regional Manager
are tasked by statute with making decisions on technical issues
relating to mining and the environment
and are possessed with
the necessary specialised expertise to exercise their statutory
obligations.
[85]
The Supreme Court of Appeal has emphasised
that the deference owed to the decisions of administrative
bodies is
important in cases in which the decision-maker has specialised
expertise in a specific field. In the matter of
Minister
of Environmental Affairs and Tourism and Others v Phambili Fisheries
( Pty) Ltd and Another (32/2003, 40/2003)
[2003] 2 All SA 616
(SCA)
(16 May 2003) at para 53
,
the court held that “
Judicial
deference is particularly appropriate where the subject-matter of an
administrative action is very technical or of a kind
in which a Court
has no particular proficiency. We cannot even pretend to have the
skills and access to knowledge that is available
to the Chief
Director. It is not our task to better his allocations, unless we
should conclude that his decision cannot be sustained
on rational
grounds.”
[86]
This principle was crystalised by the Constitutional Court in the
matter of
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister
of Environmental
Affairs
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) at para 48
,
the court held “
Judicial
willingness to appreciate the legitimate and
constitutionally-ordained province of administrative agencies; to
admit the
expertise of those agencies in policy-laden or polycentric
issues; to accord their interpretations of fact and law due respect;
and
to be sensitive in general to the interests legitimately pursued
by administrative bodies and the practical and financial constraints
under which they operate. This type of deference is perfectly
consistent with a concern for individual rights and a refusal to
tolerate
corruption and maladministration. It ought to be shaped not
by an unwillingness to scrutinize administration action, but by a
careful
weighing up of the need for and the consequences of judicial
intervention. Above all, it ought to be shaped by a conscious
determination
not to usurp the functions of administrative agencies;
not to cross over from review to appeal.”
[87]
In the matter of
International
Trade Administration Alliance Commission v SCAW South Africa (Pty)
Ltd
2012 (4) SA 618
(CC) para 95
,
the court held that “
Where
the Constitution or valid legislation has entrusted specific powers
and functions to a particular branch of government, courts
may not
usurp that power function by making a decision of their preference.
That would frustrate the balance of power implied in
the principle of
the separation of powers. This primary responsibility of a court is
not to make decisions reserved for or within
the domain of other
branches of government, but rather to ensure that the concerned
branches of government exercise their authority
within the bounds of
the Constitution. This would especially be so where the decision in
issue is policy-laden as well as polycentric.”
[88]
Turning to the matter before me, the applicants require the court to
find that the mining envisaged
by the Motjoli entities will
result in unacceptable pollution, ecological degradation or damage to
the environment. My view is that
this matter is highly technical and
the court does not have the necessary skill and knowledge to
determine the impact the mining
would have on the environment. Review
applications are not meant to determine whether a decision taken by
the executive is correct
on not, they are meant to determine whether
there exists a reviewable irregularity by the executive who made the
decision. The court
must defer to the decisions of the second
respondent (Director-General) and the third respondent ( Regional
Manager, REMDEC LIMPOPO
REGION).
[89]
The applicants further contend that Aquila Steel did not adequately
consult with interested and affected
persons. In their heads of
argument they state that “
No
consultation with any of abovementioned nominators [sic] prior to,
during and subsequent to the first and second decisions took
place.”
[90]
The respondents aver in their heads of argument that they have
adequately consulted with the interested
parties prior to the
granting of the mining right and the subsequent consent to the
transfer thereof.
[91]
Section 10 of the MPRDA provides that, the Regional Manager must
within 14 days of accepting a mining
right application, make known
that an application for a mining right has been received in respect
of a particular piece of land and
call upon interested and affected
persons to submit their comments regarding the said application
within 30 days from the date of
the notice. If there is an objection
to the granting of the mining right, the Regional Manager must refer
the objection to REMDEC
to consider the objections and to advise the
Minister accordingly. The Motjoli entities aver in their answering
affidavit that in
the Rule 53 Record, the requirement in terms of
section 10 was complied with by the placement of a notice of the
acceptance of Aquila
Steel’s mining right application on the notice
board and same was forwarded to the Magistrate’s court in the
Magisterial District
of Thabazimbi. The notice in terms of section 10
is dated the 26
th
September 2013, gave details of the
mining property and stated that comments in respect of the
application should be sent in writing
to the Regional Manager within
30 days of the date of the notice. The Motjoli entities in their
answering affidavit aver that, in
the Rule 53 Record there is
evidence of letters from EB Nieuwoudt on behalf of the Rooiberg
Bewaria addressed to the Regional Manager
commenting on Aquila’s
mining right application. These letters are proof that the process in
terms of section 10 was complied with.
The applicants have not
disputed this averment.
[92]
Section 22 (4) of MPRDA provided, at the relevant time, that if the
Regional Manager accepts an application
for mining, the Regional
Manager must, within 14 days, notify the applicant:
(a)
to conduct an environmental impact
assessment and submit an environmental management programme
for
approval in terms of section 39, and
(b)
to notify and consult with interested and affected parties within 180
days from the date of
the notice.
[93]
The Motjoli entities aver that the Regional Manager, in a letter
dated the 26
th
September 2013 informed Aquila Steel that
its mining right application had been accepted and required it to
conduct its environmental
impact assessment within 180 days from the
date of the notice, that is by 26
th
March 2014.
Aquila Steel also had to notify and consult with interested and
affected parties. Following Aquila Steel’s submission
of its final
environmental management programme on 11 July 2014, the applicants’
attorneys lodged an objection with both the Regional
Manager and
Aquila Steel objecting to the mining right application as well as the
environmental management programme.
[94]
Regulations 50 and 51 of MPRDA prescribed the requirements for the
environmental impact assessment report
and the environmental
management programme. Regulation 50(f) required the inclusion in the
environmental impact assessment report
of the details of the
engagement process and an indication of how the issues raised by the
interested parties and affected persons
have been addressed. The
Motjoli entities set out in their answering affidavit that Aquila
Steel had complied with the Regulations
50 and 51. They aver that the
applicants’ allegations regarding insufficient consultation have no
merit.
(a)
The applicants allege in their supplementary affidavit that the
landowners of surrounding
properties were not provided with
sufficient information, did not have sight of the environmental
management programme before it
was submitted and were not adequately
consulted;
(b)
The applicants further allege in in their replying affidavit that
whatever public participation
process carried out by Aquila Steel was
not with regard to its mining right application;
(c)
The applicants also allege that the Madimatle community was not
properly consulted, most importantly
in respect of the ancestral
graves and that the Rule 53 record does not contain any evidence of
communication with other organisations
that would be affected by the
mining.
[95]
The Motjoli entities gave a detailed account of the consultation
processes Aquila Steel engaged
in their answering affidavit.
They aver that on the 2
nd
October 2012, Aquila Steel
informed interested and affected parties that it holds a prospecting
right over the property and invited
interested and affected parties
to attend a public participation meeting on 10
th
November
2012 to discuss amongst other things the way forward regarding the
current cultural use of the caves. They further aver
that Aquila
Steel conducted a preliminary environmental assessment and submitted
its scoping report and environmental management
programme to DMR on
the 10th October 2013 for approval. DMR required Aquila Steel to
revise the original environmental management
programme, which was
done on the 11
th
July 2014 and was approved on 18
th
July 2014.
[96]
Aquila Steel had made an application in terms of section 22(4) of
MPRDA, for an application for a mining
right along with a water use
licence, water management licence and environmental authorisation.
Pursuant to a notice received from
the Regional Manager, Aquila
Steel
sent a notice to interested
and affected parties of its application on the 15
th
October 2013. Aquila Steel compiled an extensive list of interested
parties and affected parties and took extensive steps to bring
the
15
th
October 2013 notice to the attention of all interested and affected
parties by mailing it to 64 individuals, publishing it as a newspaper
advertisement, issuing site notices for public viewing, to inform
interested and affected parties that the mining right application
had
been lodged along with a water use licence, water management licence
and environmental authorisation. The notice communicated
the
deadlines for specific tasks set by DMR, which included the
submission of an environmental impact assessment report and an
environmental
management programme. It also provided details on how
Aquila Steel could be contacted for any queries or comments in
relation to
the mining right application. On 12 November 2013, the
Regional Manager requested Aquila Steel to submit a Heritage Impact
Assessment
Report as part of its environmental management programme
that would show how no harm would be caused to the graves.
[97]
On the 1
st
February 2014, Aquila Steel held the first of
the public meetings for purposes of engaging with interested and
affected parties,
and 40 individuals honoured the invitation. On the
29
th
March 2014, interviews were held with traditional
healers regarding their concerns with the envisaged mining
activities. On the 2
nd
April 2014, the Regional Manager
sent letters to the Department of Water Affairs, Department of
Economic Development and Tourism,
Department of Agriculture and the
Principal Inspector: Limpopo Region, attaching a copy of Aquila
Steel’s environmental management
programme for their comments as
required by section 40 of the pre-amended MPRDA.
[98]
Aquila Steel had appointed Shangoni Management Services (Pty) Ltd
to act as the environmental assessment
practitioner, whose
responsibility would be to compile the environmental impact
assessment report and environmental management programme.
On the 6
th
May 2014, Shangoni sent a letter to the interested and affected
parties indicating that Aquila Steel would distribute monthly
progress
reports, including a table which indicated the public
participation meetings still to be held, and proceeded to do so.
[99]
The Regional Manager sent a letter to Aquila Steel on the 12
th
May 2014 setting out shortcomings of the environmental management
programme and requested Aquila Steel to provide further information
in terms of section 39(5) of MPRDA. The issues raised were the
following :
(a)
finalisation of pending specialised studies;
(b)
procedures relating to emergencies and proposed remediation;
(c)
measures to mitigate significant impacts of proposed activities and
(d)
sufficient proof of public participation following consultation and
full public participation
with interested and affected parties.
Aquila
Steel responded to the Regional Manager by requesting an extension in
respect
of resubmitting its amended environmental management programme
as
it would be necessary to hold further consultations with the
community .
[100]
The Motjoli entities aver in their answering affidavit that Aquila
Steel convened a public participation meeting
on the 31
st
May 2014, notice of this meeting having been widely distributed via
emails to various individuals, newspaper advertisements and posted
at
site notices. Among those individuals who attended the meeting were
representatives from the Calfshelf entities and representatives
from
the applicants’ attorneys. Two further public participation
meetings were held on 12
th
June 2014, one at Itireleng Secondary School in Rooiberg, Thabazimbi
(aimed at the Rooiberg community) and the other at Regorogile
Community Hall , Regorogile, Thabazimbi(aimed at the Regorogile
community). According to the registers various members of the
Madimatle
community attended and the presentations were made in both
English and Setswana languages. The Rule 53 Record contains registers
and minutes of this meeting and all the other meetings. On the 12
th
June 2014 an additional meeting was held with the traditional healers
at the cave. On 11 July 2014 Aquila Steel submitted an amended
environmental management programme to the Regional Manager which
contained a table titled “
interested
and affected parties. Response Table
“
running into 70 pages
and captured the comments and responses received from interested and
affected parties until June 2014 on the
mining project.
[101]
On 30 August 2014 Aquila
Steel
held a further public participation meeting at the New Way Christian
Church in Thabazimbi. In their answering Affidavit the
Motjoli
entities aver that the purpose of the meeting was to describe the
process followed to date with regard to the proposed mining
project
as well as the way forward, and to provide a platform for interested
and affected persons to raise comments and questions.
From the minutes of the meeting, it appears that there were no
questions on the mountain, the cave or the cultural heritage.
[102]
On the 26
th
September 2014, the Regional Manager sent a
letter to Aquila Steel to address the comment on the environmental
management programme
regarding the need for full public participation
with the closest descendants of the deceased buried in the graves.
Aquila Steel
engaged a consultant, PGS Heritage, to assist with
the consultation with the descendants. On the 13
th
October
2014, representatives from Aquila Steel together with PGS Heritage,
met with Mr Thomas Motloki who is the eldest member of
the Motloki
family at his home in Thabazimbi. The consultation centred around the
issue of ancestral graves which are located on
the mining property.
Amongst other things discussed at the meeting, was the socio-cultural
significance of the cave and the mountain.
Mr Motloki said that the
cave was used for ancestral rituals, mostly by the traditional
healers. He knew of the natural springs on
top of the mountain which
he suggested were not used for any cultural practices or rituals.
According to Mr Motloki the cultural
practices or rituals at the cave
started in the late 1970’s.
[103]
Furthermore, Aquila Steel held community meetings on the 4
th
November 2014 at the Regorogile Community Hall and Itireleng
Secondary School, aimed at the Regorogile and Rooiberg communities as
well as the farmworkers living and working on the farms in the
surrounding areas. The Motjoli entities gave details of the minutes
of these meetings in their answering affidavit, and the minutes
clearly state that :
(a)
the local residents wanted to ensure that they were part of the
employment process;
(b)
no questions were raised about the cultural and heritage value of the
mountain, the only concern
raised was with regard to the cave and the
graves and
(c)
the community saw benefits in the project as it promised job
creation.
[104]
On the 7
th
November 2014, PGS Heritage published its
report on the consultative process with the descendants of the
deceased buried in the graves
on the mountain. The report addressed
the consultation process carried out in October 2014 and recommended
that the consultative
process should only be seen as completed when
the parties have reached a settlement on either the conservation of
the graves or their
relocation. Aquila Steel’s
representatives and the descendants met on the 11
th
December 2011, at which meeting Aquila Steel presented a proposed
agreement regarding the conservation or relocation of the graves.
There was no agreement reached on that day however the descendants
made an undertaking to revert to Aquila Steel on the proposed
agreement.
[105]
The Constitutional Court in the matter of
Bengwenyama, supra,
made
it clear that, in order to assess the adequacy of the public
participation process, one needs to assess compliance with the
applicable
provisions of MPRDA. Taking into consideration the vast
evidence of the extensive consultative processes that Aquila Steel
engaged
in with various interested and affected parties to the
envisaged mining activities, I am convinced that there was more than
adequate
consultation that was conducted. The appellants’
contestation that there was no consultation with interested and
affected parties
stands to be rejected by the court.
[106]
Section 10 of MPRDA further requires that if a person objects to the
granting of a mining right, the Regional Manager
must refer the
objection to REMDEC to consider the objections and to advise the
Minister accordingly thereon. The Regional Manager
had received
objections from the applicants on the 25 March 2015 which stated that
Aquila Steel had flouted environmental laws in
breach of section
23(1)(g) of the MPRDA, and for this reason alone the mining right
ought to have been refused. They further indicated
that that the
mining would lead to an irremediable disturbance of sensitive
ecosystems including endangered and threatened fauna
and flora. The
objections went on further to state that :
(a)
the unlawful blasting and clearing activities during the unlawful
construction of the road
had already had adverse impact on the bat
population and that mining activities would exacerbate that negative
impact, as well as
other endangered species;
(b)
there were graves on the farm that Aquila Steel had failed to
disclose in the EMP;
(c)
there is a dolomite cave (Gatkop) and
the Madimatle Mountain has spiritual and religious significance,
which is being used for religious purposes and Aquila Steel failed to
mention that in its EMP.
[107]
The objections were forwarded to the third respondent ( REMDEC), and
after considering the objections took a decision
on the 7
th
May 2015 to uphold the applicants’ objection on the basis that
Aquila Steel had failed to comply with Regulation 50(f) of the MPRDA
as it had failed to submit proof and results of consultations with
close descendants of the people buried in the graves. The applicants
contend that REMDEC’s decision further indicates that the ninth
respondent had objected to the application based on the fact that
Aquila had failed to apply for an Environmental Authorisation
authorising the listed activities in the EIA Regulations of 2010.
REMDEC
further decided on 28
th
July 2015 , that the
mountain and the caves had been provisionally protected as a Grade 1
site by the eight respondent. The
applicant ( Aquila Steel),
violated the terms of the prospecting right and the environmental
authorisation, the objection should
be upheld and the mining right
should be refused.
[108]
The applicants aver that these decisions were subsequently overturned
on the 17
th
April 2018, which led to the mining right
being approved. The applicants further aver that the
geotechnical report commissioned
around September 2020, militates
against mining in the area having held that the Madimatle Mountain as
a whole possesses heritage
significance. The geotechnical report
states that the mountain and the cave encompass a unique
cultural landscape that should
be protected. The applicants contend
that the court has to take into consideration their constitutional
rights including other healers,
whose spirituality is closely
connected to the mountain and the cave.
[109]
The applicants rely on the matter of
Fuel Retailers
Association of Southern Africa v Director-General: Environmental
Management, Department of Agriculture, Conservation
and Environment,
Mpumalanga Province and Others
2007 (6) SA 4
(CC)
, where the
court stated that:
“
[44]
What
is immediately apparent from section 24 is the explicit recognition
of the obligation to promote justifiable “economic and
social
development”. Economic and social development is essential to the
well-being of human beings. This court has recognised
that
socio-economic rights that are set out in the Constitution are indeed
vital to the enjoyment of other human rights guaranteed
in the
Constitution. But the development cannot subsist upon a deteriorating
environmental base. Unlimited development is detrimental
to the
environment and the destruction of the environment is detrimental to
development. Promotion of development requires the protection
of the
environment. Yet the environment cannot be protected if development
does not pay attention to the costs of environmental destruction.
The
environment and development are thus inexorably linked. …”
[
110] The court went
on to state the following:
“
[60]
One of the key principles of NEMA requires people and their
needs to be placed at the forefront of environmental
management –
Bathopele. It requires all developments to be socially, economically
and environmentally sustainable. Significantly
for the present case,
it requires that the social, economic and environmental impact of a
proposed development be “considered ,
assessed and evaluated” and
that any decision made “must be appropriate in the light of the
consideration and assessment”.
This is understood by the
requirement that the decision must take into account the interests,
needs and values of all interested
persons.”
[61]
Construed in the light of section 24 of the Constitution, NEMA
therefore requires the integration of
environmental protection and
economic and social development. It requires that the interests of
the environment be balanced with
socio-economic interests. Thus,
whenever a development which may have a significant impact on the
environment is planned, it envisages
that there will always be a need
to weigh considerations of development, against environmental
considerations, as underpinned by
the right to environmental
protection. In this sense, it contemplates that environmental
decisions which will achieve a balance between
environmental and
socio-economic development considerations through the concept of
sustainable development.”
[111]
The respondents aver that REMDEC does not take decisions. It advices
the Minister or in this case, the Director-General
and the Regional
Manager and makes recommendations. REMDEC cannot approve or refuse a
mining right neither can it review its own
decisions and it can also
not be
functus
officio.
The
doctrine of
functus
officio
only
applies to final decisions of courts and other decision-makers,
including administrators, and only once those final decisions
have
been communicated to the public. This principle was developed in the
matter of
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genturico AG
1977 (4) SA 298
at 306 F-H
,
confirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in the matter of
Retail
Motor Industry Organisation v Minister of Water Affairs
2014 (3) SA
251
(SCA) paras 22-25
and crystallised by the Constitutional Court in the matter of
President of the
RSA v South African Rugby Football Union
2000 (1) SA 1
(CC).
[112]
Our courts have on numerous occasions held that the decision of an
administrative decision-maker cannot be taken
on review because they
did not follow the advice or recommendation of a body tasked with an
advisory function.
Association of Regional Magistrates of South
Africa v President of the Republic of South Africa
2013 (7) BCLR 762
(CC)
.
[113]
Various
objections were lodged against Aquila Steel’s application for a
mining right in terms of section 10(2) of the MPRDA including
objections by the applicants as indicated above in the judgement. The
respondents aver that in terms of the Rule 53 Record, REMDEC
held a
meeting on the 13
th
November 2014 wherein they determined that “
since
SAHRA has issued a provisional protection on both the Cave and the
Mountain and [Aquila Steel had] violated the terms of the
prospecting
right and environmental authorisation … the objection should be
upheld until such time SAHRA advises otherwise.”
The
respondents aver that the applicants in their supplementary affidavit
incorrectly state that REMDEC recorded these matters. The
DMR’s
sub-directorate Environmental Management Section recorded in August
2015 that REMDEC had, recommended refusal of the grant.
They further
recorded on 17
th
April 2018 a recommendation to the Regional Manager that Aquila
Steel’s Environmental Management Programme be considered.
[114]
The respondents aver that by the time that the DMR’s
sub-directorate Environmental Management Section reconsidered
its
recommendation on the approval of Aquila Steel’s Environmental
Management Programme, the underlying nature of REMDEC’s concerns
had disappeared. REMDEC’s finding in respect of Aquila’s
violation of the terms of its prospecting right and environmental
authorisation
had been deprived of practical significance and
rendered the matter purely academic. Aquila Steel had addressed and
corrected the
violation through its application for retrospective
authorisation of the commencement and continuation of the 2010 NEMA
listed activities
on 20 June 2014 and a subsequent amended
environmental assessment report on 31 October 2014. The environmental
authorisation was
issued by LEDET on 20 November 2014 in terms of
section 24G(2)(b) of NEMA.
[115]
REMDEC’s finding that the objection should be upheld was also based
upon the fact that SAHRA had issued
a provisional protection in
respect of the cave and the mountain. This provisional protection had
lapsed on 12
th
December 2014 and was also
successfully appealed by Aquila Steel before the SAHRA Council on 16
May 2017. The matter
was referred back to SAHRA for the
process to commence afresh. As a result the matter has been referred
to the Limpopo Heritage
Agency as SAHRA found that the mining
property was not of Grade 1 significance.
[116]
The applicants raised various complaints regarding what they perceive
to be irrational and arbitrary manner in which
the mining right was
granted. They contend that the cultural and religious significance of
the mountain as well as the environmental
effects of the mining on
the property were not duly considered by the Director-General. He had
the unenviable task of finding an
adequate balance between the
competing considerations of protection of the environment and the
cultural and heritage resources, on
the one hand, and economic
development, equitable access to the economy and employment on the
other hand. Acting on the advice of
various functionaries, the
Director-General determined that the balance may be achieved by
granting the mining right subject to conditions
to ensure sustainable
development: excluding from the mining right various sensitive areas,
including the cave and the areas on which
there are graves and
subject to extensive mitigation and rehabilitation of the environment
as described in the environmental management
programme. In my
view there is extensive evidence that the Director-General had
considered all the available body of facts
and information brought
before him and his decision is supported by such evidence. The
decision need not be the best or most efficient
solution or one that
the court or the applicants would prefer. I am not convinced that the
applicants have succeeded in showing any
reviewable irregularities on
the part of the Director-General with regard to the decision he took.
[117]
The applicants contend in their founding affidavit and heads of
argument that the cave and the Madimatle mountain
house the spirits
of the local communities’ ancestors whose lives were lost during
the Mfecane wars against the Afrikaners. This
belief makes the mining
property a sacred historical, spiritual, cultural and religious
heritage site for the applicants and the
local community. In
religious circles it is understood and accepted that the Madimatle
mountain and the cave are geographically
and spiritually
linked. So steadfast was the belief and recognition of the
significance of the Madimatle mountain and the cave that
on 29
th
July 2014, the Traditional Healers Organisation , Mrs Masuku, KARA
and the Calfshelf entities made application to SAHRA for provisional
protection of the Madimatle mountain and the cave. They also made an
application to declare the site a national Grade 1 site in terms
of
section 29 of NHRA.
[118]
During November 2014, the Madimatle mountain and the cave were
provisionally protected. Aquila Steel appealed the
decision by SAHRA
on the basis that the decision to grant the provisional protection
was granted without first giving it an opportunity
to make
representations. The Aquila and Motjoli entities deny the
assertion by the applicants on the basis of expert heritage,
historical and anthropological findings by various experts who found
that the Madimatle mountain has no special spiritual or cultural
significance.
[119]
On 1
st
July 2015,
Aquila Steel submitted written objections to the decision taken by
SAHRA to provisionally protect the property as a Grade
1 heritage
site. On 16
th
May
2017 the appeal was granted, directing that the process followed by
SAHRA in providing provisional protection should start afresh
as
Aquila Steel was not afforded an opportunity to participate in the
process and make representations to SAHRA prior to the decision
to
provisionally protect the site being made.
[120]
It is my view that based on the principles set out above in the
judgement, the court ought not to intrude into the
sphere of the
competent decision-maker, in this case SAHRA.
[121]
The applicants in their heads of argument made allegations that the
decisions of DMR were tainted by bias. The basis
of these statements
is the fact that Mr Moloi, the executive chairman of Motjoli
Resources, is a former deputy director-general of
DMR. The
respondents aver that there is no factual basis or evidence for the
insinuations of corruption or any other impropriety.
In the matter of
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Limited v Regional Manager, Limpopo
Region, DMR 2020 JDR 1470 (GP) paras 58-59
, the court held that
allegations of bad faith must be supported by convincing evidence. In
the matter before me, there is no evidence
put before court of bias,
ulterior purpose or bad faith.
[122]
On 26
th
April 2018, the Director-General, by virtue
of the powers delegated to him by the Minister in terms of section
103 of MPRDA,
consented to the transfer of the mining right from
Aquila Steel to Motjoli Iron Ore in terms of section 11 of MPRDA. On
3
rd
August 2018, Aquila Steel ceded, assigned and
transferred the rights and obligations with regard to the mining
right to Motjoli Iron
Ore. The deed of cession was registered in the
Mineral and Petroleum Titles Registration Office on 8
th
November 2018.
[123]
The applicants’ contestation against the consent to the
transfer of the mining right, is that the consent could
not be
granted before Motjoli Iron Ore had obtained the environmental
authorisation. It is my view that this contestation is similar
to the
applicants’ case against the grant of the mining right to Aquila
Steel, which is based upon a misreading of the transitional
provisions of MPRDA, Interpretation Act and NEMA as explicitly
explained above in the judgement.
[124]
Section 11 (1) and (2) of MPRDA specifically deal with the
transferability and encumbrances of prospecting rights
and mining
rights.
Section
11 (1)
“
A prospecting
right or mining right or an interest in any such right, or a
controlling interest in a company or close corporation,
may not be
ceded, transferred, let, sublet, assigned, alienated or otherwise
disposed of without the written consent of the Minister,
except in
the case of change of controlling interest in listed companies.
(2)
The consent referred to
in subsection (1) must be granted if the
cessionary, transferee, lessee, sublessee, assign or the person to
whom the right will be
alienated or disposed of –
(a)
is capable of carrying out and complying with the obligations and the
terms and conditions
of the right in question; and
(b)
satisfies the requirements contemplated in section 17 or 23, as the
case may be.”
[125]
Turning to the matter before me, when Aquila Steel applied for the
mining right, section 23(1) of MPRDA provided that
for the grant of a
mining right, “
the
mining will not result in unacceptable pollution, ecological
degradation or damage to the environment”.
That issue was determined
through the approval of the environmental management programme.
[126]
However, by the time the Director-General consented to the transfer
of the mining right to Motjoli Iron Ore, section
23(1)(d) provided as
a condition for the grant of a mining right that “
the
mining will not result in unacceptable pollution, ecological
degradation or damage to the environment and an environmental
authorisation
is issued”.
The
applicants contend that if a mining right was granted, that right
could not be transferred because additional grant conditions
were
added by way of legislative amendments which were not applicable to
the initial grant.
[127]
On a proper reading of section 11(2) of MPRDA, the requirements
are specific to attributes relating to the
transferee of the right.
The requirement focuses on whether the transferee of the mining right
is capable of complying with the requirements
of the mining right and
whether the transferee meets the requirements set out in section 23
for holders of mineral rights. These
requirements include whether
“
the applicant
has access to financial resources and has the technical ability to
conduct the proposed mining operation optimally,
whether
“
the applicant
has provided for the prescribed social and labour plan”
whether
“
the applicant
has the ability to comply with the relevant provisions of the Mine
Health and Safety Act, 1996 (Act 29 of 1996)
and
whether “
the
applicant is not in contravention of any provision of this Act.”
[128]
It is settled law that when a transferor alienates his/her property,
whether corporeal or incorporeal, the transferee
acquires all right,
title and interest that the transferor had prior to the alienation.
The transferee in the case of a transfer
of a mining right does not
have to be assessed afresh to determine whether they comply in terms
of section 23 of MPRDA as those assessments
were done when the mining
right was initially granted to the transferor. Whatever rights and
obligations that the transferor has
will be transferred to the
transferee on alienation of the mining right. In the matter of
Mogale Alloys
(Pty) Ltd v Nuco Chrome Bophuthatswana (Pty) Ltd
2011 (6) SA 96
(GSJ)
para 38
, the
court held that the purpose of the consent requirement in section
11(1) is to ensure that the applicant under section 11 is
capable of
stepping into the shoes of the previous right holder and can “
sustain
compliance with the requirements of section 23 of MPRDA.”
The purpose is not to
revisit the correctness of granting the mining right. Furthermore
section 4(1) of MPRDA provides that “
When
interpreting a provision of this Act, any reasonable interpretation
which is consistent with the objects of this Act must be
preferred
over any other interpretation which is inconsistent with such
objects.”
[129]
It is my respectful view that the applicants’ interpretation of
section 11,read with section 23 of MPRDA would place
undue burden on
the transferee and DMR to repeat the whole application process for a
mining right and must be rejected by the court.
[130]
The applicants further seek an order
declaring that the Waterberg District Municipality and the Mopani
District Municipality are bio-critical
and biodiversity regions not
suitable for mining and mining related activities in accordance with
the Provincial Gazette No 2966
published on 4
th
January 2019, as depicted in a map annexed hereto marked Annexure
“(A), and also so declared by the Tenth Respondent.
[131]
Section 21(1)(c) of the Superior Courts Act , 10 of 2013 governs the
power of superior court to grant declaratory
relief. It provides that
:
“
(1)
A Division has jurisdiction over all persons
residing in or being in, and in relation to all causes arising and
all offences triable
within, its area of jurisdiction and all other
matters of which it may according to law take cognizance, and has the
power –
…
(c)
In its discretion, and at the instance of
any interested person, to enquire into and determine any existing,
future or contingent
right or obligation, notwithstanding that such
person cannot claim any relief consequential upon the determination.”
[132]
From a proper reading of the section it is clear that the exercise of
the court’s jurisdiction follows a two-legged
enquiry : (a) the
court must first determine and be satisfied that the applicant is a
person interested in an existing, future or
contingent right or
obligation and if so, (b) the court must decide whether the case is a
proper one for the exercise of its discretion.
Minister of Finance
v Oakbay Investments (Pty) Ltd
2018 (3) SA 515
(GP) para 55.
[133]
The respondents aver that even if the applicants meet the first leg,
they fail on the second. The factors taken
into consideration under
the second leg include (a) the existence or absence of a
dispute ;
(b)
the utility of the declaratory relief and whether if granted, will
settle the
question in issue between
the parties;
(c)
whether a tangible and justifiable advantage in relation to the
applicants’ position appears
to flow from the grant of the order
sought;
(d)
considerations of public policy, justice and convenience;
(e)
the practical significance of the order and
(f)
the availability of other remedies.
[134]
Section 40 of the National Environmental Management : Biodiversity
Act 10 of 2004 (MEMBA), the MEC for Environmental
Affairs in a
Province may by notice in a Gazette determine a geographic region as
a bio-region for the purposes
of
MEMBA
if that region contains whole or several nested ecosystems and is
characterised by its land forms, vegetation cover, human culture
and
history and publish a plan for the management of the biodiversity and
the components of the biodiversity region.
[135]
Section 41 states that:
“
A bioregional
plan must –
(a)
Contain measure for the effective
management of biodiversity and the components of biodiversity in the
region;
(b)
Provide for monitoring of the plan; and
(c)
Be consistent with –
(i)
The Act
(ii)
The national environment management
principles;
(iii)
The national biodiversity framework; and
(iv)
Any relevant international agreements
binding on the Republic.”
[136]
The declaratory order sought by the applicants is based upon a
determination by the MEC for Economic Development,
Environment and
Tourism, Limpopo. The applicants contend that the effect of the
determination is that no mining activities should
be conducted or
permitted in the Waterberg Municipality.
[137]
The determination does not prohibit mining. The executive summary of
the bioregional plan published for these regions
recognises that
agriculture, wildlife and mining are important economic sectors in
the region, with plans underway to expand the
mining industry as part
of the strategic integrated project along the Northern Mineral
belt. The purpose of the bioregional
plan according to the
determination is to (i) “
to inform land-use planning,
environmental assessments and authorisations
…
by a range if
sectors whose policies and decisions impact on biodiversity
and
(ii) to be used as “
a useful tool for addressing the need to
take biodiversity into account in land-use planning and
decision-making, in order to promote
sustainable development.
[138] It
is my view that NEMBA does not create the power to declare an area a
protected area. Similarly it does not create
a power to authorise or
prohibit mining in such an area. Those powers flow from the Protected
Areas Act, 57 of 2003, specifically
section 48(2) thereof. Any
declaration that an area is unsuitable for mining and mining related
activities is governed by specific
legislation administered by the
Minister of Environmental Affairs within whose competence such
declarations fall and for this
court to make such declarations,
would be an intrusion into the areas of competence of the Minister of
Environmental Affairs. It
would amount to the court usurping the
powers of the Executive and infringing upon the constitutional
democratic principle of the
separation of powers.
[139]
Furthermore, the declarator sought relates to both the Waterberg and
the Mopani District Municipalities. Each of
these municipalities
comprises multiple local municipalities. For instance, the Waterberg
District Municipality includes Bela-Bela
Local Municipality,
Lephalale Local Municipality, Modimolle-Mookgophong Local
Municipality, Mogalakwena Local Municipality and Thabazimbi
Local
Municipality. Most importantly none of these municipalities have been
cited in the application. The mining property is situated
in the
Waterberg District Municipality and does not concern the Mopani
District Municipality. There is no basis in law for the court
to
consider granting any relief in respect of Mopani District
Municipality as no persons whose rights or interests are based in the
Mopani District Municipality have been cited in this application.
[140]
With regard to the Waterberg District Municipality, the declarator is
simply untenable. There are various established
mines within this
district and should this area be suddenly declared unsuitable for
mining, it would cause unimaginable confusion
and irreparable
destruction to the mining industry, the economy and the entire
country.
[141] It is trite
that a court should not make an order that may prejudice the rights
of parties before it.
Amalgamated Engineering Union v Minister of
Labour
1949 (3) SA 637
(A) at 651
. In this matter the declaratory
relief sought
by
the applicants, would
materially affect the rights of, many third parties who have not been
cited, among others, different Organs
of state, municipalities,
businesses and communities in the areas mentioned in the declarator.
[142]
Motjoli Iron Ore’s mining right is subject to them complying with
other relevant laws to enable them to conduct
certain listed
activities. They may need to apply for other authorisations to engage
in various activities ancillary to mining. The
applicants will have
an opportunity should they elect to do so, to raise objections
against those applications.
[143]
With regard to the condonation for the filling of further affidavit
by the respondents, the respondents aver that
they had to file the
further affidavit because they needed to address new material
introduced by the applicants in their replying
affidavit. I am of the
view that this matter is complex and the court needed to consider all
the relevant facts put before it. The
applicants have not raised any
issues of prejudice arising from the admission of the further
affidavit. I am of the view that
it is in the interests of justice to
grant permission for the filing of the further affidavit.
[144]
In the premises, the following order is made
This application is
dismissed with costs
M.M.D.
LENYAI
ACTING JUDGE OF
THE HIGH COURT
of SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD
ON: 22 – 24 November 2021
FOR
THE APPLICANTS: ADV. W.R MOKHARE SC
ADV. M. MAJOZI
INSTRUCTED
BY: WERKSMANS INC, SANDTON
c/o KLAGSBRUIN
EDELSTEIN BOSMAN DE VRIES,
PRETORIA
FOR
THE FIRST and SECOND RESPONDENTS: ADV. K. PILLAY SC
ADV.
L. GUMBI
INSTRUCTED
BY : STATE ATTORNEY, PRETORIA
FOR
THE FOURTH TO SEVENTH AND
ELEVENTH
RESPONDENTS:
ADV. D. SMIT
INSTRUCTED
BY: WEBBER WENZEL ATTORNEYS, SANDTON
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 10 March 2022
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Masilela and Another v Masilela and Another (7358/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 332 (13 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 332High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Masuku N.O and Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Others (A263/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 37 (28 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 37High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Masilela and Others v Masilela and Another (Leave to Appeal) (70305/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 534 (19 June 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 534High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Masange v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (41235/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 626 (15 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 626High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Mphambo and Others v Minister of Police (13065/17) [2022] ZAGPPHC 206 (31 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 206High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar