Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 97South Africa
Mocke Investments (Pty) Limited v Drakenstein Municipality and Others (5937/2022) [2025] ZAWCHC 97; [2025] 2 All SA 589 (WCC) (10 March 2025)
Headnotes
on a ground unconnected to the applicant’s submissions regarding the servitude. [4] It is accordingly necessary to consider both the review under Part A and the declaratory and interdictory relief sought under Part B. It is convenient to commence by addressing Part B, which the applicant’s counsel dealt with first in written and oral argument. As the Constitutional Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal have held that it is desirable for a lower court to consider all issues in a matter before it, particularly where there may be the possibility of an appeal,[2] I shall address all material issues raised on the papers with which the parties have persisted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Mocke Investments (Pty) Limited v Drakenstein Municipality and Others (5937/2022) [2025] ZAWCHC 97; [2025] 2 All SA 589 (WCC) (10 March 2025)
Mocke Investments (Pty) Limited v Drakenstein Municipality and Others (5937/2022) [2025] ZAWCHC 97; [2025] 2 All SA 589 (WCC) (10 March 2025)
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FLYNOTES:
PROPERTY
– Servitude –
Access
by paying guests
–
Servitude
permits use of road for guests attending function venue and
staying in chalets – Activities fall within scope
of
servitude’s terms – Municipality’s decisions
were procedurally unfair and irrational – Failed
to consider
noise and traffic impacts – Appeal authority did not
properly address concerns raised – Not incorporated
into
conditions of approval – Decisions reviewed and set aside –
Consent use application remitted for reconsideration.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case number: 5937/2022
In
the matter between:
MOCKE INVESTMENTS
(PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
DRAKENSTEIN
MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
WILDEPAARDEJACHT
(PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS, CAPE TOWN
Third
Respondent
Coram:
Acting
Justice P Farlam
Heard:
6 &
12 August 2024
Parties’
further written submissions:
24 January 2025
First Respondent’s
further affidavits:
13 February 2025
Delivered
electronically:
10 March 2025
JUDGMENT
FARLAM AJ
:
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
[1]
In about 2017, Mr and Mrs
Mocke decided to move down from Pretoria to the Winelands to enjoy
what they thought would be a more tranquil
rural lifestyle. To that
end, they bought a working farm near Paarl through the applicant
company (
Mocke
Investments
),
to which they moved a few years’ later. The Mockes were aware
that a servitude road ran through the property, thereby linking
a
neighbouring farm
[1]
(the
dominant tenement) to a public road; but say that they considered the
terms of the servitude and took the view that it would
not be unduly
disruptive. They were thus perturbed to learn in early 2021 that
applications by the owner of that farm, the second
respondent
(
Wildepaardejacht
),
to the first respondent (the
Municipality
),
for approvals which would allow holiday cottages and functions on the
dominant tenement had been approved by the Municipality
in late
January 2021. They appealed against the municipal approvals, but
their appeal was dismissed on 28 October 2021 (albeit
that they only
learned of that decision at the end of January 2022). Aggrieved with
the rights granted to Wildepaardejacht, they
thereafter brought the
present application.
[2]
The notice of motion seeks relief under two parts, a Part A and a
Part B, though the two
causes of action were motivated together in
the applicant’s affidavits and were always to some extent
intertwined.
2.1.
Under Part A, the applicant has sought to review and set aside the
Municipality’s
decisions to
(a)
grant a consent
use, in terms of section 15(2)(n) of the Drakenstein By-law on
Municipal Land Use Planning (the
Planning By-law
) for a farm
building to be used as a function venue; and
(b)
grant an
application for technical approval, in terms of section 13(2) of
the Drakenstein Municipality: Zoning Scheme
By-law, 2018 (the
Zoning
Scheme By-law
), permitting the building of four chalets
(accommodating two guests each) on Wildepaardejacht farm.
2.2.
Under Part B, the applicant seeks declaratory and interdictory relief
with reference to
the terms of the servitude, and more particularly
(a)
an order declaring that the proposed use of the
servitude road pursuant to the aforementioned municipal approvals
would be
contrary to the terms of the registered deed of servitude;
and
(b)
an order interdicting the second respondent from
using, or allowing the use of, the servitude road for the hosting of
any
events or functions on its farm, or the hosting of visitors in
the chalets, as well as an order prohibiting construction work in
respect of the chalets.
[3]
The relief is interlinked because, as all parties appeared to accept,
if the servitude would not permit the traffic that the impugned
approvals would inevitably require, then the Municipality misdirected
itself in granting the approvals; and, in that event, the applicant
would be entitled to relief under both Part A and Part B. The
relief
under the two parts of the notice of motion is also, however,
discrete in that the dismissal of the declaratory relief under
Part B
would not determine the fate of the review under Part A, which would
still have to be considered with reference to the applicant’s
other review grounds, and could theoretically be upheld on a ground
unconnected to the applicant’s submissions regarding
the
servitude.
[4]
It is accordingly
necessary to consider both the review under Part A and the
declaratory and interdictory relief sought under Part
B. It is
convenient to commence by addressing Part B, which the applicant’s
counsel dealt with first in written and oral
argument. As the
Constitutional Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal have held that
it is desirable for a lower court to consider
all issues in a matter
before it, particularly where there may be the possibility of an
appeal,
[2]
I shall address all
material issues raised on the papers with which the parties have
persisted.
# THE RELIEF SOUGHT IN
RELATION TO THE SERVITUDE (PART B)
THE RELIEF SOUGHT IN
RELATION TO THE SERVITUDE (PART B)
## The servitude
The servitude
[5]
The servitude was registered in November 2000, when the applicant’s
farm was owned by Mr Richard West, and the second respondent’s
farm was effectively owned by
former president FW
de Klerk, through a
company
called
Enchanted Investments (Pty) Ltd (
Enchanted
Investments
).
[6]
Clause 1 of the deed of servitude recorded the
properties owned by the “
dominant
owner
”
(Enchanted Investments)
and the “
servient owner
”
(Mr West), respectively, as well as that “
the
parties have agreed that THE SERVIENT OWNER will grant a servitude
road over THE SERVIENT PROPERTY in favour of THE DOMINANT
OWNER as
owner of THE DOMINANT PROPERTY
”
(clause
1.3) and that “
the parties wish to
record such agreement in writing and wish to have such servitude
registered against the Title Deeds of the respective
properties
”
(clause 1.4).
[7]
Clause 3 of the servitude then provides that
“
[t]he following conditions are
applicable to the servitude
”
:
“
3.1
The servitude shall be in favour of all 3 (THREE) THE DOMINANT
PROPERTIES described above and shall be for the use
of the registered
owners thereof, from time to time and in the event of the registered
owner being a legal persona, then such servitude
shall be for the use
of all persons who may have an interest in such legal persona, their
household, friends, invitees, their servants
and the servants of the
registered owner from time to time and shall include access and
egress by means of any type of vehicle
that may be necessary for THE
DOMINANT OWNER to conduct its activities on THE DOMINANT PROPERTY
from time to time;
3.2
THE SERVIENT and THE DOMINANT OWNER shall equally be liable for the
maintenance of the servitude road;
3.3
THE DOMINANT OWNER and all persons using the servitude area under
him, shall at all times do so at their own
risk and in a reasonable
and civilised manner so as to cause the least possible interference
and nuisance to THE SERVIENT OWNER
and shall immediately make good
any structural damage that may occur to the property of THE SERVIENT
OWNER as a result of the use
of the servitude road area by THE
DOMINANT OWNER. THE DOMINANT OWNER shall not be liable for any damage
that may be caused as a
result of the normal, reasonable, and
civilised use of the servitude, such as dust and/or noise and/or the
like;
3.4
Except as otherwise provided for herein, THE SERVIENT OWNER shall not
allow or cause any obstruction or other
interference to be erected on
the servitude area and shall allow THE DOMINANT OWNER the reasonable
use thereof, provided that THE
SERVIENT OWNER shall be entitled to
erect such speed control devices, such as speed bumps, as may be
agreed between THE SERVIENT
OWNER and THE DOMINANT OWNER so as to
control the speed of vehicles using the road;
3.5
THE SERVIENT OWNER shall not be liable for any claim that may arise
as a result of the use of the servitude
area by THE DOMINANT OWNER,
or any persons using such road under him;
3.6
This servitude shall be registered against the Title Deeds of the
parties in the Deeds Office;.
3.7
The parties shall share the costs of the registration of the
servitude equally.”
[8]
The key question for present purposes is what is meant by the word
“
invitees
” in clause 3.1 of the servitude, in the
context of the use permission granted in that clause to “
all
persons who may have an interest in [the registered owner[s] of the
dominant properties], their household, friends, invitees,
their
servants and the servants of the registered owner from time to time
”
.
A second issue, in the event of the applicant’s submissions on
the first question being rejected, concerns the circumstances
in
which it might be held, in the abstract, that the use of the
servitude would not be “
in a
reasonable and civilised manner
”
,
as required by clause 3.3 (or in other words would not be
civiliter
modo
, as would anyway be required under
the common law).
## Interpretive principles
applicable to the servitude
Interpretive principles
applicable to the servitude
[9]
As the servitude arose
out of an agreement between the parties, it is to be interpreted in
accordance with the usual rules applicable
to the interpretation of
written contracts,
[3]
and thus
in accordance with the approach laid down in cases like
Endumeni
,
[4]
Bothma-Batho
Transport
,
[5]
and
Coral
Lagoon
.
[6]
When interpreting a particular provision in the servitude, one must
therefore try to discern the intention of the parties, having
regard
to the language they used, the context in which that provision
appears in the servitude, and the wider context (both in
relation to
the document as a whole and the circumstances in which it came into
existence). The exercise is an objective one and
involves positing a
meaning to the text on the basis of those criteria (and further
considerations such as the need for the meaning
to be a sensible and
businesslike one), rather than looking for what a party might
subjectively have intended.
[10]
As noted by the
applicant, where an agreed servitude “
detracts
from and limits the grantor’s rights of ownership, its terms
are generally restrictively construed
”
,
[7]
so as to impose the least onerous burden on the servient property.
[11]
As the second respondent
submitted in response, this principle would however seem only to
apply where the terms of the servitude
are unclear or ambiguous; and
accordingly, if the terms of the servitude are (after application of
the general interpretive principles
mentioned above) sufficiently
clear, they must be afforded their normal meaning, even if that were
to impose a heavy burden on
the servient tenement.
[8]
[12]
The second respondent also emphasized the principle of “
effective
use
”, which was said to imply that the servitude holder
acquires, in addition to the servitude, all the entitlements without
which the servitude cannot be exercised (though that principle seems
of limited utility in the present case, given that the anterior
question is what exactly the servitude entailed).
## The interpretation of the
servitude
The interpretation of the
servitude
[13]
In my view, what should be regarded as having been intended by the
word “
invitee
” in clause 3.1 of the servitude was
that any person whom the owner of the dominant tenement had agreed
could access its property,
and thus anyone who had a legal right to
be on the dominant tenement, should be allowed to use the servitude
road in order to enter
and exit the Wildepaardejacht farm.
[14]
That conclusion is consistent with the normal meaning of the word,
and also, to my mind,
supported by the reference at the start of
clause 3.3 to “
THE DOMINANT OWNER and
all
persons using the servitude area under him
”
[emphasis added].
[15]
Although
this has not directly informed my interpretation of clause 3, I note,
too, that, as pointed out by Griesel J in
Roeloffze
,
[9]
it is stated in Maasdorp’s Institutes of Cape Law,
[10]
with reference to a passage from
Voet
,
[11]
that, under the common law: “
Servitudes
… may be made use of, not only by the owner of the dominant
tenement, but by any one who has a legal right to
be upon the
dominant tenement, such as servants, guests, visitors, labourers,
etc
.”
The interpretation I have reached would thus appear to accord with
the common-law position.
[16]
In certain instances, the owner’s consent might not have to be
expressly given, as
it could be regarded as implied from previous
approvals or a connection with the owner or someone else with a right
to be on the
Wildepaardejacht farm. In other instances, the owner of
Wildepaardejacht farm, or a mandated representative, might have to
give
specific consent; but even then, it could be implied in that
consent that the person in question (for example, a contractor, or
a
business acquaintance) could himself request another person to join
him (for example, a subcontractor, or an employee or contact
of the
businessperson).
[17]
It would also not seem to make a difference whether the “
invitee
”
would be paying the owner of the dominant tenement for the right to
access and use the property, or a portion thereof, or
whether he or
she would be enjoying the property without charge. Thus, if the owner
of the property agreed to some couples staying
in rooms on the
property, it would be of no moment whether the couples were friends
of the owner, or friends of friends, or strangers
who were being
permitted to stay over in return for the payment of a fee.
[18]
Indeed, it would seem that the servitude was intended to facilitate
the business of the
owner of the Wildepaardejacht farm, in which case
the persons using the servitude road would, in many instances, either
be charging
the owner or being charged by it. This is illustrated by
the mention in clause 3.1 of the fact that the
permitted use “shall
include
access and egress by means of any type of vehicle that may be
necessary for THE DOMINANT OWNER to conduct its activities
on THE
DOMINANT PROPERTY from time to time
”
.
While I acknowledge that the last part of that quoted excerpt may be
read as referring to the “
type of
vehicle
”
(rather than the
identity of the persons driving the vehicles), the words nevertheless
indicate that what was intended was for the
servitude to allow the
owner of the dominant property to conduct its business activities on
the Wildepaardejacht farm.
[19]
As indicated by the example given in paragraph
[17]
above, I think that the wording of the
servitude would comfortably cover the four couples (and up to
8 persons) who might occupy
the guest cottages, or chalets,
on
the Wildepaardejacht farm
which are the subject of
the application for technical approval. The parties must surely have
contemplated that couples might stay
over at Wildepaardejacht at the
invitation of the owner, and use the servitude road to access and
egress the property, and it would
make no difference as far as the
use of the servitude road is concerned whether the guests were
friends, or friends of friends,
and if the latter, whether they paid
to stay at the dominant property or were allowed to do so for free;
and it could thus also
make no difference if the guests were members
of the public who had been allowed to stay at the property in return
for payment
of a fee.
[20]
The scenario contemplated by the application for a
consent use so that a farm building could be used as a function venue
is not
as clearcut, given that, in the case of a wedding, for
example, permission would be given to the bridal couple and their
families
and whichever guests they choose to invite and are able to
attend, and so the consent for some of the attendees would be more
indirect
(and extend to persons whose identities could well not be
known to the owner). The particular kind of business activity
contemplated
by the consent use might also not have been envisaged at
the time that the servitude was agreed. Those kinds of considerations
would nevertheless not seem to make a difference in principle. For
the persons attending the dominant tenement would still be doing
so
with the permission of Wildepaardejacht and would moreover be doing
so in furtherance of the business activities of the owner.
[21]
What remains to be considered is whether the use of the
Wildepaardejacht farm as a function
venue would necessarily mean that
the resultant use of the servitude road would not be “
in a
reasonable and civilised manner
”, or thus
civiliter
modo
. (This question does not arise in relation to the use of
chalets by a maximum of four couples, as that use would not be heavy
enough
to even potentially raise concerns about the reasonableness of
the use in the abstract.)
[22]
The approval granted by the original decision – which permitted
the function venue
to accommodate 216 guests for an unlimited number
of functions every month – could conceivably have meant that
the burden
on the servitude road would be so heavy and so disruptive
to the owner of the servient tenement that the Municipality could
never
reasonably have concluded that the usage would be “
reasonable
and civilised
”, or in accordance with the intention of the
parties when the servitude was agreed. One cannot, however, in my
view, conclude
that the more limited consent use approval granted on
appeal – which was for 80 guests for no more than four
functions per
month – would necessarily be unreasonable, or
offend the terms of the servitude. It may be that, in certain
instances, the
persons using the servitude for purposes of attending
a wedding, would not do so in a reasonable or civilised manner. It
might
even turn out that a good number of wedding guests do not
respect the
civiliter modo
requirement. But, in that case,
Mocke Investments would have to seek redress with reference to actual
incidents and concrete factual
examples. The relief sought might also
not necessarily involve curtailing the use of the Wildepaardejacht
farm as a weekend wedding
venue; but could instead involve relief
such as an order requiring Wildepaardejacht to take steps to ensure
that the servitude
road is used in a reasonable and civilised manner
(for example, by requiring all wedding couples using the function
venue to hire
people carriers to ferry the guests to and from a
parking space to the Wildepaardejacht farm).
[23]
The applicant is therefore not entitled to declaratory orders, as
sought in paragraphs
7.1 and 7.2 of Part B of the amended notice of
motion, or thus orders:
“
Declaring
that:-
7.1
Any use of the agreed servitude road K1299/2000 over Applicant’s
farm 1434, Klein Drakenstein (‘the
servitude road’),
registered in favour of the subject property, by guests and tourists
as envisioned in the Second Respondent’s
application to the
Municipality for consent use and technical approval dated August
2019, which will result from the approvals
referred to in paragraph 1
above (i.e. usage by the guests and service providers of/at the
function venue and four chalets), will
be contrary to the agreed
terms of the servitude road.
7.2
Unless an alternative access route (than the servitude road) to the
function venue and chalets is established,
the use of the servitude
road for those purposes would be unlawful.”
[24]
It follows, too, that the applicant is not entitled to the ancillary
interdictory relief
sought under paragraph 8 of Part B, pertaining to
the use of the servitude road, and the building of the chalets.
# THE REVIEW (PART A)
THE REVIEW (PART A)
## The relevant decisions
for purposes of the review
The relevant decisions
for purposes of the review
[25]
As indicated above, the Municipality approved Wildepaardejacht’s
applications in
January 2021 and dismissed Mocke Investments’
appeal against those approvals at the end of October 2021. Despite
there having
been two decisions adverse to the applicant, the
Municipality, supported by the second respondent, submitted that only
the second
of those (i.e., the appeal decision) could, or should, be
reviewed, as the initial approval had been replaced by the appeal
decision,
given that the appeal involved a “wide appeal”.
The Municipality’s counsel submitted in this regard that:
“
Consequently,
as a matter of law, the initial decision no longer stands or has any
legal effect and cannot be set aside on review
as the effect of a
wide appeal is that there was a complete rehearing and
reconsideration of the initial decision and that the
appeal decision
replaced the initial decision. Thus the only operative decision which
is capable of review is the appeal decision.”
[26]
While it is correct that, after an appeal hearing
de novo
, the
appeal decision will supersede the original decision, that does not
mean that, where there is a wide appeal, it would not
be competent to
set aside the initial decision. Nor would it in the usual course
suffice to set aside only the appeal decision
if the original
decision was also adverse to the party bringing the review. For, if
the appeal decision were to be set aside and
declared invalid, then
the original decision (which had hitherto been replaced by the appeal
decision) would revive; and so there
would still be an extant, and
legally binding, decision contrary to the interests of the applicant
unless the initial decision
were to be set aside as well.
[27]
The position in this
regard was neatly summarised in
Wings
Park
,
[12]
where Plasket J (as he then was) stated:
[13]
“
[33] When a
decision favourable to an applicant has been taken at first instance,
but reversed on internal appeal, … it is
only the appellate
decision that needs to be reviewed: if the review is successful, the
decision at first instance will be revived.
. . .
[34]
When an
applicant has suffered an unfavourable decision at first instance and
it is confirmed on appeal
, the situation is somewhat different.
Both decisions must be taken on review and, for the applicant to
achieve success, usually both decisions will have to be set aside
. .
. . In these circumstances, had only one decision been attacked,
whether at first instance or on appeal, the other would have
remained
in place
.
…
[46] My conclusion
from the cases I have discussed is that, as a general rule, when an
administrative action is subject to an internal
appeal, review
proceedings must, at least, be directed at the appellate decision.
Whether it is only the appellate decision that may be challenged
may depend on the nature of the decision at first instance and the
remedy sought by the applicant.
In most instances, however,
both decisions will have to be challenged.
….”
[28]
Those dicta in
Wings
Park
have
been endorsed by the Supreme Court of Appeal (
SCA
),
including in
South
Durban Community Alliance
,
[14]
a case in which the applicant (referred to by the SCA as “
the
Alliance
”
)
sought to review and set aside a decision of an MEC on appeal, but
had not sought a review of the decision of the Department which
had
granted the authorisation. The SCA (which raised the failure to
challenge the Department’s decision as a preliminary
issue)
noted that: “
Because
the Alliance had only attacked the appellate decision of the MEC, the
decision of the Department at first instance, would
ordinarily have
remained in place
.”
The SCA also later stated that: “
This
may well have been the kind of matter, where both decisions should
have been challenged. That, in and of itself, ought to have
led to
the failure of the Alliance’s application before the court
below
” –
though
the Court did not make a “
firm
finding in that regard
”
,
seemingly because it considered that the appeal should be dismissed
because the review anyway lacked substantive merit.
[29]
The approach in
Wings
Park
and
South
Durban Community Alliance
was
subsequently followed by the SCA in
Black
Eagle Project
,
[15]
where a review application in which the applicant had failed
timeously to challenge the original decision of the Department head
(only bringing the review against the MEC’s appeal decision)
was dismissed purely on this basis.
[16]
[30]
In
Wings
Park
and
South
Durban Community Alliance
,
as well as
Black
Eagle Project
,
the appeal decisions were made pursuant to a “wide appeal”.
[17]
That an appeal may have involved a full rehearing thus does not in
and of itself mean that the original decision could, and should,
not
be challenged as well. That is also confirmed by
Tayob
v Ermelo Road Transportation Board
,
[18]
where the appellate hearing involved a “
re-hearing
in the fullest sense
”
,
[19]
and Appellate Division set aside both the initial decision and the
appeal decision which upheld it.
[31]
There may be
circumstances where a failure to challenge both the appellate
decision and the original decision is not fatal to a
review. For
example, in
Sewpersadh
[20]
–
a case in which
the applicant had only sought an order setting aside the appeal
board’s decision, and not the initial decision
(which in that
case was by the Treasury) – the SCA remarked upon the problems
that the applicant had created for himself
by doing so,
[21]
but found that the difficulties could be addressed in that case by
the appeal board’s decision being substituted on review
with an
order which overturned the Treasury’s initial decision (as the
parties agreed could occur). As indicated above,
the normal
position is however that, where both the original and appellate
decisions are adverse to the applicant, both decisions
should be
challenged, irrespective of whether the appeal decision is the result
of a wide appeal.
[32]
The applicant in this case was thus correct to challenge both the
initial decision (of
a delegated official) and the appellate decision
(of the Executive Mayor), and both decisions will therefore be
addressed below
to the extent appropriate.
## The Municipality’sin limineobjections
The Municipality’s
in limine
objections
[33]
The Municipality submitted, as preliminary points of objection, that
the review should
be dismissed because there was an unreasonable
delay in its institution, as well as because it was a disguised
appeal. Neither
submission was, in my view, well-founded.
[34]
While the appeal decision
was delivered on 28 October 2021, the applicant appears only to have
learned about it at the end of January
2022. Even as late as 28
January 2022, a municipal official with whom the applicant’s
representative met in an attempt to
establish the progress of the
appeal advised that the appeal decision had not yet been taken. The
application was launched on 23
May 2022, some four months after
applicant had been informed of the appeal outcome, and thus well
within the 180-day (maximum)
period prescribed by section 7(1) of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (
PAJA
).
I do not think that it can fairly be said that this period of almost
four months was unreasonable, more especially given the
complexity
and detail of this application. The Municipality can also hardly
complain about the time taken to prepare the application
given that
it took some six-and-a-half months to deliver its answering affidavit
after receipt of the applicant’s supplementary
founding
affidavit. In any event, as was noted in
Joubert
Galpin Searle
,
[22]
in circumstances where judicial review proceedings are brought within
180 days, a respondent needs to show exceptional circumstances
in
order to non-suit the applicant on the basis of unreasonable delay.
The Municipality did not make out such a case. Nor did either
the
Municipality or the second respondent (which did not itself advance
such an objection) demonstrate any prejudice arising out
of the
timing of the bringing of the application. This defence is therefore
rejected.
[35]
The Municipality’s contention that the review was a disguised
appeal is not a threshold
ground for rejecting the application. The
applicant has couched its review with reference to recognised grounds
of review. Inasmuch
as certain of those grounds go to the manner in
which the impugned decisions were reached, there can be no serious
suggestion that
they are appeal submissions masquerading as review
grounds; while whether the other complaints are really repackaged
grounds of
appeal is not something that can be considered in the
abstract, and must instead be assessed with reference to the merits
of the
individual challenges.
## The applicant’s
grounds of review
The applicant’s
grounds of review
[36]
The grounds of review advanced in the applicant’s supplemented
founding papers were,
in broad summary that:
36.1.
the process was procedurally unfair;
36.2.
the decision-makers misdirected themselves by not considering the
terms of the deed of servitude;
36.3.
the appeal authority misconceived the nature of the applicant’s
objections;
36.4.
the decision-makers did not properly consider:
36.4.1. the
consequences of increased traffic on the servitude road over the
applicant’s property as a result
of the approvals, including
the noise and safety ramifications;
36.4.2. the
security concerns raised by the increased traffic;
36.4.3. the
noise levels at the function venue;
36.5.
there was a reasonable apprehension of bias regarding the appeal
decision.
[37]
While not all these
grounds were mentioned by the applicant’s counsel in his
initial argument,
[23]
he
expressly stated that none was abandoned. I am therefore required to
address all of them to some extent, though I shall merely
refer to
the bias argument (which was not pressed by the applicant in
argument) in the context of the respondents’ submission
that it
was so devoid of merit that it would purportedly justify a punitive
adverse costs order.
[38]
Two of the review grounds can be disposed of at the outset.
[39]
It is unnecessary to deal
at any length with the second ground identified above:
viz
.
the submission that the terms of the deed of servitude were not
considered. This point appears to have merit with regard to the
initial decision (as the Municipality effectively concedes), but not
the appeal decision. But either way, the real issue is whether
the
deed of servitude contemplated, and permitted, the kind of vehicular
use that would be the inevitable consequence of the approvals.
If it
did not, then – as I understood the respondents to accept –
the approvals were reviewable as the Municipality
(which states that
it approached the matter on the basis that the servitude was
consistent with the traffic use associated with
the approvals) would
have made a material mistake of law, and also reached an irrational
decision, given that the Wildepaardejacht
farm cannot at present be
accessed by road by any other means. On the other hand, if the
servitude did not present any difficulties
for the use of the
Wildepaardejacht farm as a function venue, or for the guest cottages
built thereon – as I have held above
– then any failure
by a decision-maker to consider the terms of the deed of servitude
would have been immaterial and occasioned
the applicant no prejudice,
and so would not warrant the setting aside of the decision.
[24]
The interpretation of the servitude earlier in this judgment is
therefore dispositive of this issue.
[40]
The third ground – which only relates to the appeal decision,
given that the applicant
was not able to comment on the applications
prior to the original decision being made, as a result of not being
apprised of the
applications until after they had been approved –
can also be dealt with briefly. The applicant essentially relies in
this
regard on the memorandum which served before the appeal
authority. However, the passage which the applicant has focused on in
this
regard involved a summary of the second respondent’s
submissions, rather than reflecting the Municipality’s
understanding
of the applicant’s contentions. The relevant
enquiry in any event seems to be whether the applicant’s
objections were
duly considered by the appellate authority and
whether the appellate authority’s treatment thereof was
reasonable and rational.
I therefore do not think this review
ground warrants separate consideration.
[41]
Before addressing the other review grounds, it is important to
reiterate that both the
initial decision and the appellate decision
contained separate approvals – pertaining to (i) the
consent use sought
for the function venue, and (ii) the
technical approval sought for the four chalets – which were
conceptually distinct.
While all components of the initial and appeal
decisions were contained in one document in each case, it would
therefore have been
possible for the Municipality to have approved
only one of the applications (either the consent use application
relating to the
function venue; or the application for technical
approval for visitors’ accommodation). A reviewable
irregularity in relation
to one of the applications would also not
necessarily vitiate the other.
### Procedural fairness
Procedural fairness
[42]
The applicant’s case in this regard is, in summary, that:
42.1.
notice of the applications was sent to a P.O. Box address (P.O. Box
11, Huguenot) which belonged to the
previous owner of the applicant’s
farm (Mr West), rather than the address provided for Mocke
Investments in CIPC’s
records (an address in Pretoria, to which
their correspondence was then generally sent) and the applicant was
therefore deprived
of the opportunity of commenting on the
applications prior to the initial decision being made; and
42.2.
the applicant was first able to communicate its concerns and
objections about the applications during the
appeal process, when it
was placed under considerable time pressure as a result of not being
apprised of the applications before.
[43]
The applicant also complains, albeit faintly, that its replying
submissions in the appeal
were not considered by the appellate
authority, though this would not appear to warrant separate
consideration.
[44]
The Municipality has disputed that there was not proper notification
of the application,
arguing that it sufficed that it was sent to
Mocke Investments by registered mail (albeit to an address which was
not then an address
of the company). The Municipality does not
however appear to set much store by that contention and instead
focuses its attention
on a submission that any procedural unfairness
was cured on appeal, given that the appeal constituted a wide appeal.
[45]
Wildepaardejacht seeks to defend the procedural fairness of the
original decision by (i) pointing
out the applications were
advertised on the notice boards of all municipal libraries and
municipal offices, as well as on the municipal
website; and
(ii) noting that the registered mail was apparently collected by
Mr Kriel, who had previously been an employee
of Mr West and had
thereafter become an “
employee/representative of the
applicant
”. The second respondent also submits that section
13 of the Zoning Scheme By-law does not require any notification of a
technical
approval application to be given to other property owners,
and that section 45 of the Planning By-law does not mention consent
use applications among the applications for which public notice must
be given. The second respondent submits, too, that any procedural
unfairness with regard to the original decision was cured on appeal.
[46]
That Mr Kriel may have collected the registered mail from the P.O.
Box which (then) belonged
to Mr West, and handed the post to Mr West,
does not mean that the applicant should be deemed to have had
notification of the applications.
The fact is that the Municipality
sent the notice to the wrong address, and, as a consequence, it did
not come to the applicant’s
attention and was instead (at best)
received by Mr West, who for whatever reason did not pass the notice
on to Mocke Investments.
Mr Kriel’s collecting of post sent to
Mr West’s P.O. Box is thus, to my mind, irrelevant.
[47]
That the notices were published on the notice boards of municipal
libraries and municipal
offices, as well as on the municipal website
is also not sufficient – as indeed the Municipality
acknowledged when requiring
personal service in this instance. There
was no reason for Mocke Investments to suspect that there was
something of cardinal importance
to them on the notice boards.
Particularly when an owner is based in another province, posting on a
notice board would be of little
to no use.
[48]
The fact that section 45 of the Planning By-law does not require
public notice to be given
of consent applications is also not
dispositive. The question in each case is whether the rights or
legitimate expectations of
a third party could be materially and
adversely affected by a decision by the Municipality to approve an
application. In this case,
Mocke Investments, at least, were entitled
to notice of the consent use application, given the impact that it
could have on them,
both as the owner of an adjoining farm, and in
the light of the road servitude which was (and is) the sole means for
a vehicle
to access the Wildepaardejacht farm from a public road.
That was again recognised by the Municipality; hence its requiring
that
Wildepaardejacht send a notification to Mocke Investments and
the other owners of neighbouring farms.
[49]
The original decision in the consent use application was accordingly
procedurally unfair
(as the Municipality seemed to appreciate). That
unfairness was moreover exacerbated by the fact that the original
decision-maker
stated in his reasons that one of the factors that
justified his decision was that there were no objections – when
that was
in fact attributable not to consent by interested and
affected persons, but instead the absence of notification to them.
[50]
The technical use application would however appear to stand on a
different footing. I agree
with the second respondent that there was
no need for neighbours to be given notice of that application. Given
the very limited
additional use of the servitude road which could be
expected to result from the short-term letting of four chalets, the
existence
of the servitude also did not constitute an independent
reason for notifying Mocke Investments.
[51]
The key question would consequently appear to be whether the
procedural unfairness of the
original decision in respect of the
consent use application was cured on appeal, as the Municipality and
Wildepaardejacht contended.
[52]
As Plasket J noted in
Wings
Park
,
[25]
South African courts at one stage took the view
[26]
that, as held by Megarry J in
Leary
v National Union of Vehicle Builders
,
[27]
“
a
failure of natural justice in the trial body cannot be cured by a
sufficiency of natural justice in an appellate body
”
(because, “
[i]f
the rules and the law combine to give the member the right to a fair
trial and the right of appeal, why should he be told that
he ought to
be satisfied with an unjust trial and fair appeal?
”
).
However, just as the “
general
rule
”
espoused
in
Leary
has been qualified in the
United Kingdom (beginning with
Calvin
v Carr
[28]
),
so has there been a reconsideration of the approach in South Africa.
In
Slagment
v Building Construction
,
[29]
the Appellate Division agreed with the Privy Council’s
qualification of
Leary
in
Calvin
v Carr
,
with Nicholas AJA stating that “
[i]t
is not possible to lay down a general rule in this connection
”
.
In similar vein, the SCA in
Scenematic
[30]
held that whether or not an appeal can cure a failure of natural
justice is fact-specific and “
[n]o
purpose would be served by attempting to formulate some all-embracing
rule
”
.
[53]
What must therefore be considered is whether, on the particular facts
of the present case,
the procedural unfairness at first instance with
regard to the consent use application was remedied on appeal.
[54]
That the Planning By-law may contemplate a wide appeal (something
emphasized by the respondents)
is not sufficient to show that the
procedural unfairness of the original decision was cured by the
appeal process. One must instead
look at what happened during the
appeal itself. And when that is done it is evident that the appeal
process was not only substantially
informed by a memorandum from the
same officials who were involved in the initial decision, but built
upon and relied heavily on
the initial decision, with the reasons for
the appeal decision, and the conditions of approval, being largely
the same as those
of the original decision.
[55]
The relevant portion of the minutes of the appeal authority meeting
of 28 October
2021 – which commences with the statement
that “
This Item was
unanimously resolved
by the Executive Mayor that
[
sic
]” (bold in
original), a puzzling recordal when a decision is made by one person
– states that the three appeals against
the initial decision
were dismissed and that the conditions in the initial decision were
to be amended in three respects, before
recording in paragraph 5
that:
“
The reasons for
the decision be as follows:
5.1
The appellants brought no new information to light that could
fundamentally affect the outcome of the application;
5.2
The matter regarding the bridge has been adequately addressed by the
applicant;
5.3
The matter regarding the access servitude has been adequately
addressed by the applicant with the provision
of the relevant title
deed and relevant conditions;
5.4
Function venues are considered to be a suitable secondary land use to
that of agriculture;
5.5
Countless examples of such activities can be found within the
Drakenstein area, as well as in the Cape Winelands
District;
5.6
The proposal will not negatively impact on the existing agricultural
activities on the property;
5.7
The proposal will strengthen the agri-tourism character of the
property;
5.8
The development proposal will not to a loss
[
sic
]
in
viable agricultural land;
5.9
All relevant internal and external departments consented to the
application;
5.10 The
proposal is considered to be consistent with the Drakenstein
Municipality Spatial Development Framework; and
5.11 The
conditions in the provisional letter dated 21 January 2021, with the
exception of Condition 5.5, be adhered to.”
[56]
Those reasons were in large part identical to the reasons given by Mr
Strijdom, the original
decision maker, and thus indicated that the
Executive Mayor associated himself to a considerable extent with the
conclusions of
the authorised employee. Seven of the nine clauses of
Mr Strijdom’s reasons were repeated, with four new clauses
(clauses
5.1, 5.2, 5.3 and 5.11) being added. The first appellate
reason moreover conveys that the appellants’ submissions were
not
considered to raise anything which warranted revisiting the
delegated official’s decision. It is thus evident that the
original
decision formed the baseline for the appeal. This was
despite the fact that the original decision was not only reached
without
any input from the appellants or any other member of the
public (a factor deemed worthy of mention in the authorised
employee’s
reasons, clause 5.7 of which stated that “
No
objections were received as part of the public participation
process
”); but was taken without due consideration of
relevant facts. The appellate reasons are thus, in my view,
incompatible with
the submission that there was a total rehearing on
appeal.
[57]
While the appeal process
could theoretically have involved a complete reconsideration, without
any potential predisposition towards
endorsing the decision of the
original decision-maker, that did not occur in this instance
[31]
– with the denial of an oral hearing to Mocke Investments (as
it had requested) further limiting the possibility of a full
rehearing. The original decision, made without the input of directly
affected parties like Mocke Investments (and on the erroneous
assumption that such parties supported the application), materially
influenced the appeal decision. It would appear, too, that
Mocke
Investments were prejudiced by only having one opportunity to make
submissions, and a very limited time (the remaining duration
of the
period within which it could submit an appeal, which was less than a
third of the time which an interested party should
have had to object
and appeal) within which to analyse the application and the initial
decision, and seek expert input.
[58]
I therefore do not consider that the appeal decision remedied the
procedural unfairness
of the original decision. That procedural
unfairness instead, in my view, tainted the whole process. Both the
appeal decision and
the original decision in the consent use
application must therefore be set aside on the basis of section
6(2)(
c
) of PAJA.
### The alleged failure to
pay due consideration to the noise at the function venue
The alleged failure to
pay due consideration to the noise at the function venue
[59]
It is convenient to consider next the review ground based on the
municipal decision-makers’
alleged failure to pay due
consideration to the likely noise at the function venue. That review
ground is again only of relevance
to the consent use application, and
not the technical approval application (which would not be likely to
result in any discernible
increase in noise for neighbouring
properties).
[60]
It is common ground that, in response to an objection from another
neighbour about the
noise, the acoustic engineers commissioned by
Wildepaardejacht to analyse the likely noise at the function venue
(Mackenzie Hoy
Consulting Acoustics Engineers) recommended the
completion of a Noise Management Plan by a registered professional
acoustics engineer,
and that this Plan should incorporate various
components – including that a fixed sound system and limiter
should be installed
at the function room; that only the fixed sound
system should be used in the venue; and that the roof specification
and the glazing
specification should be reviewed and, if needs be,
measures recommended to avoid noise breakout. Wildepaardejacht has
agreed with
that conclusion. Yet those recommendations were not
reflected in the conditions imposed by the appeal decision.
[61]
The Land Use Planning Memo of 26 October 2021, which served before
the appeal authority,
states in its concluding paragraph that: “
The
department is of the opinion that the objections have adequately been
addressed through specialist studies and reports by the
applicant,
and if the approval is upheld, the development may proceed
.”
However, the specialist study / report which assessed the noise at
the function venue could only reasonably and sensibly
have been
regarded as addressing the noise-related objection if its findings
were embodied in a condition, or conditions, with
which the second
respondent was obliged to comply. Without conditions to that effect,
the objections, and the acknowledged problems,
were plainly not
addressed. By not imposing the recommended condition(s), the appeal
decision was thus reviewable by virtue of
the appeal authority having
failed to apply his mind and also having made an unreasonable, indeed
irrational, decision.
[62]
The second respondent, acknowledging the merit of the noise
recommendations by Mackenzie
Hoy, has undertaken in its affidavits to
comply therewith. But that does not address the defect in the
decisions themselves. Nor
would it be adequate to protect the
objectors, who would not necessarily be able to enforce such an
undertaking, and would anyway
not be able to rely on it against a
subsequent owner of the property, given that it does not confer a
real right.
[63]
The caution from the SCA
against interfering with an administrative decision merely on the
basis that the decision-maker should
have weighed up considerations
differently, and thereby reached a different decision, is also not
apposite here. For, as noted
in the next section of this judgment, a
distinction has been drawn by the SCA between that kind of situation
and one where (as
in this instance) a functionary palpably ignores,
or makes an error as to, material facts, or acts irrationally.
[32]
[64]
The consent use approval therefore falls to be reviewed and set aside
on this basis as
well, this time in terms of section 6(2)(e)(iii),
6(2)(f)(ii)(cc) and (dd), and 6(2)(h) of PAJA.
### The alleged failure to
pay due consideration to the impact of the increased traffic over the
applicant’s farm
The alleged failure to
pay due consideration to the impact of the increased traffic over the
applicant’s farm
[65]
I turn now to consider the applicant’s concerns about the
increased traffic on the
servitude road over its property, which lie
at the heart of its review. The applicant alleges that the traffic
will have unacceptable
noise, safety, dust and security implications
for its property. It raises the spectre of cars with potentially
rowdy or boisterous
occupants leaving a wedding function shortly
before midnight and then driving down the servitude road some
thirty-three metres
from the bedrooms in their house and twenty-four
metres away from their employees’ cottages. The applicant also
alleges that
it will now be more difficult to ascertain whether
vehicles using the servitude road after sunset (when farming
activities would
typically stop) would be travelling to or from
Wildepaardejacht farm for legitimate purposes, or instead be driving
on the applicant’s
farm with nefarious intent. And it further
complains about allegedly increased safety risks and the possibility
of excessive dust
arising from the greater vehicular use of the
servitude road.
[66]
A distinction must again be drawn between the application for
technical approval to build
four accommodation units (for a maximum
of two guests each) and the application for consent use for a
function venue.
[67]
The technical approval, which is regulated by section 13 of the
Zoning Scheme By-law, could
“
only be refused
”, in
terms of section 13(2)(f) thereof, “
if it does not adhere to
the parameters of this Scheme, or is not permitted in terms of other
applicable law, or conflicts with
other adopted regulations or
standards, or is likely to lead to development which is hazardous or
unsafe for occupants of the land
unit or the general public
”.
There is no suggestion that the desired technical approval –
which was for “
visitors’ accommodation
” as
defined in section 1 of the Zoning Scheme By-law – did not
adhere to the parameters of the Scheme (indeed, the
proposed
visitors’ accommodation was well within the maximum allowed by
section 157(5) of the Zoning Scheme By-law: namely,
7 bedrooms
and 14 people). Nor is it contended that there was any inconsistency
with any other applicable law, or other regulations
or standards. It
could also not reasonably be contended that the four accommodation
units, or the use thereof or access thereto,
would be hazardous or
unsafe for the Mockes and their employees. The technical approval
sought by the second respondent (for visitors’
accommodation
for a maximum of 4 people) would only minimally increase the use of
the servitude road and could scarcely raise any
noise, safety or
security concerns. It was presumably because of the very limited
impact of even the maximum permissible visitors’
accommodation
permitted by the technical approval that section 157(3) of the Zoning
Scheme By-law is merely concerned with the
“
adverse impact,
such as, but not limited to, noise, traffic congestion, pollution,
emissions …
” which might arise from “
visitors’
facilities
” (as defined), but does not refer to “
visitors’
accommodation
”. The review grounds addressed under this
heading would therefore (as with the noise-related grounds) seem to
have no application
for the technical approval to permit the proposed
visitors’ accommodation.
[68]
It is also appropriate to differentiate between the original decision
of January 2021,
by Mr H.G. Strijdom, the Manager Land Use Planning
and Surveying at the Municipality, and the appeal decision of October
2021,
by the Executive Mayor, in this regard.
[69]
The original decision contained a significant misdirection in that it
gave authorisation
(in the condition included under clause 3.3) for
the function venue to accommodate 216 guests for an unlimited number
of functions,
despite the applicant having stated in correspondence
with the Municipality that it only sought approval for 80 guests for
no more
than four functions per month. Mr Strijdom furthermore failed
to consider the considerable traffic and other impact on the
servitude
road, and thus the applicant’s farm, of an approval
which would permit a function with over 200 guests every day. And, by
virtue of his misdirection regarding the potential number of guests,
he obviously did not consider the impact on the servitude
and the
applicant’s farm of the number of guests actually envisaged.
The consent use approval in the original decision (which
was moreover
reached without apparent awareness of what the servitude entailed)
would therefore be reviewable for this reason alone.
[70]
The appeal decision stands on a different footing. The appeal
decision amended clause 3.3
of the initial approval letter of
21 January 2021 (which stated that: “
No more than 216
guests shall be accommodated within the function venue
”) to
make it read as follows: “
That no more than 80 guests be
allowed at a time and no more than 4 events per month
”. The
appellate authority moreover had the benefit of a traffic report
(from Sturgeon Consulting, dated 18 February
2020) and comments
on a second traffic assessment report (also from Sturgeon
Consulting), although this report was seemingly not
itself before the
Executive Mayor.
[71]
To some extent, the applicant’s complaint is that the appeal
authority should have
reached a different conclusion on the facts
before him, and more particularly given more weight to some factors
and accorded less
importance to others. Insofar as it seeks to
advance such a case, its submissions are unsustainable. For, as is
well-established,
an administrative decision cannot be reviewed on
that basis.
[72]
This was explained by the
SCA in the following (often-quoted) passage in
Clairison’s
:
[33]
“
[20] It has
always been the law, and we see no reason to think that PAJA has
altered the position that the weight or lack of it
to be attached to
the various considerations that go to making up a decision, is that
given by the decision-maker. As it was stated
by
Baxter
:
[34]
'The court will merely
require the decision-maker to take the relevant considerations into
account; it will not prescribe the weight
that must be accorded to
each consideration, for to do so could constitute a usurpation of the
decision-maker's discretion.'
[21] That was
expressed by this court as follows in
Durban
Rent Board and Another v Edgemount Investments Ltd
[35]
in relation to the
discretion of a rent board to determine a reasonable rent:
'In determining what
is a reasonable rent it is entitled and ought, to take into
consideration all matters which a reasonable man
would take into
consideration in order to arrive at a fair and just decision in all
the circumstances of the case. . . . How much
weight a rent board
will attach to particular factors or how far it will allow any
particular factor to affect its eventual determination
of a
reasonable rent is a matter for it to decide in the exercise of the
discretion entrusted to it and, so long as it acts bona
fide, a Court
of law cannot interfere.'
[22] What was said in
Durban
Rent Board
is
consistent with present constitutional principle and we find no need
to reformulate what was said pertinently on the issue that
arises in
this case. The law remains, as we see it, that when a functionary is
entrusted with a discretion, the weight to be attached
to particular
factors, or how far a particular factor affects the eventual
determination of the issue, is a matter for the functionary
to
decide, and as he acts in good faith (and reasonably and rationally)
a court of law cannot interfere. That seems to us to be
but one
manifestation of the broader principles explained — in a
context that does not arise in this case
[36]
—
in
Bel
Porto School Governing Body and Others v Premier, Western Cape, and
Another
[37]
and
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Others
.
[38]
”
[73]
Also relevant is the
following passage from
South
Durban Community Alliance
,
which was endorsed by the SCA in
Peermont
Global (North West)
,
[39]
where Swain JA stated (at para [23]):
“
I consider that
the present state of the law in this regard, is correctly set out in
the following
dictum
,
in the case of
Airports
Company South Africa v Tswelokgotso Trading Enterprises CC
2019 (1) SA 204
(GJ) para 12:
‘
In sum, a court
may interfere where functionary exercises a competence to decide
facts but in doing so fails to get the facts right
in rendering a
decision, provided the facts are material, were established, and met
a threshold of objective verifiability. That
is to say, an error as
to material facts that are not objectively contestable is a
reviewable error. The exercise of judgement
by the functionary in
considering the facts, such as the assessment of contested evidence
or the weighing of evidence, is not reviewable,
even if the court
would have reached a different view on these matters were it vested
with original competence to find the facts.’
”
[74]
According to the Municipality’s answering affidavit, the appeal
authority (the Executive
Mayor) paid due attention to the traffic
impact with reference to the factual and expert evidence presented to
him; and concluded
that the applicant’s fears appeared to be
unfounded, or at least exaggerated, and that the adverse impact would
be within
permissible bounds. In the circumstances, so the
Municipality submitted, there is no basis to interfere with this
decision on this
score.
[75]
The Municipality’s version in its answering affidavit was
however entirely hearsay.
It was merely advanced by Mr Johaar, who
has stated that he is the Executive Director: Corporate Services at
the Municipality.
Mr Johaar has no personal knowledge of the
decisions. According to the minutes of the “
Drakenstein
Municipal Appeal Authority Meeting
” of 28 October 2021 –
the meeting at which the appeal decision was taken – Mr Johaar
was not even present at
that meeting (which was attended by the City
Manager, the Executive Director: Planning Services and Human
Settlements, three Senior
Managers (including Mr Strijdom, the
authorised employee who made the initial decision) and a member of
the Office of the City
Manager). Nor was the memo from the
Municipality’s Land Use Planning and Surveying Section, dated
26 October 2021, which
gave a short synopsis of the Land Use
Planning’s Department view of the appeal, addressed to Mr
Johaar. There was no affidavit,
whether confirmatory or otherwise,
from the Executive Mayor. Nor was there an affidavit from Mr
Strijdom, or any other municipal
official. The Municipality’s
response on this score was thus, at best, an uncorroborated
second-hand version. That its answering
affidavit contained a general
request from Mr Johaar in its introductory section “
that any
hearsay evidence relied upon be admitted in terms of the
Law of
Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988
” could also hardly assist
the Municipality in the light of its failure to motivate why any
particular hearsay evidence should
be admitted in terms of
section 3
of that Act. Nor, in any event, was any application made by the
Municipality at the hearing for the admission of any hearsay
evidence.
[76]
Fortunately for the Municipality, the applicant agreed, in the
context of the filing of
the further submissions on procedural
unfairness, to the Municipality being afforded an opportunity to
remedy its hearsay problems.
The Municipality duly delivered five
confirmatory affidavits, including from Mr Poole, the erstwhile
Executive Mayor, and Mr Strijdom,
the Municipality’s Manager:
Land Development Manager, who was the original decision-maker. The
Municipality’s version
in Mr Johaar’s affidavit has thus
been confirmed by persons with firsthand knowledge thereof.
[77]
That nevertheless does
not mean that the Court is necessarily bound to accept the
Municipality’s assertions that all relevant
traffic
impact-related considerations were taken into account when the appeal
decision was made. The Municipality is, after all,
precluded
from
attempting to improve the appellate authority’s reasons by
virtue of the well-established rule that administrators are
bound by
the reasons they give at the time of their decision,
[40]
and
“
[a]ny
further reasons are irrelevant
”
.
[41]
It
would thus be impermissible for the Municipality itself, after the
fact, to recruit new reasons as a purported justification
for its
appellate authority’s decision.
[42]
Any
such reasons would, in the words of the SCA, “
in
truth … not [be] the true reasons for the decision, but rather
an ex post facto rationalization of a bad decision
”
.
[43]
[78]
It is accordingly necessary to consider the reasons provided in the
minutes of the appeal
authority meeting of 28 October 2021, as well
as the other recordals in those minutes.
[79]
As noted in paragraph [55] above, the appeal authority’s
reasons are contained in
paragraph 5 of the relevant portion of the
minutes, where it is indicated that:
“
The reasons for
the decision be as follows:
5.1
The appellants brought no new information to light that could
fundamentally affect the outcome of the application;
5.2
The matter regarding the bridge has been adequately addressed by the
applicant;
5.3
The matter regarding the access servitude has been adequately
addressed by the applicant with the provision
of the relevant title
deed and relevant conditions;
5.4
Function venues are considered to be a suitable secondary land use to
that of agriculture;
5.5
Countless examples of such activities can be found within the
Drakenstein area, as well as in the Cape Winelands
District;
5.6
The proposal will not negatively impact on the existing agricultural
activities on the property;
5.7
The proposal will strengthen the agri-tourism character of the
property;
5.8
The development proposal will not to a loss
[
sic
]
in
viable agricultural land;
5.9
All relevant internal and external departments consented to the
application;
5.10 The
proposal is considered to be consistent with the Drakenstein
Municipality Spatial Development Framework; and
5.11 The
conditions in the provisional letter dated 21 January 2021, with the
exception of Condition 5.5, be adhered to.”
[80]
There is no mention in the appeal reasons of any assessment of
traffic impact, nor of any
consideration of any other potentially
deleterious effects of increased traffic (such as noise, dust or
danger to pedestrians);
nor, concomitantly, of any conclusions
reached about the applicant’s claims in this regard. While it
is unclear what the
third clause of the reasons (clause 5.3) was
intended to convey, the mere “
provision of the …
title deed and relevant conditions
[of the access servitude]”
(as referred to therein) did not indicate that the appellate
authority had considered the issues
raised by the applicant, on
appeal, with regard to the likely consequences of the increased
vehicular use of the servitude; merely
that the appellate authority
had been apprised of, and was thus aware of, the terms of the
servitude itself. Nor would adherence
to all but one of the
conditions imposed in the initial decision (something mentioned in
the eleventh clause of the reasons) mean
that the conditions were
thought adequate to address the applicant’s concerns. Those
conditions were after all imposed without
regard to any input from
the applicant (which did not have an opportunity to make
representations to the authorised employee) and
by a delegated
official (the authorised employee) who had misdirected himself in a
crucial respect with regard to the consent use
and did not (and could
not, in the light of the misdirection) properly consider the traffic
impact. The conditions did not address
any traffic, noise or safety
issues. The reason in clause 5.11 moreover overlooked the fact that
condition 3.3 of the initial decision
(which referred to the function
venue being allowed to accommodate up to 216 guests) was plainly
erroneous, and that if it had
remained the traffic impact would
indeed be considerable.
[81]
As mentioned in paragraph [56] above, the appellate authority’s
reasons indicate
that the Executive Mayor associated himself to a
considerable extent with the conclusions of the authorised employee,
whose reasons
were repeated in large measure. The first appellate
reason also indicates that the appeal authority did not consider that
anything
had been raised by the appeals which justified revisiting Mr
Strijdom’s initial decision, even though the original decision
was reached without any input from the appellants or any other member
of the public (and in fact partly justified on that basis,
as clause
5.7 of Mr Strijdom’s reasons indicated) and also involved clear
misdirections. The strong reliance on the delegated
official’s
reasons undermines the allegation that due cognisance was taken of
the new information regarding traffic impact
which was furnished on
appeal.
[82]
The one-page memo from
the Municipality’s Land Use Planning and Surveying Section to
the City Manager, Mr H Barends of Corporate
Services and the
Executive Mayor, dated 26 October 2021, which evidently served before
the appellate authority on 28 October 2021,
also does not directly
mention the need to consider the various impact occasioned by the
increased traffic over the servitude road
attributable to a function
venue.
[44]
[83]
The question of whether the appeal authority properly considered the
consequences, or impact,
of the increased traffic on the servitude
road over the applicant’s property which would be caused by
granting the consent
use is therefore a complicated one –
though I should mention that the applicant’s submissions about
security concerns
raised by the increased traffic did not
appear to warrant much consideration, or thus need to have been
adverted to in the reasons.
As it is unnecessary to make a firm
finding on this issue in the light of my earlier conclusion that the
consent use approvals
should be set aside, I shall therefore not do
so. I merely record that I am not entirely satisfied that the appeal
authority considered
all relevant factors in this regard; and that,
on reconsideration, the reasons should address these issues squarely.
[84]
I should add, too, that it is clearly important that the Municipality
take account of noise,
traffic, and dust issues when assessing the
adverse impact which might arise from the use of agricultural land
for a function venue.
It would seem that an owner of agricultural
land which wants to have a function venue on its land could
potentially (
i
) apply in terms of the Zoning Scheme
By-law for technical approval for a “
visitors’
facility
” (which is defined in section 1 of the By-law as
meaning “
a facility or amenities for visitors such as a
restaurant, shop, farm stall, outdoor market, restroom, recreational
facilities,
function venue, information centre, conference facility,
… or other visitors’ attractions related to the land
unit,
but excludes visitors’ accommodation, hotels or any land
use which requires permission, technical approval or is a consent
use
in that zone
”; or (
ii
) apply for a consent use in
terms of the Planning By-law, read with section 15(1) of the Zoning
Scheme By-law (which states that
“
Consent use applications
are made in terms of the Planning By-law
”) and section 150
of the Zoning Scheme By-law (which lists in tabular form the use
restrictions which apply to agricultural
land, as “
Permitted
”,
“
Technical approval
” or “
Consent
”
uses). As noted above, if application were to be made for technical
approval for a “
visitors’ facility
” (which
could include a function venue), then the Municipality would have to
comply with section 157(3) of the Zoning Scheme
By-law, which
provides that: “
Visitors’ facilities may not have an
adverse impact, such as, but not limited to, noise, traffic
congestion, pollution, emissions or the gathering of large numbers of
people, on surrounding properties, nor may the visitors’
facilities have an adverse impact on any bona fide agricultural
activities on the agricultural enterprise itself or on neighbouring
properties
”. If the second respondent had applied for a
technical approval for a function venue on its farm, it would
therefore have
had to satisfy the Municipality that it did not have
an adverse impact with regard to noise, traffic congestion,
pollution, etc.
on neighbouring properties or adversely affect their
agricultural activities. That consideration would be no less
important, and
may even need to be more closely scrutinised, in the
case of a consent use application.
# THE RELIEF SOUGHT IN THE
REVIEW AND COSTS
THE RELIEF SOUGHT IN THE
REVIEW AND COSTS
## The further relief sought
in the review
The further relief sought
in the review
[85]
In its notice of motion, the applicant prayed that, in the event that
the impugned decisions
were reviewed and set aside, the matter should
be remitted to the Municipality under section 8(1)(
c
)(i) of
PAJA for reconsideration of the second respondent’s
applications, together with such directions as the Court may deem
fit, including four specific directions (mentioned in paragraphs 3.1
to 3.4 of the notice of motion).
[86]
In its replying affidavit, the applicant changed its stance and
indicated that it now considered
it necessary to seek substitution
relief in the first instance, and a remittal only in the alternative.
It also indicated that,
in the event of the Court remitting the
second respondent’s applications back for reconsideration,
there should be a fifth
direction, in terms of which the Municipality
was compelled to expressly consider the report from Mackenzie Hoy
Consulting Acoustics
Engineers (which, as noted above, had evidently
not been taken cognisance of by the appeal authority).
[87]
The new prayer for substitution was motivated on the basis that the
Municipality appeared
to have closed its mind as to the proper
interpretation of the servitude and would therefore inevitably make
the same decision
regarding its meaning and import again. The
Municipality disputed this, arguing that, while it had formed a view
regarding the
servitude which it considered to be correct, it would
adhere to any different interpretation which the Court reached. The
Municipality
therefore strongly disputed that there was any basis for
a substitution in the event of the review being upheld.
[88]
I agree with the Municipality that it cannot be concluded that its
officials would disregard
any interpretation of the servitude which
was different from the one that they had adopted, and that they would
therefore inevitably
make the same decision again in the event of
either or both of the impugned decisions being reviewed and set
aside. The premise
underlying the substitution relief is therefore
flawed. The issue has also anyway largely become academic, as I have
indicated
that I effectively agree with the Municipality’s
interpretation of the servitude. Thus, even were it to have been
competent
for the applicant to have attempted to seek such relief in
reply and in argument, and even were it to have otherwise made out a
case for such exceptional relief (which in my view it has not), the
substitution relief would nevertheless have been unsustainable.
[89]
That leaves the question of whether the remittal to the Municipality
of the consent use
application should be accompanied by directions,
as permitted by section 8(1)(
c
)(i) of PAJA.
[90]
I do not believe that directions would be appropriate in this
instance. While the report
of Mackenzie Hoy Consulting Acoustics
Engineers was irregularly overlooked in the appeal decision, there is
no reason to suspect
that this will happen again. There is also no
basis for me to conclude that the municipal officials will not
consider all relevant
considerations and reports when the matter is
remitted to them for reconsideration. I merely clarify that the
consent use application
would have to be considered afresh by both
the delegated official (whether the Manager Land Use Planning or
another delegatee)
– as the original decision was fatally
flawed the first time around as a result of interested and affected
parties not being
afforded an opportunity to participate – and,
if there is an appeal, the appeal authority (who would be different
from the
previous time, as the former Executive Mayor, Mr Poole is a
now a Member of Parliament, as his confirmatory affidavit of 10
February
2025 indicates).
## Costs
Costs
[91]
The applicant has been substantially successful in its review
application, which was for
the most part concerned with the consent
use application, rather than the application for technical approval.
On the other hand,
it has been unsuccessful in obtaining the
declaratory and interdictory relief sought under Part B of the notice
of motion, in which
the Municipality and the second respondent have
prevailed.
[92]
Part A (the review) and Part B of the application took up roughly
equal time. Although
I have not done an audit, the two Parts also
seemed to take up similar space in the affidavits and heads. The two
components of
the application would moreover appear to be of
comparable importance. It would therefore seem appropriate for the
applicant and
the respondents to bear their own costs in the
application.
[93]
It remains to consider the respondents’ arguments that the
applicant should be mulcted
with costs on a punitive scale for having
made what they contended was an irresponsible and vexatious claim of
bias. As foreshadowed
earlier, that contention requires a brief
consideration of the applicant’s bias contention as advanced in
its affidavits,
though not pursued in argument.
[94]
The applicant’s main submission in this regard related to the
fact that a year-end
function of the Municipality’s Department
of Land Use Planning was held at Wildepaardejacht in the last quarter
of 2021,
after the appeal decision was made, but before it came to
the applicant’s attention. The applicant found out about that
function
when certain attendees got lost on the applicant’s
farm while trying to reach the function venue. The proximity of this
function
to the appeal decision caused the applicant to suspect that
the Department may have had a reason to favour the second respondent.
[95]
The second respondent’s response to this accusation was to
point out that the function
took place after the appeal decision was
made. The second respondent – like the Municipality –
also expressed considerable
outrage that bias had been alleged at
all.
[96]
That the Land Use Planning Department’s year-end function
postdated the appeal decision
is hardly dispositive. The key issues
are
when
the function was discussed and agreed to, and
how
it was arranged, and
what payment
, if any, was made for the
use of the venue; and on those questions the second respondent was
completely silent.
[97]
The Municipality also made the point that the function took place
after the appeal decision
had been made. But Mr Johaar went further
and stated that the possibility of a function was first raised
after
28 October 2021
(the date of the appeal decision). As Mr Johaar
did not have personal knowledge of any of this, he indicated that a
confirmatory
affidavit from Haneefa Kariem would accompany his
affidavit. No such affidavit was however filed, and so the
Municipality’s
version remained hearsay until its further
affidavits, including a confirmatory affidavit from Ms Kariem, were
filed (with the
consent of the applicant) in mid-February 2025.
[98]
Ms Kariem stated in her affidavit, deposed to on 11 February 2025,
that she was appointed
to serve on the organising committee for the
Department’s 2021 year-end function on 12 November 2021, that
she commenced
her planning for the year-end function after 12
November 2021, and that the function was booked “
during the
period between 20 November 2021 and 25 November 2021
”.
The question of when the function was planned and agreed to is thus
now confirmed. There is however still no indication
of how the
function came to be held at the Wildepaardejacht Farm. Nor is there
any indication of whether anything was paid for
the use of the Farm,
or whether any form of remuneration was even discussed. Nor is there
any evidence of arms’ length discussions
between the
Municipality and Wildepaardejacht, or indeed any written
correspondence at all, as one might have expected.
[99]
While the applicant ultimately did not feel that there was sufficient
information to sustain
a review ground of bias or a reasonable
apprehension of bias, the applicant cannot be said to have been
vexatious for raising a
complaint along these lines in its
affidavits. Given the inadequate responses to the applicant’s
allegations, the respondents’
demand for a costs order were
also particularly unmeritorious.
# ORDER
ORDER
[100]
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
The decision of the First Respondent’s Land Use Planning Appeal
Authority on or about 28 October
2021 to dismiss an appeal against
the decision by the First Respondent’s Manager Land Use
Planning and Surveying, on or about
21 January 2021, to approve a
consent use application by the Second Respondent, in terms of section
15(2)(n) of the Drakenstein
Municipality Land Use Planning By-law,
for a function venue to permit the utilisation of a farm shed for
functions and receptions
on the Second Respondent’s property
Wildepaardejacht Farm 859/1, Paarl (the “consent use
approval”), is reviewed
and set aside.
2.
The decision of the First Respondent’s Manager Land Use
Planning and Surveying, on or about 21
January 2021, to grant the
consent use approval is also reviewed and set aside.
3.
The consent use application referred to in paragraph 1 above is
remitted back to the First Respondent
for reconsideration.
4.
Save to the extent indicated above, the relief sought in Part A and
Part B of the notice of motion
is dismissed.
5.
There is no order as to costs.
ACTING JUDGE P FARLAM
For
applicant
: Adv C H J
Maree
Instructed
by
: Chris Fick & Associates
For
first respondent
: Adv M
Adhikari
Instructed
by
: CK Attorneys
For second respondent
:
Adv SP
Rosenberg
Instructed
by
: Hofmeyr Attorneys
[1]
That
farm actually consists of three adjoining farms (863/1, 857/4 and
859/1), though they operate as one farm and can therefore
be
referred to as such.
[2]
See
e.g.,
Spilhaus
Property Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mobile Telephone Networks
(Pty) Ltd and Another
2019
(4) SA 406
(CC) paras [44]-[45], and
Coughlan
NO v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others
[2025]
1 All SA 20
(SCA) para [30].
[3]
See e.g.,
Cillie
v Geldenhuys
[2008] ZASCA 54
;
2009
(2) SA 325
(SCA) para [15].
[4]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
paras [18]-[19].
[5]
Bothma-Batho
Transport (Edms) Bpk v S Bothma & Seun Transport (Edms) Bpk
2014 (2) SA 494
(SCA)
paras [10]-[12].
[6]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and others
2022
(1) SA 100
(SCA) paras [47]-[50].
[7]
De
Witt v Knierim
1991
(2) SA 371
(C) at 385E, referring to Maasdorp JA’s judgment in
Union
Government (Minister of Railways and Harbours) v Marais and Others
1920 AD 240
at 271. See,
too,
Pieterse
v Du Plessis
1972
(2) SA 597
(A) at 599G -
in
fine
;
Kruger
v Joles Eiendom (Pty) Ltd and another
[2009]
1 All SA 553
(SCA) para [8].
[8]
Kruger
v Joles Eiendom supra
fn.7
para [9], referring to a statement in
Van
Rensburg v Taute
1975
(1) SA 279
(A) at 301G -
in
fine
.
[9]
Roeloffze
NO and Another v Bothma NO and Others
2007
(2) SA 257
(C) para [50].
[10]
A F S Maasdorp
Institutes
of Cape Law
Vol.
2 (1918) at 202.
[11]
Voet’s
Commentaries on the
Pandects
8.3.1.
[12]
Wings
Park Port Elizabeth (Pty) Ltd v MEC, Environmental Affairs, Eastern
Cape and Others
2019
(2) SA 606 (ECG).
[13]
Emphasis added, authorities omitted.
[14]
South
Durban Community Environmental Alliance v MEC for Economic
Development, Tourism and Environmental Affairs, Kwazulu-Natal
Provincial Government and Another
2020
(4) SA 453
(SCA).
[15]
Black
Eagle Project Roodekrans v MEC: Department of Agriculture,
Conservation and Environment, Gauteng Provincial Government and
Others
(542/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 84
(17 June 2021).
[16]
Se,,
too,
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Medtronic International Trading SARL
2023
(3) SA 423
(SCA), where the majority summarised the holding in Wings
Park (which it distinguished on the facts) as follows (in para
[53]):
“
There
the court held that when an unfavourable decision at first instance
is confirmed on appeal, it is necessary to take both
decisions on
review for the applicant to achieve success. This is because if only
one decision is assailed, whether the one at
first instance or on
appeal, the other decision would remain intact
.”
[17]
The
appeals in
Wings
Park
and
South
Durban Community Environmental Alliance
was
brought in terms of the National Environmental Management Act, 107
of 1998 (
NEMA
),
and, as the SCA noted in the latter case at para [7], an appeal in
terms of NEMA was held in
Magaliesburg
Protection Association v MEC: Department of Agriculture,
Conservation, Environment and Rural Development
[2013]
3 All SA 416
(SCA) para 53 to be “
a
wide one enabling a full hearing
”
.
See, too,
Wings
Park
at
para [30]. An appeal in terms of NEMA’s predecessor, the
Environmental Conservation Act, 73 of 1989 – the statute
under
which the appeal was brought in
Black
Eagle Project
–
was
also held to involve a rehearing on the merits and the power to
entertain new evidence, and thus a wide appeal (
Sea
Front for All and Another v MEC, Environment and Development
Planning, Western Cape and Others
2011
(3) SA 55
(WCC) paras 21 – 28).
[18]
Tayob
v Ermelo Road Transportation Board and Another
1951
(4) SA 440
(A).
[19]
Ibid
at
448E – F.
[20]
Sewpersadh
v Minister of Finance and Another
[2019]
4 All SA 668
(SCA) ([2019] ZASCA 117).
[21]
The
Court
inter
alia
stated
at para [20]: “
For
some reason [the applicant] did not challenge the initial decision
of the Treasury. It would probably have been better had
he done so.
It was pointed out in
Wings
Park
that
when an applicant has suffered an unfavourable decision at first
instance which is confirmed on an internal appeal, both
decisions
must usually be taken on review in order to have the decision set
aside. This is because if just the appeal decision
is set aside, the
first decision that was the subject of the internal appeal will
continue to stand should it, too, not be set
aside on review
.”
[22]
Joubert
Galpin Searle Inc. v Road Accident Fund
2014
(4) SA 148
(ECP) para [40], quoted with approval in
South
Durban Community Alliance
(footnote
14
above)
para [64].
[23]
At my request, the parties filed legal submissions dealing with the
procedural unfairness challenge in late January 2025, as,
while this
had been fully ventilated in the affidavits, it had not been
addressed in written or oral argument at the hearing.
[24]
See
e.g.,
Rajah
& Rajah (Pty) Ltd v Ventersdorp Municipality
1961
(4) SA 402
(A) at 408;
Manong
& Associates v Director-General: Department of Public Works
[2004]
1 All SA 673
(C) at 687i-j, read with 685a-b.
[25]
Wings
Park Port Elizabeth v MEC, Environmental Affairs, Eastern Cape supra
fn.
12
paras
[43]-[44].
[26]
See e.g.,
Turner
v Jockey Club of South Africa
1974
(3) SA 633 (A).
[27]
Leary v
National Union of Vehicle Builders
[1970]
2 All ER 713 (Ch).
[28]
Calvin
v Carr & others
[1979] UKPC 1
;
[1980]
AC 574
(PC) at 592; [1979] 2 All ER 440 (PC) at 447. See, too,
the decision of the House of Lords in
Lloyd
and Others v McMahon
[1987] UKHL 5
;
[1987]
AC 625
(HL) at 716; [1987] 1 All ER 1118 (HL) at 1171.
[29]
Slagment
(Pty) Ltd v Building Construction and Allied Workers’ Union &
others
1995
(1) SA 742
(A) at 756G.
[30]
Minister
of Environmental Affairs and Tourism & Another v Scenematic
Fourteen (Pty) Ltd
[2005]
2 All SA 239 (SCA) paras [34]-[35].
[31]
Contrary to what the Court in
R
v Visitors to the Inns of Court, ex part Calder and Persaud
1994 QB 1
at 59 held
should occur, the appeal was thus not a “full hearing”
on the merits.
[32]
See e.g.,
South
Durban Community Alliance
(
footnote.14
above) para [23].
[33]
MEC
for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning v Clairison’s
CC
2013
(6) SA 235
(SCA). The footnotes in the original have been retained
in the quotation.
[34]
Lawrence
Baxter
Administrative
Law
1
ed (1984) at 505.
[35]
Durban
Rent Board and Another v Edgemount Investments Ltd
1946
AD 962
at 974, adopted in
Johannesburg
City Council v The Administrator, Transvaal and Mayofis
1971
(1) SA 87 (A).
[36]
Bel
Porto
was
concerned with the rationality, and
Bato
Star
with
the reasonableness, of executive decisions.
[37]
2002 (3) SA 265
(CC)
(2002 (9) BCLR 891
;
[2002] ZACC 2)
para 45.
[38]
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC)
(2004 (7) BCLR 687
;
[2004] ZACC 15)
paras 44
and 45.
[39]
Peermont
Global (North West) (Pty) Ltd v Chairperson of the North West
Gambling Review Tribunal and Others and Two Other Cases
[2022]
ZASCA 80
(2 June 2022) para [110].
[40]
National
Lotteries Board v South African Education and Environment Project
2012
(4) SA 504
(SCA). (
See
also
Van
Zyl and others v Government of the Republic of South Africa and
others
2008
(3) SA 294
(SCA) at 311D-F (para [55]) and
Zuma
v Democratic Alliance
2018
(1) SA 200
(SCA) para [24].)
[41]
PG
Group Ltd and Others v National Energy Regulator of South Africa and
Another
2018
(5) SA 150
(SCA);
[2018] 3 All SA 52
(SCA) para [41]. The judgment
of the Constitutional Court –
National
Energy Regulator of South Africa and Another v PG Group (Pty)
Limited and Others
2020
(1) SA 450
(CC);
2019 (10) BCLR 1185
(CC) – is to similar
effect.
[42]
National
Lotteries Board
fn.
Error!
Bookmark not defined.
above,
paras [24]-[28].
[43]
National
Lotteries Board
fn.
Error!
Bookmark not defined.
above,
para [27]. See, also, the Constitutional Court’s decision in
Minister
of Defence and Military Veterans v Motau and Others
2014 (5) SA 69
(CC);
2014 (8) BCLR 930
(CC) para [55], fn. 85.
[44]
It instead indicates that the three objections received were “
based
on procedural fairness, failure to consider proposed impact on
existing agricultural properties, condition of access bridge
and
capacity of the access / servitude road in respect of the traffic
being generated by the proposal at hand
”
.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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