Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 173South Africa
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Styger (12306/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 173 (31 March 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Styger (12306/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 173 (31 March 2022)
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Styger (12306/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 173 (31 March 2022)
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sino date 31 March 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 12306/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE
:
31 MARCH 2022
In
the matter between:
CITY
OF
TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
KOOP
DE VRIES
STYGER
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
matter has been heard in open court and disposed of in the terms of
the Directives of the Judge President of this Division.
The
judgment and order are accordingly
published
and
distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
[1]
Introduction
The
respondent is the owner of a suburban property situated in the area
of jurisdiction of the applicant, being the City of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality (the municipality). He has converted the
single dwelling on the property, which was zoned for use as
"Residential 1" into a multiple occupation set of four
units. He did so without applying for a change in the zoning of
the
property and without submitting any building plans. The municipality
now seeks orders declaring the building works unlawful
and in
contravention of the National Building Standards Act 103 of 1977 and
in contravention of the regulations promulgated thereunder.
The
municipality also seeks the authority to demolish the offending
works.
[2]
The facts
Very
little of the facts are in dispute. The respondent brazenly went
about the conversion of the dwelling and conceded that neither
rezoning applications nor building plans have been submitted. The
facts are briefly the following:
2.1
The respondent became the owner of the property
on 21 June 2019.
2.2
At the time that the respondent became the owner
of the property, it
consisted of a residential erf in a suburban area with one dwelling
erected on it together with an adjacent
outbuilding (motor garage).
2.3
The municipality also issued the respondent with
a zoning certificate
in terms of the Tshwane Town-Planning scheme, 2008 (revised in 2014).
The zoning certificate was dated 25
July 2019. The property use was
zoned as "Residential l" and the property did not fall
within the Schedules to the scheme
whereby an additional dwelling was
permitted in certain defined areas. In terms of Regulation A20 of the
National Building Regulations
(the Regulations) promulgated in terms
of section 17(1) of the National Building Regulations and Building
Standards Act, 103 of
1977 (the Act), the classification of the
property fell into class H4, being
"Dwelling house
Occupancy consisting of a dwelling unit on its own site,
including a garage and other domestic outbuildings, if a
n
y".
2.4
On the same day that the zoning certificate was
issued, the Acting
Chief Building Surveyor: Building Plans and Inspection Management of
the municipality received a call from the
respondent's immediate
neighbour, who complained that the respondent was erecting a building
against her boundary wall without
her consent. The neighbour also
advised that the respondent was busy altering the dwelling on the
property, converting it into
units.
2.5
The next day, 26 July 2019, a building surveyor
in the municipality's
Building Control Section, conducted an inspection of the property.
Having found that the respondent was indeed
in the process of
converting the dwelling into units, she served a notice in terms of
section 4(1) of the Act on the builders who
were on site on the
premises, thereby directing them to cease construction. The builders
however refused to sign acknowledgment
of receipt of the notice.
2.6
Three days later the Acting Chief Building Surveyor
received another
telephone call for the neighbour, advising him that the respondent
(and his builders) have not ceased construction.
Hereupon the Acting
Chief Building Surveyor personally attend d the premises, inspected
the building works and took some photograph.
His inspection and
photographs revealed the following:
-
There were some building works being erected against the neighbour's
wall (I interpose
to point out that these have since been demolished
and removed and nothing more need be said about them);
-
There were materials for making trusses lying in the front
yard of the property;
-
Mortar was being mixed for the laying of bricks;
-
Works were being constructed against the neighbour's garage
and inside the dwelling;
-
The roof and the ceilings (including brandering and trusses)
in large parts of the dwelling had been removed and walls were being
raised, constructed and plastered.
2.7
Subsequent to a reporting of the above, the prosecutor
of the Tshwane
Municipality Court issued a summons for the respondent to appear in
court on 22 August 2019. This summons was served
on the building
works foreman who signed acknowledgement of receipt thereof.
2.8
By 20 August 2019, following upon yet another complaint
from the
neighbour, a further inspection was done by the building inspector.
She found (supported by photographic evidence) that
trusses had been
partially installed, material was on the pavement and gates to the
property were locked.
2.9
On 22 August 2019 the respondent failed to appear
in court but the
matter was struck from the roll as the magistrate had found the
service to have been inadequate for the issuing
of a warrant of
arrest.
2.10
On 26 August 2019 a new summons was issued, this time for the
respondent to
appear in court on 19 September 2019. The Acting Chief
Building Surveyor personally attempted to serve this summons on the
respondent
personally but only encountered a domestic servant at his
place of residence (which is not the property in question). She
telephoned
the respondent who gave her strict instructions not to
accept service or sign any acknowledgement of receipt. The Acting
Chief
Building Surveyor then took a photograph of the domestic
servant and the summons which she had placed on a window sill of the
respondent's
residence. The papers are silent as to what happened to
the warrant for arrest which was subsequently issued on 19 September
2019
upon the respondent's failure to appear in court, particularly
in view thereof that the respondent has eventually conceded having
received the summons.
2.11
Four days after the service of the second summons, the Acting Chief
Building
Surveyor again visited the property. He found that the
building works were still ongoing and he further found the following
(which
findings he supported with photographic evidence):
-
there were still building works being erected against the
neighbour's garage;
-
electrical distribution boards were being installed for four
different units being constructed on the property;
-
handmade trusses, without bolts, were installed, which did not
satisfy the specifications provided for in the Act;
-
four water meters were installed, one for each of the
prospective units;
-
a new drain had been installed and closed up without a
pressure test having done by the municipality (this was as a
consequence
of no plans having been submitted and, consequentially,
no building inspections having taken place);
-
waste pipes have been installed without gulleys or vent pipes
for the new toilets;
-
brickworks had been erected which pressed against the
neighbour's electric fence on the boundary of her property.
-
foundations had been dug for a new boundary wall;
-
the single dwelling was being converted into four separate
occupational units on the property.
2.12
The application for the relief referred to earlier was launched by
the municipality on 19 February 2020. On 23 March
2020 the respondent
indicated his opposition to the application. Upon failure to deliver
an answering affidavit, the matter was
set down for hearing on 7 May
2021. Covid-consequences were to blame for this delay. On 6 May 2021
only, that is more than a year
after he had been called upon to do
so, did the respondent deliver his answering affidavit, causing a
postponement and yet another
delay. In his answering affidavit,
virtually none of the above facts were placed in dispute. In fact,
one of the grounds of opposition
was that by the time the application
had been launched, all the building works complained of and which
resulted in the conversion
of the single dwelling house into four
dwelling units, had been completed. The respondent consequently
labelled the relief claimed
to be moot. I shall deal with this fact
and the other technical disputes raised by the respondent
hereinlater.
[3]
The
applicable statutory
provisions:
3.1
Section 4(1) of the Act provides that:
"No person shall
without the prior approval in writing of the local authority in
question, erect any building in respect of
which plans and
specifications are to be drawn and submitted in terms of this Act”
3.2
Section 4(4) of the Act further then provides that
"Any
person erecting any building in contravention of the provision of
subsection (J) shall be guilty of an offence
...".
3.3
In terms of section 1 of the Act a "building" has been
defined widely
and includes
"any other structure
...
erected or used for or in connection with
... the
accommodation or convenience of human beings ... [and] ... any wall
... any part of a building ... any facilities or system
or part or
portion thereof, within or outside but incidental to a building, for
the provision of a water supply, drainage, sewerage,
storm-water
disposal, electricity supply or other similar service in respect of
the building".
3.4
A further section on which the municipality relied was section 21,
which provides
as follows:
# "Order in respect of
erection and demolition of buildings
"Order in respect of
erection and demolition of buildings
Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any law relating to
magistrates' courts, a magistrate shall have jurisdiction,
on the
application of any local authority or the Minister, to make an order
prohibiting any person from commencing or proceeding
with the
erection of any building or authorizing such local authority to
demolish such building if such magistrate is satisfied
that such
erection is contrary to or does not comply with the provisions of
this Act or any approval or authorisation granted thereunder".
3.5
It was not in dispute between the parties that this court has the
necessary
jurisdiction to order any relief that a Magistrates Court
may have been entitled to grant.
3.6
Regulation A20 of the Regulations provides for the classification and
designation
of occupancies of buildings. A single dwelling house is
classified as H4 as already referred to above, while classification
H3
is for
"occupancy of two or more dwelling units on a
single site".
3.7
The Regulations provide an explanation for the difference between a
"dwelling
house" and a "dwelling unit" as
follows:
"dwelling house means a single dwelling unit and any
garage and other domestic outbuildings, situated on its own site"
while a
"dwelling unit means a unit containing one or
more habitable rooms and provided with adequate sanitary and cooking
facilities".
3.8
Regulation A22(3) provides that
"no owner shall
...
backfill or enclose a drainage installation until such
installation has been inspected, tested and approved by the local
authority
...".
3.9
Section 13 of the Act exempts
"minor building work”'
from its application, but these have limitations as prescribed in
Regulation AZ2, being, inter alia
"the replacement of a roof
or part thereof with the same or similar material"; "the
partitioning or enlarging of
any room by the erection or demolition
of an internal wall if such erection if such erection or
demonstration does not affect the
structural safety of the building
concerned"
and
"the erection of any other building
where the nature of the erection is
such in the opinion
of the building
control officer it is not necessary for
the applicant to submit, with his application, plans prepared in full
conformation
of these regulations".
3.10
Plans and the approval thereof are also not necessary where
maintenance is undertaken but, in
terms of Regulation A1(4), this is
limited to
"repair which
has
become
necessary
as
a result
of
ordinary wear
and tear
or which is
undertaken
in
the
normal
course
of
maintenance
or
upkeep
of
any building".
3.11
The Regulations also provide for
"General
Enforcement"
in Regulation A25, the relevant p01tions of which read as
follows:
"(1) No person
shall use any building or cause or permit any building to be used for
a purpose other than the purpose shown
on the approved plans of such
building, or for a purpose which causes a change in the class of
occupancy as contemplated in these
regulations, whether such plans
were approved in terms of the Act or in terms of any law in force at
any time before the date of
commencement of the act, unless such
building is suitable, having regard to the requirements of these
regulations, for such first-mentioned
purpose or for such changed of
occupancy.
(6)
The local authority may serve a notice on any person
contemplated in section 4(4) of the Act or sub-regulation (4) or (5),
ordering
such person forthwith to stop the erection of the building
concerned or to comply with such approval, as the case may be...
(7)
Whether or not a notice contemplated
in
sub-regulation (6) has been served, the local authority may serve a
notice on the owner of any building contemplated in sub-regulation
(4) or
(5),
ordering
such
owner
to
rectify
or
demolish
the
building in question
by a date specified
in
such a
notice".
[4]
The respondent's case and the evaluation thereof:
4.1
As already stated, the facts summarised in paragraph 2 were not
materially in
dispute. This includes the fact that no building plans
have been submitted and neither has any application for the change of
the
zoning of the property or its classification been submitted.
4.2
In respect of the zoning issue the respondent, through his counsel,
had to concede
that the respondent was not before court with clean
hands. The respondent had clearly acted in breach of the Tshwane
Town-planning
Scheme. He proffered no explanation for his conduct.
4.3
In respect of the remainder of the issues and, in particular, the
applicability
of the Act and the Regulations, the respondent's
attitude, as displayed in his belated answering affidavit, was
technical to the
point of being as obstructive as he had been in
respect of the service of the summonses on him. I shall deal with
those defences
which may be material to the disputes between the
parties, hereunder.
4.4
Firstly, the respondent contended that the Acting Chief Building
Surveyor had
no authority to depose to an affidavit on behalf of the
municipality. Various statutory provisions and extracts therefrom
were
cited in the answering affidavit. It is not necessary to repeat
the law as to whether a witness needs to be "authorized"
at
all, as the respondent had, by the time of hearing of oral argument,
abandoned this point, in my view, correctly so. ln any
event, the
deponent had produced the necessary delegations to act on the
municipality's behalf in reply to the respondent's raising
of this
point.
4.5
Another point was that the municipality should be non-suited due to
the failure
of the joinder of the current occupiers of the four
units. The steps preceding this application was launched long before
any occupation
of the units and in fact long before the completion of
construction. Even if it might be that the units were occupied by the
time
of the belated answering affidavit, no particulars were
furnished as to when these occupiers commenced their occupation. They
clearly
commenced their occupancy when the respondent had been
(repeatedly) informed of the municipality's contentions regarding the
unlawfulness
of the construction. The respondent clearly permitted
occupancy of the units either in contravention of the Act and the
Regulations,
or at risk of such contravention, but definitely in
contravention of the zoning certificate. In my view, these occupiers
should
look to the respondent for the relief of any prejudice they
might suffer but the respondent cannot claim a procedural benefit as
a result of his own unlawful actions. This point is therefore
rejected.
4.6
A further basis for opposition was the respondent's contention that
the municipality's
case was "exclusively" based on sections
4(1) and 4(4) of the Act and that was the full extent of the case
that the respondent
had to meet. This is an oversimplification of the
case. Although the applicant's deponent referred to sections 4 and 21
of the
Act as the basis of the application, he also, in paragraphs 12
and 13 of the founding affidavit, referred to the zoning of the
property. In paragraph 15 of the founding affidavit, he expressly
stated the following: "...
the conversion of the premises
into units is contrary to the Zoning Certificate issued to the
respondent,
which
authorised
the
premises
to
one
residential
dwelling".
The respondent's terse answer instructive.
It was simply this:
"The contents hereof are denied.
It is repeated that no case was made out based on land use.
The applicant exclusively relied on the Building Standards
Acts for the relief it seeks in the Notice of Motion".
As
already pointed out above, the denial is without foundation. The
contravention of the zoning certificate has rightly been conceded
at
the time of hearing. In an attempt at avoiding the consequence of
this concession, the respondent seeks to limit the declaration
of
unlawfulness referred to in the Notice of Motion to the linking
thereof exclusively to the other contraventions, being those
of the
Act and to the provisions of the Regulations. I find this facetious
and self-serving. Clearly the conduct of the respondent
in converting
one dwelling house into four units without prior approval or
re-zoning is unlawful and I find no reason why, on the
admitted
facts, the municipality should not be entitled to such a declaration.
4.7
It is in the same fashion that the respondent, without putting
forward any contrary
evidence, claims that "no cause of action"
has been made out by the municipality. This bald allegation has as
little
foundation as the respondent's equally bald allegation that
the Act is either not applicable or that the works are excluded from
the Act. No case had been made out by the respondent that the works
are "minor works" as contemplated in section 13 of
the Act.
The only attempt at justifying such an exclusion, is the respondent's
own say so and his erroneous view that he is entitled
to do anything
as long as the outside walls of the dwelling are not extended. He
furnishes no other motivation for any exclusion,
save insofar as he
claims that the dwelling was in a dilapidated state when he purchased
it and that he was merely busy with maintenance.
Clearly this
contention is so uncontrovertibly refuted by the photographic
evidence referred to above, that it must be rejected.
The claim
clearly falla outside Regulation A1 (4) referred to in paragraph 3.9
above.
4.8
The respondent's "bull point" was that section 4(1) of the
Act can
only be relied on by the municipality while the construction
was actively being carried out and that the municipality can no
longer
rely on it once the building works have been completed. The
absurd construction that the respondent seeks to place on the
combination
of sections 4(1) and 21 (read with Regulation A25) is
that, as long as the respondent can delay matters until completion of
the
activities he had been called upon to cease, he is safe from any
subsequent order once he had completed the offending works. This
proposition need merely to be stated to demonstrate its absurdity and
it is trite that no interpretation of a statute which would
lead to
an absurdity will be followed.
4.9
In support of the respondent's contention further, much reliance was
placed
on
Wierda Properties v Sizwe Ntsaluba Gobodo
2018 (3)
SA 95
(SCA). In fact, the respondent's counsel, relying on this
judgment, proclaimed in heads of argument: "...
Section 4 (1)
of the Act only deals with the
process of erecting
any building
... it does not deal with a building that
has already been erected
....
There is, however, no need for
the Court to venture upon the aforesaid interpretive exercise as same
has already been considered
by the Supreme Court of Appeal
...".
4.10
Firstly, the judgment in
Wierda Properties
is to be
distinguished from the present case, both on the facts and on the
law.
4.11
ln
Wierda Properties,
the determination that the court had
been required to make, was in respect of the validity and
enforceability of lease agreements
which had been entered into after
the fact, in respect of buildings which had been erected without
plans and for which no occupation
certificates had been issued. The
lessor in
Wierda Properties
was not the person who had
constructed the offending works. The previous owner did that. In
Wierda Properties
the party seeking relief were the
lessor and the tenant (in respect of the initial counter-applicant)
and not the municipality.
It was not a case of a local authority
seeking to exercise its oversight over building works erected within
its area of jurisdiction.
The facts are therefore completely
different from the current application. In the current application,
the respondent is the person
who had committed the contraventions.
4.12
The law considered in
Wierda Properties
was also completely
different from the present application. Apart from the issue of the
validity of a lease agreement, the consequences
of occupation of
building works erected without plans was considered, particularly
with reference to section 14 of the Act, dealing
with occupancy
certificates. None of these questions feature in the present
application.
4.13
Furthermore, the judgment in
Wierda Properties,
apart from the
aforementioned differences, is no authority for the proposition
advanced by the respondent. The Supreme Court of
Appeal did not find
that section 4(1) finds no application once a building has already
been constructed or when the building works
have already been
completed. Apart from the absence of such a finding, in various parts
of the judgment, the lean1ed judges of
appeal made reference to
remedies available to municipalities, distinguishing those from the
rights of lessor and tenants. See
for example paragraphs [20] and
[27] of the judgment. Accordingly, this "defence" must also
fail.
[5]
Conclusions
5.1
I find that, on the facts, the respondent has contravened
the terms
of the zoning certificate issued in respect of the property and
thereby has contravened the provisions of the Tshwane
Town-Planning
Scheme, 2008. The building works whereby the dwelling house had been
converted into four dwelling units are unlawful
and the municipality
is entitled to a declaration in this regard.
5.2
Even if I may be wrong in the above conclusion, not on
the facts, but
on the basis that the respondent may be correct in his assertion that
the application was not clearly enough a "land-use
application"
as he calls it, I find that the municipality is still entitled to a
declaration of unlawfulness due to the respondent's
non-compliance
with the Act.
5.3
The Act is clearly applicable: the respondent was not
merely
conducting "maintenance", the works were not "minor
works", the conversion altered the classification
and occupation
of the previously approved dwelling house, the works involved
alternations to roof structures, electrical and water
and sewage
reticulation and involved drainage works, all which needed plans for
approval and inspection.
[6]
Relief sought
6.1
Apart from the declaratory relief, the municipality is entitled to
the "demolition"
relief. This would include the works
erected against the neighbour's garage.
6.2
One must take into account, however, that there may be tenants still
in the units
and they might need time to adjust their circumstances.
It might also be that, as had happened in
Wierda Properties,
approval for the offending works may be sought from the
municipality and that the works may comply or be capable of
rectification
so as to comply with the specifications prescribed by
the Act. Similarly, an application for re-zoning might conceivably be
successful
(depending also on the neighbour's attitude) if belatedly
made. This court has a discretion to suspended the execution of its
orders
if the circumstances warrant it.
6.3
On the issue of costs, not only should the customary rule that costs
should follow
the event apply, but, having regard to the brazen
unlawful conduct of the respondent and his tardiness in prosecuting
his opposition
to the application, coupled with the nature of the
"defences" raised, I am of the view that a punitive costs
order is
warranted.
[7]
Order
1.
The erection of building works at the property situated at 215 Ockert
Street, Wiedapark, Centurion, Pretoria (the property), whereby the
dwelling house has been converted to four dwelling units contrary
to
the zoning certificate issued in respect of the property and which
works have been done without building plans approved by the
City of
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (the offending Works), are declared
unlawful and declared to be in contravention of section
4(1) of the
National Building Regulations and Standards Act 103 of 1977 and the
Regulations promulgated thereunder.
2.
The City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality is authorised to enter
the property and to demolish the offending works, which shall include
all the works whereby the dwelling house was converted into
four
dwelling units and which shall include the electricity-, water
drainage- and sewerage installations installed in connection
therewith and all works erected against the neighbour's garage or the
electrical fencing of her property.
3.
The execution of the order in paragraph 2 above is suspended until
the finalization of applications for approval of the necessary plans
and specifications and the finalization of applications for
re-zoning
of the property, both sets of applications which must be delivered to
the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality within
30 days from
date of this order.
4.
The suspension shall lapse in the event of said applications not
being timeously lodged or, having been lodged, not being successful
or, being only partially successful, to the extent of such failure
to
succeed.
5.
The respondent shall pay the costs of this application on the scale
as between attorney and client.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 8 March 2022
Judgment
delivered: 31 March 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
Adv G Mashigo
Attorney
for Applicant:
Rambevha
Morobane Attorneys, Pretoria
For
Respondent:
Adv J A Venter
Attorneys
for Respondent:
Phillip Venter Attorneys, Pretoria
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