Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 497South Africa
Rand Water Board v Rautenbach and Another (4654/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 497 (13 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 July 2022
Headnotes
by virtue of Deed of Transfer T26233/1978;
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Rand Water Board v Rautenbach and Another (4654/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 497 (13 July 2022)
Rand Water Board v Rautenbach and Another (4654/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 497 (13 July 2022)
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sino date 13 July 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number: 4654/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
REVISED.
13 July 2022
In the matter between:
RAND
WATER
BOARD
Applicant
and
IANTHE
FLORENCE RAUTENBACH
First Respondent
TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER
J:
[1]
The present dispute between the applicant
(Rand Water) and the first respondent (Rautenbach) involves a
notarial deed of servitude
(the servitude) registered in December
1997 in favour of Rand Water, over the Remainder of Portion 484 of
the Farm Garsfontein
374, Registration Division JR, Gauteng Province,
measuring 379, 5603 hectares (the Property).
[2]
According to Rand Water, it requires use of
this servitude to lay a further pipeline within it to cater for the
increasing demand
of water supply owing to what it describes as the
“
increasing population growth and
township developments or spatial developments”
of
the region.
[3]
Rand Water complains that there are a
number of encroaching structures on the strip of land constituting
the servitude but, as this
application is confined to relief against
Rautenbach, those are the ones that this application focuses on.
[4]
The
Property is located in a development in Pretoria known as Woodhill
Estate and Country Club. According to Rand Water, it has
engaged with
the Woodhill Homeowners Association
[1]
regarding the encroachments only to be met with a response that there
are no “huge” encroachments within the estate
on the
servitude and that, should there be any encroachments those are most
probably within the buffer zone. Thus it would appear
that an impasse
has been reached.
[5]
The specific encroachments complained of
via-à-vis Rautenbach are the following:
5.1 a
swimming pool encroaching by 7.43m²;
5.2 the
building (i.e. the house) encroaching by 4.13m²; and
5.3 the
boundary walls constructed over the servitude area until the opposite
end of the servitude boundary and
on top of Rand Water’s
existing pipeline H26 and along the path of Rand Water’s new
proposed pipeline.
[6]
Rautenbach has filed a counter-application
in which she seeks the following:
6.1
that if there is an encroachment, that Rand Water has acted
unreasonably in refusing to grant consent for
the “as built”
encroachments;
6.2
that, in this event, the Court should grant such consent as may be
necessary; and
6.3
that Rand Water report to the Court on the safety of its existing
pipeline in so far as it runs over Rautenbach’s
property.
[7]
Whilst the premise of both the application
and counter-application appear innocuous enough on the face of it,
they are in fact anything
but. The reason for this stems from the
servitude itself and an email from Mmule Raditsela of Rand Water
dated 29 January 2018
in response to a letter from Rautenbach’s
attorney, Hannes Gouws.
THE SERVITUDE
[8]
The servitude itself is contained in
Notarial Deed of Servitude K7429/1997S and was originally granted by
the City Council of Tshwane
to Rand Water on 9 December 1997. Whilst
not all of the terms of the servitude are relevant, paragraphs 1 and
2 are and they state
the following:
“
1
The OWNER
[2]
hereby gives and grants to RAND WATER for itself, its
Successors-in-Title or Assigns, the rights in perpetuity, to convey
and
transmit water over:
REMAINDER
of PORTION 284 of the Farm Garsfontein 374,
Registered Division JR, Province Gauteng;
MEASURING
379, 5603 (THREE SEVEN NINE COMMA FIVE SIX
NOUGHT THREE) Hectares;
HELD
by virtue of Deed of Transfer T26233/1978;
(hereinafter referable
as the “PROPERTY”)
By means of pipelines
already [laid] and which may hereafter be laid, along a strip of
ground, 2,5887 Hectares in extent, as depicted
by figure
ABCDEFGHJKLMNP on the annexed Diagram S.G. No 9450/1992 (“the
STRIP”), together with the right on perpetuity,
to lay or carry
through water, over, on or across the PROPERTY, along the STRIP and
from time to time patrol, inspect, maintain,
repair remove and relay
such pipelines, together with the necessary valves, cocks, metres,
boxes, cables and all other accessories
in connection therewith, any
or all of which may be above and/or below the ground level (“the
WORKS”), and to build,
repair and renew all embankment, on
which the WORKS may now or hereafter be laid or constructed, as may
be necessary, together
with all such rights of way and rights of
ingress to and egress from the PROPERTY, as may be requisite and
necessary for any of
the purposes aforesaid, and for the due and
proper exercise of the rights hereby granted.
“
2
THERE shall be no structures erected,
parking allowed, trees planted or material placed or deposited
on or
over the STRIP or within 2 (TWO) metres thereof, and the depth or
cover over the pipeline shall not be materially altered,
without
written consent from RAND WATER which consent shall not be
unreasonably withheld.”
[9]
Rand
Water states that owing to increasing water demand in the region, and
in furtherance of its Constitutional obligations
[3]
it had identified and requires use of its servitude, including the
part laid across a portion of the estate, in order to lay a
further
pipeline to augment the existing but insufficient water supply. It
alleges that the encroachments directly interfere with
its rights,
entitlements, duties, powers and functions. Rand Water alleges that
not only do the encroachments hinder Rand Water’s
access to the
servitude and pipeline but pose a danger to the pipeline.
[10]
It
further alleges that at the time that Woodhill was being developed,
Rand Water had agreed to the development subject to conditions
of
agreement of servitude and pipeline protection stated in a letter
written to the developer (Nuclear Lifestyle Design), dated
8 December
2005
[4]
. It alleges that the
present layout of Woodhill and the encroachments were never approved
and subsequent attempts to obtain copies
of the certificates of
occupation were met with a complete lack of co-operation both from
the representatives of the residential
estate and from Rautenbach.
Attempts to obtain copies of the requisite permissions from the
custodian of town planning and the
relevant law enforcement
structures for building regulations also proved fruitless.
[11]
Rand Water then states:
“
57
Symptomatic of these infringements, the Applicant’s
representatives generally encountered difficulties
in gaining access
into the estate over the years, for purposes of inspecting its water
services work, either for general inspections,
doing meter readings
or general patrols or repairs….”
[12]
This, states Rand Water, was despite
providing the estate’s representatives with a monthly schedule
of visits to inspect,
for example, water leaks, meter readings and
for general patrols. Not only was gaining entry into the estate and
residential properties
made difficult for the inspectors, but the
encroachments also hindered proper execution of their duties.
[13]
Of course this is all disputed by
Rautenbach who argues that, not only was the consent for the
encroachments actually granted, but
Rand Water has failed to
substantiate any of its allegations with expert evidence. This it
eventually attempted to do in a further
affidavit to which Rautenbach
has objected.
[14]
An argument has also been made on her
behalf that this court can decide the matter based solely on the fact
that the consent to
development in 2005 is deemed to be given because
there was no formal objection to the development and that clause 2 of
the servitude
which provides that consent “
shall
not be unreasonably withheld
.”
[15]
The fact that the “experts”
relied on by Rand Water cannot agree on the exact measurements of the
encroachments and
their materiality also does not assist Rand Water.
[16]
In my view, there are material disputes of
fact present on these papers which are not limited to:
16.1 whether or not
actual consent whether tacit or otherwise, was given to this
development and any possible encroachments;
16.2 the extent of
any encroachments;
16.3 their
materiality via-a-vis Rand Water’s constitutional and statutory
obligations;
16.4 whether the
counter-application should be granted.
[17]
I do not agree that these issues are such
that they should be decided on paper or that they are issues solely
of interpretation
and law. In my view, whether or not consent was
originally sought and granted is a matter for evidence, as is whether
there are
encroachments and, if so, the materiality of these. It
remains so that a
“…
..
court should be careful not to attribute to itself superior wisdom in
relation to matters entrusted to other branches of government.
A
court should thus give due weight to findings of fact and policy
decisions made by those with special expertise and experience
in the
field”.
[5]
[18]
Given the importance of the constitutional
prerogatives of access to water that Rand Water is obliged to fulfill
and given the weighty
disputes of fact on these papers, I am of the
view that it is in the interest of justice that this matter be
referred to trial.
ORDER
[19]
Thus the order I make is the
following:
19.1 the
application is referred to trial;
19.2 the Notice of
Motion shall stand as a simple summons;
19.3 the applicant
shall file a Declaration within 20 days of this order setting out the
facts and issues to be decided at
trial;
19.4 thereafter the
Uniform Rules of Court shall apply to the delivery of further
pleadings and all matters incidental to
and including the conduct of
trials;
19.5 costs are
reserved for determination by the trial court.
B
NEUKIRCHER
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 14 July 2022
Appearances:
For
the Applicant
: Adv VP Ngutshana
Instructed
by
: Raborifi R Incorporated
For
the First Respondent
: Adv JL van der Merwe (SC)
: Adv J Rust (SC)
Instructed
by
: Gerhard Wagenaar Attorneys
For
the Second Respondent : No appearance
Date
heard
: 20 January 2022 (final heads of argument filed on 21 February 2022)
Date
handed down
: 13 July 2022
[1]
Which
is responsible for the administration of the estate and common
areas.
[2]
The
City Council of Tshwane
[3]
In
terms of Section 27(1):
“
(1)
everyone has the right to have access to
…
.
(b) sufficient food
and water…
(2)
The State must take reasonable legislative and other measures within
its available resources to achieve the progressive realization
of
each of these rights…”
[4]
The
conditions were stipulated in that letter and an accompanying
annexure and annotated A4 layout plan
[5]
International
Trade Administration Commission v SCAW South Africa P/L (Bridon
International Limited Intervening) In re: SCAW South
Africa P/L v
International Trade Administration Commission
2012 (4) SA 618
(CC)
at para 101
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