Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 204South Africa
Green Point Residents and Ratepayers' Association and Others v Gartner and Others (6707/2022) [2025] ZAWCHC 204; [2025] 3 All SA 486 (WCC) (11 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
11 April 2025
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAWCHC 204
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Green Point Residents and Ratepayers' Association and Others v Gartner and Others (6707/2022) [2025] ZAWCHC 204; [2025] 3 All SA 486 (WCC) (11 April 2025)
Green Point Residents and Ratepayers' Association and Others v Gartner and Others (6707/2022) [2025] ZAWCHC 204; [2025] 3 All SA 486 (WCC) (11 April 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2025_204.html
sino date 11 April 2025
SAFLII Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE HIGH
COURT, CAPE TOWN
CASE NO: 6707/22
In the matter between:
THE
GREEN POINT RESIDENTS AND
RATEPAYERS’
ASSOCIATION
First
Applicant
THE
TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING
OF
THE RUSNIC TRUST (IT 2867/09)
Second
Applicant
THOMAS
FRANCIS GALLAGHER
Third
Applicant
JACQUELINE
FRANCES GALLAGHER
Fourth
Applicant
JULIAN
DAVID RABINOWITZ
Fifth
Applicant
CYRIL
IAN GLASER
Sixth
Applicant
BARBARA
RUTH MAYERS
Seventh
Applicant
and
LEONHARD
GÄRTNER
First
Respondent
ANDREAS
ROBERT HERMANN PLANK
Second
Respondent
JANINE
ADUDE STEPHANIE BEATRICE PLANK
Third
Respondent
THE
CITY OF CAPE TOWN
Fourth
Respondent
Heard
26 February 2025
Delivered
on
11 April 2025 (by electronic mail to the parties)
JUDGMENT
KHOZA,
AJ
Introduction
1.
This case raises a question of principle:
when does the doctrine of mootness preclude judicial review of
unlawful administrative
action? The issue arises in the context of a
building plan approval that was conceded to be unlawful and was
subsequently abandoned.
A revised plan was submitted and granted,
resulting in a new and independent approval.
2.
At the heart of this dispute lies a tension
between two foundational tenets: on the one hand, that unlawful
administrative actions
are valid and binding until they are set
aside; on the other, that courts do not adjudicate disputes which no
longer raise a live
controversy or produce to legal consequences.
Resolving this tension calls for careful attention to the proper
limits of judicial
power in administrative law.
3.
In March 2022, the applicants instituted
these review proceedings to challenge the approval of a building plan
by the fourth respondent
(“the City”) in February 2021
(“the 2021 plan”) for a second dwelling on Erf 1[...] in
Green Point belonging
to the first to fourth respondents (“the
developers”). They seek to have the City’s approval
(“impugned
approval”) declared unlawful and set aside and
a consequential order directing the developers to demolish all
building works
on Erf 1[...].
4.
However,
the City and the developers oppose the review on the ground of
mootness. They argue that the relief sought has been overtaken
by
events, rendering it moot and granting it will have no practical
effect. Since this jurisdictional point is dispositive of the
case,
the parties confined their oral argument at the hearing on 26
February 2025 to the issue of mootness. This approach aligns
with the
one adopted by the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) in
Solidariteit
Helpende Hand NPDC and Others v Minister of Cooperative Governance
and Traditional Affairs
[1]
(“
Solidariteit
Helpende
”).
5.
The applicants own properties within the
vicinity of Erf 1[...].
The first applicant
is an association representing residents and ratepayers in the
greater Green Point and Mouille Point area.
6.
This matter did not spring from nowhere; it
marks the latest chapter in a protracted dispute, marked by
successive legal proceedings
and shifting procedural terrain. To
grapple properly with the mootness argument, it is necessary to trace
the tangled history of
the parties’ long-running legal
skirmishes.
Factual and litigation
context
7.
The developers purchased Erf 1[...] in
March 2020 and subsequently applied to the City for the approval of
the building plan on
the property. The City approved the plan on 22
February 2021. That approval sparked this litigation.
8.
Construction on Erf 1[...] commenced in
July 2021. By the end of that year, applicants began raising concerns
about the lawfulness
of the approved plan. To address these concerns,
they consulted a professional town planner, Mr Pratt, in November
2021 as well
as their attorney, Mr Van Rensburg. They also attempted
to halt construction through correspondence with the developers, but
these
efforts were unsuccessful.
9.
Convinced that the 2021 plan and the City’s
approval were unlawful, the applicants initiated these review
proceedings on 4
March 2022, seeking to have the impugned approval
set aside.
10.
The review grounds on which the applicants
impugn the 2021 plan are as follows:
10.1.
Height restriction ground:
The
applicants contend that the proposed second dwelling depicted in the
approved plan exceeds the height restrictions applicable
to Erf
1[...], namely 6 metres as measured from the ground level to the wall
plate and 8 metres as measures from ground level to
the top of the
roof. This argument is based on the premise that the second dwelling
constitutes a separate structure from the main
dwelling. If, however,
the second dwelling is considered part of the main structure, the
height restrictions would be less stringent
– 8 metres and 10
metres respectively.
10.2.
The ground level and Lidar Map ground:
The applicants argue that the existing
ground level of Erf 1[...] should have been based on the City’s
Lidar Map of February
2021 rather than the survey conducted by the
developer’s land surveyor, Mr Gluckman. They claim that the
Lidar Map reveals
lower existing ground level than those assumed by
the developers.
10.3.
The sensitivity enquiry ground:
The applicants assert that the approved building
is unsightly and objectionable, as it towers over the gardens and
private spaces
of adjacent properties and negatively affects the
amenities enjoyed by the owners of Erven 2[...] and 2[...]2.
10.4.
The setback non-compliance ground:
The applicants contend that incorrect common
boundary setbacks were applied. Specifically, they argue that the
0-metre setback relaxation
permitted under the Development Management
Scheme (“DMS”) of the Municipal Planning By-Law
(“By-Law”) was
incorrectly applied to both common
boundaries, whereas it should have been applied to only one.
10.5.
The title deed restriction ground:
The applicants assert that the proposed second
dwelling contravenes applicable restrictive title deed conditions.
They argue that
the main entrance should face Roos Road rather than
High-Level Road, as required. Additionally, they contend that the
second dwelling
was impermissibly built within 25 feet of Rood Road.
11.
On 6 April 2022, the applicants obtained an
interim interdict from this Court (per Gamble J), pending the
determination of the review.
The interim interdict was granted on the
prima facie
basis that the proposed dwelling in the building plans contravened
the DMS.
12.
The developers, advised by professional
town and regional planners, were informed they had strong prospects
in the review regarding
the separate structure and title deed
grounds, but not on the Lidar Map or height restriction grounds.
Their legal representatives
also advised that “the sensitivity
enquiry ground” was bad. Consequently, the developers opted to
submit a revised
plan to the City in April 2022 (“the revised
plan”).
13.
Although not legally required, the City
invited the applicants to comment on the revised plan on 26 April
2023. The applicants objected
to the revised plan, reiterating the
same review grounds mentioned above. Additionally, they argued that
the interim interdict
and the pending review prohibited the City from
considering the revised plan. The City countered that the interdict
only prevented
further construction work on Erf 1[...] based on the
2021 plan and did not restrict the City’s statutory power to
consider
new or revised plans.
14.
On 27 November 2023, the City approved the
revised plan because it was satisfied that this plan eliminated or
cured the defects
in the 2021 plan and the parts that are similar in
both plans are valid and the applicants’ complaints about them
are unfounded.
Following that approval, the developers resumed
construction on Erf 1[...] on 8 February 2024. This prompted further
litigation
between the parties.
15.
The applicants then brought an urgent
application to compel the developers to comply with the interim order
previously granted.
This application was based on their firm belief
that Gamble J’s order prohibited the developers from resuming
construction
pending the finalisation of the current review
application and that the approval of the revised plans did not alter
this legal
position. The developers opposed the application. On 12
March 2024, Adams AJ struck it from the roll for lack of urgency, but
it
was re-enrolled for hearing later.
16.
On 8 March 2024, the applicants launched a
second review application under case number 4859/2024 to have the
City’s approval
of the revised plan set aside (“second
review application”). They also sought an interim order halting
construction
under the revised plan, pending the determination of the
second review. However, on 3 June 2024, Lukheleni J dismissed the
interdict
application and granted the applicants leave to appeal to
the SCA.
17.
On 6 June 2024, Fortuin J issued a ruling
in the application to compel which conflicted with Lukheleni J’s
judgment. She held
that Gamble J’s order barred all
construction on Erf 1[...], even with the revised plan, and ordered
the developers to cease
all building works on the property (“the
compliance order”). In contrast, Lukheleni J had found that
Gamble J’s
order did not preclude construction under the
revised plan.
18.
Fortuin J found, in addition, that the
developers’ submission of the revised plan and their attempts
to “frustrate the
interdict” and the pending review
application “constituted constructive contempt.” This
escalated tensions, prompting
the developers to seek leave to appeal.
19.
Following Fortuin J’s interpretation
of Gamble J’s order, the City filed a reconsideration
application in June 2024
in which it sought to amend Gamble J’s
order by deleting the words “or otherwise”. Fortuin J
heard this application
alongside the applicants’ leave to
appeal against the compliance order. She granted the reconsideration
application and dismissed
the application for leave to appeal.
20.
However, in granting the reconsideration
application, Fortuin J, apart from deleting the impugned words,
inserted the phrase –
‘
or
any element contained in the 2021 plan which is subject to the
pending review –
which neither
party had requested. The modification effectively prevented the
developers from continuing construction. As a result,
the City
applied for leave to appeal the reconsideration order, which remains
pending before this Court.
21.
Prior to approving the revised plan, the
City informed the applicants, on 12 May 2023, that it would consider
the revised plan and
agreed that the 2021 plan should be set aside.
However, it did not concede the entire review, the review grounds or
the other relief
sought in the notice of motion. It is of the view
that some of the review grounds are bad.
22.
On 21 June 2023, the developers filed a
notice to abide the court’s decision in the current review
application conditional
on no costs order being made against them.
By then, the review application had become
unopposed, but the applicants failed to pursue it to finality.
Instead, in February 2024,
they submitted a draft order to the
respondents, proposing to settle all the relief sought in Part B of
the notice of motion. However,
none of the respondents accepted the
terms of this proposal.
23.
In June 2024, the City proposed a draft
order aimed at resolving both the review application and the pending
appeal against Fortuin
J’s compliance order, despite the
ongoing dispute over Gamble J’s order. The developers accepted
the proposed order,
but the applicants rejected it.
24.
It appears that a disagreement arose
between the parties regarding the terms of the proposed order. The
applicants expected the
developers to include a tender for costs in
their notice to abide and for the City to either specify the grounds
of review it conceded
and tender costs, or oppose the review
application. This did not happen, resulting in a deadlock.
25.
Althoug the City disagrees with the relief
sought, it chose not to oppose the review and denied liability for
costs. The developers
aligned themselves with the City’s
position on mootness. However, the applicants dispute that the matter
is moot.
26.
Pursuant to the interim orders of Gamble J
and Fortuin J, the applicants have successfully halted construction
on Erf 1[...], pending
determination of Part B of the relief they
seek in the review application – which relates to the now
abandoned 2021 approval.
This determination accordingly hinges on
resolving the jurisdictional issue of mootness.
Mootness
27.
The
general principle is that a matter is moot when a court’s
ruling will have no practical effect on the parties. A matter
is not
justiciable where it no longer presents a real, existing or live
dispute between the parties that a court’s decision
or order
would practically resolve or affect. Courts do not decide
hypothetical questions or pronounce on matters that are academic,
nor
do they issue orders that have no practical effect.
[2]
28.
Furthermore,
a court of first instance does not have jurisdiction to entertain the
merits of a matter if a dispute or a cause of
action has ceased to
exist before judgment – there is no longer a claim before the
court for its adjudication.
[3]
Only a court of appeal has a discretion to hear appeals
notwithstanding the mootness of the matter.
[4]
29.
Therefore, a ruling of this Court will only
have practical effect on the parties if a live dispute still exists.
Otherwise, there
comes a point during litigation at which the court
must fold its arms.
Key
submissions and points of dispute
30.
The City’s and the developers’
case for mootness can be summarised as follows:
30.1.
The 2021 plan was abandoned and the
associated development rights under the impugned approval were
relinquished or waived;
30.2.
The 2021 plan was replaced and superseded
by the revised plan, and it will not be used for construction on Erf
1[...]; and
30.3.
As a result, a live dispute no longer
exists and setting aside the impugned approval would have no
practical effect. The only live
issue is one of costs.
31.
The developers added that the 2021 plan
lapsed due to the operation of section 7(4) of the National Building
Regulations and Building
Standards Act 103 of 1977 (“the
Building Act”). They assert that the lapsing of the 2021 plan
renders the matter moot.
The applicants reject this argument.
32.
The applicants maintain that a live dispute
remains and that the relief they seek would have practical legal
consequences. They
advance four reasons: first, that the 2021 plan
has not lapsed; second, that rights derived from administrative
action cannot be
waived, and that the approval of the revised plan
amounts to impermissible self-help; third, that the City has not
articulated
the grounds on which it concedes the 2021 approval to be
unlawful; and fourth, that administrative action remains valid and
binding
until set aside by a court.
Has the 2021 plan
lapsed?
33.
The
developers contend that the 2021 plan lapsed by operation of section
7(4) of the Building Act,
[5]
owing to a failure to “proceed with” construction for a
continuous period of 12 months — specifically, from 8
April
2022 (the date of Gamble J’s interim interdict) to February
2024 (when building activity resumed). They submit that
if the plan
has indeed lapsed, then the application is moot on that ground alone.
34.
The
applicants reject this interpretation. They contend that the 2021
plan remains valid because construction commenced in July
2021, well
within the 12-month window. They argue that the developers’
interpretation of section 7(4) provision is contrived,
leads to
absurdity, imposes an unbusinesslike interpretation that would render
section 11 of the Building Act
[6]
redundant.
35.
The
interpretation of the section 7(4) must be guided by the established
principles of statutory construction. In
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard (“Cool Ideas”),
the Constitutional Court affirmed that the ordinary grammatical
meaning of statutory language should prevail, unless it leads to
absurdity.”
[7]
This approach accords with the Supreme Court of Appeal decision in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality (“Endumeni”),
where Wallis JA held that the statutory interpretation must considers
the text, context and purpose of the provision.
[8]
36.
The
same interpretative principle was endorsed in
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Golden Dumps (Pty) Ltd (“Golden Dumps”),
where the Appellate Division held that effect must be given to every
word and that no word, phrase or sentence should lightly be
regarded
as superfluous.
[9]
37.
Section 7(4) serves a distinct purpose
separate from section 11. It is designed to prevent building plan
approvals from remaining
valid indefinitely. By requiring the timely
commencement or continuation of building works, it enables local
authorities to maintain
effective oversight of development and
ensures that approvals remain aligned with prevailing planning
considerations.
38.
Section 11, by contrast, addresses the
problem of partially built or abandoned structures. It operates as an
enforcement mechanism,
empowering a local authority to issue
compliance notices where construction has commenced but then grind to
a halt for more than
three months. In essence, it is legislative
nudge to keep developers moving and ensure that the urban landscape
is not scattered
with the remnants of half-built developments.
39.
Section 7(4) of the Building Act is framed
in disjunctive terms. It provides that a building plan approval will
lapse after 12 months
unless either the erection of the building has
been “commenced” or it has been “proceeded with”
within
that period. The two disjunctive conditions –
“commended” and “proceeded with” – are
expressed
in the alternative and must be given a distinct and
purposive meaning in accordance with the principles of statutory
interpretation.
40.
The first condition – “commenced”
– refers to the initiation of actual physical construction such
as excavation,
laying of foundations, or other substantial
preparatory works. The second condition – “proceeded
with” –
presupposes that construction has already begun
and requires that building works be actively continued during the
12-month period.
41.
These two limbs of the disjunction serve
distinct legal functions. If either is satisfied within 12 months of
approval, the plan
does not lapse. Put differently, the developer
need only break ground within that period, or, alternatively,
continue previously
commenced construction during that period.
Section 7(4) requires only one of the conditions to be met to
preserve the validity
of the approval.
42.
In this case, the 2021 plan was approved on
22 February 2021. It would have lapsed on 22 February 2022, unless
either the erection
of the building was commenced, or proceeded with
during that 12-month period.
43.
Construction commenced in July 2021, well
within the 12-month window. The first disjunctive condition was
therefore satisfied, preserving
the validity of the approval beyond
February 2022. The fact that construction was subsequently halted by
Gamble J’s interim
order on 8 April 2022 is immaterial for
purposes of section 7(4), since requirement for commencement had
already been fulfilled
prior to expiry of the prescribed period.
44.
I accordingly conclude that the 2021 plan
did not lapse by operation of section 7(4). It remained in force when
the revised plan
was approved in November 2023. This interpretation
does not render section 11 redundant.
45.
But
the fact that the 2021 plan did not lapse raises this question: does
it continue to exist
in
fact
and
in
law
following its abandonment and replacement by the revised plan? I
return to this question after the next section.
The effect of
abandonment and supersession on mootness
46.
The question of mootness may turn on
whether the developers’ waiver of rights has extinguished the
legal dispute that would
otherwise sustain judicial review.
47.
The applicants contend that the rights
conferred by the 2021 approval cannot be waived in a manner that
extinguishes the decision
itself. Nor, they argue, can such waiver
shield an otherwise unlawful administrative act from judicial
scrutiny. On their view,
administrative action is inherently public
in nature, produces external legal effect, and remains subject to
review regardless
of whether the beneficiary continues to rely on it.
48.
In
support of this submission, the applicants rely on
SA
Eagle Insurance Co Ltd v Bavuma
(“
Bavuma
”),
contending that administrative decisions such as building plan
approvals implicate the public interest and cannot be unilaterally
waived or abandoned.
[10]
They
argue that once such a decision is made, its legal consequences
extend beyond private entitlement and remain reviewable by
the
courts.
[11]
49.
In
my view, the applicants’ reliance on
Bavuma
is misplaced. That case concerned the waiver of statutory rights in a
context where the public interest was directly and substantially
implicated. The principle it affirms is that a person may not waive a
right that serves a broader regulatory or societal function.
It is
rooted in the maxim
quilibet
potest renuntiare juri pro se introducto
—
a person may renounce a law enacted for their own benefit—but
only where the right in question is truly personal,
and its waiver
does not intrude upon the public interest.
50.
This raises the central question in the
present case: does the approval of a building plan on privately owned
land implicate the
public interest in a manner that precludes its
waiver? In my view, it does not.
51.
In
Walele
v City of Cape Town,
[12]
the Constitutional Court made clear that the approval of building
plans — where those plans comply with applicable zoning
and
building regulations, and do not trigger the disqualifying factors in
section 7(1)(b)(ii) of the Building Act — does
not affect the
rights of neighbouring owners or implicate broader public interests.
Such approvals, the Court held, are regulatory
in nature and confined
to the relationship between the applicant and the local authority.
Neighbours, it affirmed, have no automatic
right to be heard in such
proceedings.
[13]
52.
The
2021 plan in this case complied with existing land use rights and
applicable statutory frameworks. There is no indication that
the
approval required any deviation from planning instruments, involved
public participation, or had external legal consequences
beyond
enabling the developer to build. Unlike the legislative scheme in
Bavuma
,
which concerned rights designed to protect broader public interests,
the approval at issue here was administrative in nature and
conferred
rights that were private and personal to the beneficiary. The
Bavuma
principle accordingly finds no application here.
53.
The City and the developers contend that
the matter is moot because the developers have expressly abandoned
the 2021 plan and waived
the development rights arising from its
approval—rights which they were lawfully entitled to
relinquish.
54.
In support of this submission, they rely on
the decision of the Appellate Division in
Cape
Coast Exploration Ltd v Scholtz
1933 AD 56
(“Cape Coast Exploration”)
where Wessels CJ held that:
“
There
is certainly nothing …. to prevent the owner of a statutory
right or privilege from renouncing or abandoning such a
right or
privilege to which he is entitled. If therefore an owner or
discoverer asks to have her certificate withdrawn, he is at
liberty
to do so.”
[14]
55.
They
also invoke Baxter’s observation that an administrative
decision may be revoked with the consent of its beneficiary,
and that
a public authority is generally required to seek judicial review
unless: (a) the affected parties’ consent to its
abandonment;
or (b) it can be shown that those parties would benefit from its
withdrawal.
[15]
56.
Both
Cape
Coast Exploration
and Baxter’s commentary affirm the principle that rights
derived from administrative action may, in appropriate circumstances,
be lawfully abandoned by the person in whom they vest. That principle
is consistent with settled law on waiver and its consequences.
that
once a right is validly abandoned, it is extinguished and cannot be
revived.
[16]
Put
differently, a waiver brings an end to the right and precludes its
future enforcement.
[17]
57.
Read
together,
Cape
Coast Exploration
and Baxter confirm that administrative rights may be lawfully waived,
and that such waiver carries final legal effect. That position
is not
displaced by the
Bavuma
principle, which has no application in the absence of a broader
public interest. The applicants’ contention that the developers
could not abandon the rights under the 2021 approval is therefore
without merit.
58.
In the result, the developers’
express abandonment of the rights conferred by the approved 2021 plan
extinguished any ongoing
legal dispute. The approval no longer
carries legal consequence, is no longer relied upon by any party, and
no longer forms the
basis for any enforceable entitlement.
59.
The applicants’ further contention —
that the 2021 plan could be relied upon by the developers’
successors in
title — must also fail. The rights under the
impugned approval have been validly extinguished. There is nothing
left to revive.
On this point alone, the matter has become moot.
60.
That conclusion disposes of the applicants’
waiver-based objections. I turn briefly to their further contention —
that
the 2021 approval was impermissibly superseded by the subsequent
decision. The applicants contend that, by approving the revised
plan,
the City effectively corrected its own earlier approval and this
constituted “self-help” — a step they
argue is
legally impermissible.
61.
The
City disavows this characterisation. It submits that it exercised its
statutory power to consider and approve a new building
plan — a
power that may be used to regularise or rectify deficiencies in an
earlier approval. That authority is not unusual;
many statutes permit
administrators to revisit earlier decisions, whether expressly or
impliedly.
[18]
62.
I
am inclined to agree with the City for three reasons. First, sections
4 and 7 of the Building Act empower it to consider and approve
new
plans that meet statutory requirements. The revised plan was
submitted as a fresh application, and the City was bound to assess
it
as such. Second, the SCA in
Camps
Bay Ratepayers and Residents Association v Harrison
[19]
recognised
that local authorities hold an implied power to approve amendment or
replacement plans.
And third, this Court confirmed in
Searle
v Mossel Bay Municipality
[20]
that the approval of a replacement plan effectively displaces the
original, rendering any dispute over the earlier approval legally
spent
63.
The
answer to the question posed in paragraph 45 — whether the 2021
plan continues to exist in fact and in law — is
no
.
While the plan may remain on record, it no longer carries legal
currency. It was abandoned in practice and overtaken by the approval
of the revised plan. The developers do not rely on it; the City has
treated it as superseded; and no rights or obligations are
asserted
under it. Whatever legal force it once held has been extinguished and
cannot be revived.
64.
In my view, that alone is enough to
establish mootness. This court should fold its arms. But the
applicants are not quite done.
They press two further arguments
which, if my conclusion on mootness at this stage is wrong, I am
obliged to address.
Do partial concessions
keep the dispute alive?
65.
The applicants contend that a live dispute
lingers because the City has not conceded each and every ground of
review. In their view,
even if the 2021 plan and the rights its
approval conferred have been abandoned, they remain entitled to a
judgment from this Court
that pronounces on the issues and settles
the
lis
between the parties — a ruling, they say, that would be binding
going forward.
66.
They
rely on the judgment of this Court in
Camps
Bay & Clifton Ratepayers Association and Others v Al Khalifa
Family Trust and Another
[21]
(“Al
Khalifa”)
where Rogers J (as he then was) proceeded to adjudicate a review
application despite partial concessions by the City of Cape Town.
At
paragraph 9 of the judgment, he explained:
[9]
Since the CCT has only conceded certain grounds of review and
because KFT has not formally conceded any of the grounds, I shall
have to deal with all of them.
This is in any event necessary
because the grounds on which I uphold the review will or may bind the
parties going forward.
It is unfortunate that I should have to do
so without the benefit of argument from the CCT and KFT. Because
there are multiple
grounds on which each of the approvals is
attacked, and because there are also complaints about building work
which is not authorised
by the latest approved plans, the judgment is
much longer than I would have liked.
67.
That
proposition misses the mark.
Al
Khalifa
is readily distinguishable on the facts. There, the applicants
challenged both the original approval and a set of rider plans.
While
the City made partial concessions, the developers pressed ahead,
opposing the review and intending to build in terms of the
contested
approvals. A live controversy remained on the table. Rogers J was
obliged to deal with the merits — his ruling
would shape the
legal rights of the parties going forward.
68.
Not
so here. The developers have walked away from the 2021 plan, waived
the rights that flowed from its approval, and committed
to proceeding
with construction under the revised plan. They no longer seek to
defend the original approval, nor to act on it.
Unlike in
Al
Khalifa
,
there is no continuing reliance on the disputed decision. The legal
footing for the review has simply fallen away.
69.
During
oral argument, the applicants advanced two further points to keep the
dispute alive. First, they submitted that the boundary
setback issue
remains unresolved and warrants adjudication, noting that this ground
was found to be arguable in
Al
Khalifa
.
Second, they argued that the respondents’ concessions on height
restrictions and layout were not made under oath, and that
the
lawfulness of the 2021 plan has not been expressly conceded or
answered — leaving the merits, in their view, still on
the
table.
70.
These arguments do not hold. The fact that
a ground of review was previously found arguable, in another case,
does not justify adjudication
in this case in the absence of an
active dispute. What the applicants are pressing for is not the
resolution of an actual controversy,
but a ruling in the abstract —
a judgment for judgment’s sake. This is indicative of a
conceptual misunderstanding
of the distinction between the grounds of
review and the effect of the administrative action once it is no
longer relied upon.
71.
What
the applicants seek here bears a striking resemblance to what this
Court declined to do in
Habitat
Council v The City of Cape Town and Others (“Habitat
Council”).
[22]
There, Gamble J cautioned against delivering a judgment merely to
“
castigate
the City for its constitutional delinquency”
and “
to
tell the City that it was wrong and that in future it should do its
job better.”
[23]
This is, in effect, what the applicants now invite this Court to do.
I decline that invitation.
72.
In my view, the City’s refusal to
concede specific review grounds does not resuscitate a dispute that
has otherwise run its
course. But the applicants are not quite done.
Shifting ground, they advance a further argument: that the 2021
approval continues
to exist in fact and in law, and that this alone
is enough to keep the matter justiciable.
Does a court have
jurisdiction absent legal consequences and a live dispute?
73.
The applicants contend that the impugned
approval constitutes administrative action that remains valid and
binding until set aside
by a court. They argue that, unless it is
formally invalidated, the 2021 plan approval continues to carry legal
consequences —
consequences that could, in theory, be relied
upon by the developers or their successors in future. On that basis,
they submit
that a setting-aside order would still serve a practical
legal purpose
74.
The
applicants anchor their argument in the principle of administrative
law articulated in
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
[24]
(“
Oudekraal
”),
and endorsed in later decisions including
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd
[25]
(“
Kirland
”)
and
Merafong
City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Ltd
[26]
(“
Merafong
”).
75.
The
principle is well established: administrative decisions—whether
lawful or not—remain legally effective and binding
until set
aside by a court of law. Until that point, they may continue to
produce legally operative consequences. In support of
this
contention, the applicants rely on the following passages from the
majority judgment in
Merafong
:
[41]
The import of
Oudekraal
and
Kirkland
was that
government cannot simply ignore an apparently binding ruling or
decision on the basis that it is invalid. The validity
of the
decision has to be tested in appropriate proceedings. And the sole
power to pronounce that the decision is defective, and
therefore
invalid, lied with the courts. Government itself has no authority to
invalidate or ignore the decision. It remains legally
effective until
properly set aside.
[42]
The underlying principles are that the courts’ role in
determining legality is pre-eminent
and exclusive; government
officials, or anyone else for that matter, may not usurp that role by
themselves pronouncing on whether
decisions are unlawful, and then
ignoring them and, unless set aside, a decision erroneously taken may
well continue to have lawful
consequences…
76.
However,
the applicants overstate the reach of the
Oudekraal
principle. Their submission proceeds from the premise that
every
administrative action must be judicially set aside before it can lose
legal or factual effect. I do not agree. That is not, in
my view,
what
Oudekraal
intended. If that were so, the doctrine of mootness would never apply
in cases involving administrative decisions.
77.
As
the SCA has clarified, the purpose of the
Oudekraal
principle is to preserve legal certainty and promote the orderly
functioning of the state. It does so by ensuring that administrative
decisions are not unilaterally disregarded merely because they are
believed to be invalid. Such decisions, though potentially unlawful,
exist in fact — and their factual existence may carry legal
consequences. Until set aside by a court, they retain binding
force
and may serve as the lawful basis for further administrative or
private acts. In this regard, the SCA held:
[31]
Thus the proper inquiry in each – at least at first – is
not whether the initial
act was valid but rather whether its
substantive validity was a necessary precondition for the validity of
consequent acts. If
the validity of consequent act is dependent on no
more than the factual existence of the initial act then the
consequent act will
have legal effect for so long as the initial act
is not set aside by a competent court.
78.
Properly
understood, the
Oudekraal
principle rests on the premise that legal consequences may continue
to flow from the mere factual existence of an administrative
act,
even if that act is unlawful. As Cameron J aptly observed, the notion
that an unlawful act can provide legally effective consequences
is a
central conundrum of
Oudekraal
that is constitutionally sustainable and necessary because its
factual footprint may, for better or worse, lay the groundwork for
subsequent lawful action built upon it.
[27]
79.
This
is where
Oudekraal
and mootness meet: while
Oudekraal
addresses the legal consequences of an administrative act that
remains formally in existence, the doctrine of mootness focuses
on
whether setting aside such an act would have any practical legal
effect. If not, the court’s jurisdiction is not engaged.
80.
In the present matter, the only arguable
legal consequence flowing from the impugned approval would be if the
developers or successors
in title were to dust off the 2021 plan and
attempt to build in accordance with it, drawing on the impugned
approval’s formal
existence. But that eventuality is not on the
cards here. Neither the developers nor their successors in title are
in any position
to breathe life back into rights that have long since
been extinguished.
81.
Neither
Oudekraal
,
Merafong
,
nor the other authorities on which the applicants rely obliges a
court to adjudicate disputes where a factual existence of an
administrative decision bears
no
legal consequence
.
A court’s jurisdiction is engaged only where the impugned act
continues to produce tangible legal effects. That is not the
case
here. On the contrary, the matter is moot and falls outside the reach
of judicial determination.
82.
The
applicants seek to resist this conclusion by invoking the
Stransham-Ford
principle, contending that courts lack jurisdiction only where the
underlying cause of action has been extinguished. They argue
that
because the impugned approval has not been judicially set aside, the
cause of action remains extant and justiciable.
83.
Stransham-Ford
does
not assist the applicants. It is both factually and legally
distinguishable. That case concerned a terminally ill applicant
who
sought judicial authorisation for physician-assisted death. Before
the High Court could determine the matter, the applicant
passed away.
The SCA held that his death extinguished the cause of action,
rendering the matter moot, since the order sought could
no longer
serve any purpose. The only potential beneficiary was no longer
alive.
84.
The
principle in
Stransham-Ford
has been applied consistently in subsequent cases
[28]
including
Solidariteit
Helpende,
where
the applicants challenged COVID-19 regulations prohibiting religious
gatherings. Before the hearing, the regulations were
amended to lift
the prohibition. The High Court dismissed the matter due to mootness.
The SCA upheld that finding, concluding that
by the time the matter
was heard, all regulations had been repealed, leaving nothing to
review or set aside.
85.
Stransham-Ford
underscores
a foundational principle: the existence of an administrative action
or a cause of action does not, on its own, confer
jurisdiction on
this Court to consider the merits in the absence of a live dispute or
any legal consequences. An administrative
action is not litigated in
abstract – it must be anchored in a concrete and ongoing
controversy. Without that, the court
is left swinging at shadows.
Once that underlying dispute is resolved, so too is the basis for
adjudication.
86.
In
Stransham-Ford
,
the live dispute was extinguished by the applicant’s death –
the legal flame, so to speak, flickered out before judgment
could be
handed down. In
Solidariteit Helpende,
the dispute dissolved when the regulations were repealed, the legal
ban they had imposed no longer existed, and with it, the controversy
fell away. By contrast, in this matter, the lawfulness and legal
effect of the 2021 plan has lost traction because of the developers’
subsequent action and current stance. In short, there is no longer
any axe to grind.
87.
Even if there was once an axe to grind, the
battlefield has shifted. The City’s approval of the revised
plan, which effectively
superseded the 2021 plan, rendered the
dispute academic. As confirmed in
Searle,
the approval of a replacement plan
extinguishes any legal controversy arising from the original. The
dispute concerning the 2021
plan has thus voyaged to the second
review application, where it now properly belongs.
88.
As concluded in paragraphs 59 and 63 above,
there is no longer a live dispute requiring adjudication. Here too,
the court must fold
its arms.
Conclusion
89.
This case underscores that the doctrine of
mootness applies with undiminished force in the realm of
administrative law. Courts are
not in the business of settling
abstract disputes or issuing advisory opinions dressed up as
judgments. Once the legal consequences
of the impugned decision have
fallen away, the courtroom ceases to be a forum for resolution.
Judicial restraint in such a setting
does not dilute the rule of law
— it safeguards the constitutional boundaries within which the
judicial function must operate.
90.
In the circumstances, the review
application must therefore be dismissed, with costs. But what costs
are warranted in the circumstances
of this case?
Costs
91.
The
general principle is that costs follow the result. A successful party
is ordinarily entitled to its costs unless the court finds
that there
are circumstances justifying a different order. The discretion to
awards costs must be exercised judiciously having
regard to the
facts, the conduct of the parties, and broader interests of justice
considerations.
[29]
92.
That principle is not inflexible, The Court
may, in appropriate cases, depart from it – particularly where
success is partial
or hallow, where a party has contributed to the
dispute or where broader considerations of fairness and public
interest demand
a different outcome.
93.
Punitive
costs orders, such as those on the attorney-and-client scale, are
reserved for exceptional cases where a party has acted
vexatiously,
frivolously, abusively or in a manner deserving of judicial censure.
Conduct such as persisting with litigation that
has become moot, or
rejecting a reasonable offer of settlement may justify such an
order.
[30]
94.
In this case, the relief sought by the
applicants has been unopposed since June 2023. After receiving the
developers’ revised
plan, the City advised the applicants in
May 2023 that it no longer opposed the review and accepted that its
earlier approval should
be set aside.
95.
On 21 June 2023, the developers filed a
notice to abide the outcomes of the review application. From that
point, the matter was
clearly unopposed. The applicants however took
no steps to bring it to finality or obtain the relief they now seek.
96.
When the City approved the revised plan on
27 November 2023, the application became moot. The applicants took no
action until February
2024, after construction resumed in terms of
the revised plan.
97.
In February 2024, the applicants proposed
an order setting aside both approvals, interdicting the City’s
future exercise of
public powers to approve building plans over Erf
1[...], and seeking costs on an attorney-and-client scale. The City
rejected the
proposed order. The applicants thereafter launched a
second review application.
98.
In June 2024, the City proposed a draft
order to resolve this application and the associated matters on
appeal. The draft order
recorded that the matter had become moot and
included a favourable costs order for the applicants up to that date,
to be born by
the developers. The developers accepted the terms of
the draft order, including liability for review costs.
99.
The applicants rejected them without
providing cogent reasons. This is regrettable. They were entitled to
their costs for what was,
at its inception, a meritorious review. The
opportunity to recover those costs was lost by their own refusal.
100.
As stated, from June 2023, the matter was
unopposed. Yet the applicants declined to finalise it. Instead, it
relied on the earlier
interim order by Gamble J and compliance order
by Fortuin J to continue to half construction even under a validly
approved revised
plan. In my view, this litigation ceased to function
as a
bona fide
review and became a mechanism to frustrate lawful construction.
101.
The developers have achieved substantial
success in these proceedings. While they failed to establish
that the 2021 plan had
lapsed under the Building Act, they succeeded
in the overall result: the validity of the 2021 plan was rendered
moot by the approval
of the revised plan. They seek a costs order,
including costs of two counsel.
102.
The developers were the originators of this
dispute. They submitted an unlawful plan, obtained its approval and
only conceded its
defects after litigation had commenced. It was only
thereafter that they renounced their rights and submitted a revised
plan. However,
their later offer to resolve the matter including
costs, was unreasonably rejected.
103.
I am accordingly inclined to grant the
developers a costs order – but only for the costs occasioned by
the applicants’
persistence with the review from 27 November
2023 onwards, the date on which the application became moot.
104.
The City seeks a punitive costs order
against the applicants. It raises two grounds for this order: first,
that the applicants persisted
with a moot application at public
expense; and second, that they made unsubstantiated and gratuitous
allegations of bias and procedural
impropriety against the City and
its officials – allegations were never withdrawn or
substantiated.
105.
While the City has been wholly successful
in resisting the application, I am not persuaded that a punitive
costs order is warranted.
It was the City’s approval of the
2021 plan that precipitated this litigation, which at inception was
well-founded. The City
has not explained how the unlawfulness of the
plan, it later conceded, escaped its detection at the approval stage.
These considerations
weigh against an exceptional order.
106.
That said, once it received the revised
plan, the City acted responsibly. It did not oppose the review,
accepted that the prior
approval should be set aside, and made
repeated efforts to resolve the matter. Its attempts at resolution
were constructive and
failed through no fault of its own.
107.
The same cannot be said of the applicants.
Between May and November 2023, they had ample opportunity to finalise
the matter while
it remained unopposed. After November 2023, they
were aware of the mootness defence, yet they persisted –
proposing sweeping
and untenable relief in February 2024 and
rejecting a reasonable offer in June 2024 that would have disposed of
the matter on favourable
terms for them.
108.
In the circumstances, although I decline to
grant a punitive costs order, I am satisfied that the applicants
should bear the costs
incurred by the City and the developers from 27
November 2023, including costs of two counsel.
109.
This allocation of costs reflects the
principle that while applicants were justified in initiating these
proceedings, their refusal
to withdraw or settle after the matter
became moot shifted the burden of liability in relation to costs.
110.
I therefore make the following order:
110.1.
The application is dismissed.
110.2.
The applicants are directed to pay:
110.2.1.
The City’s costs incurred from 27
November 2023 onwards, including the costs of two counsel, such costs
to be taxed on Scale
C for Senior Counsel and Scale B for Junior
Counsel; and
110.2.2.
The developers’ costs incurred from
27 November 2023 onwards, including the costs of two counsel, such
costs to be taxed on
Scale C for Senior Counsel and Scale B for
Junior Counsel.
GSS KHOZA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION
APPEARANCES
For the applicants: Adv D
Irish SC, with Adv D Lubbe, instructed by Mr LJ van Rensburg and Co.
For the first to third
respondents: Adv J Muller and Adv D Baguley, instructed by Slabbert
Venter Yanoutsos Inc.
For the fourth
respondent: Adv R Paschke SC, with Adv M de Beer, instructed by
Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
[1]
[2023]
ZASCA 35
(31 March 2023) at para 11.
## [2]AB
and Another v Pridwin Preparatory School and Others(CCT294/18) [2020] ZACC 12; 2020 (9) BCLR 1029 (CC); 2020 (5) SA 327
(CC) at para 50. Also seeNational
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and OthersNPC
and Another2023
(6) BCLR 752 (CC) at para 23;Legal
Aid v Magidiwana2015 (2) SA 568 (SCA) at para 2, confirmed on appealLegal
Aid South Africa v Magidiwana and others(2015 (6) SA 494 (CC); 2015 (11) BCLR 1346 (CC).
[2]
AB
and Another v Pridwin Preparatory School and Others
(CCT294/18) [2020] ZACC 12; 2020 (9) BCLR 1029 (CC); 2020 (5) SA 327
(CC) at para 50. Also see
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Oth
ers
NPC
and Another
2023
(6) BCLR 752 (CC) at para 23;
Legal
Aid v Magidiwana
2015 (2) SA 568 (SCA) at para 2, confirmed on appeal
Legal
Aid South Africa v Magidiwana and others
(2015 (6) SA 494 (CC); 2015 (11) BCLR 1346 (CC).
[3]
Minister
of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Estate Late
Stransham-Ford
[2016] ZASCA 197
;
[2017] 1 All SA 354
(SCA);
2017 (3) BCLR 364
(SCA);
2017 (3) SA 152
(SCA) paras 25 and 26.
[4]
This
power is conferred on a court of appeal by
section
16(2)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[5]
Section
7(4) of the Building Act reads:
“
Any
approval granted by a local authority in accordance with subsection
(1)(a) in respect of any application shall lapse after
the expiry of
a period of 12 months as from the date on which it was granted
unless the erection of the building in question
is commended or
proceeding with within the said period or unless such local
authority extended the said period at the request
in writing of the
applicant concerned.”
[6]
Section
11 of the Building Act reads:
Erection of buildings
subject to time limit
(1)
If for a period exceeding three months the
erection of a building is not proceeded with, the local authority in
question may by
notice in writing, served by post or delivered,
order the owner of such building to resume and to complete the
erection of such
building within the periods specified in such
notice.
(2)
If the owner of a building on or to whom a
notice referred to in subsection (1) was served or delivered, fails
to resume or complete
the erection of such building within the
periods specified in such notice, the local authority in question
may extend such periods
from time to time if such owner satisfies it
that such failure was due to circumstances beyond his control.
(3)
If the owner of a building on or to whom a
notice referred to in subsection (1) was served or delivered, fails
to resume or to
complete the erection of such building within the
periods specified in such notice or, when applicable, within such
periods as
extended in accordance with subsection (2), and the local
authority in question is of the opinion that such building is
unsightly
or dangerous to life or property or derogates from the
value of adjoining or neighbouring properties, such local authority
may
by notice in writing, served by post or delivered, order such
owner to demolish such building, to remove the material of which
such building consisted and any other material or rubbish from the
site in question, and to otherwise clean up such site within
the
period specified in the last-mentioned notice.
(4)
If the owner of a building fails to comply
with a notice served on or delivered to him in accordance with
subsection (3) in respect
of such building, the local authority in
question may demolish such building, remove the material of which
such building consisted
and any other material or rubbish from the
site in question and otherwise clean up such site, and may recover
the costs thereof
from such owner: Provided that such local
authority may sell such material and may utilise the proceeds of
such sale to defray
the costs of such demolition, removal or
clean-up and shall pay the balance, if any, of such proceeds to such
owner.
(5)
Any approval granted by a local authority
in accordance with section 7(1)(a) in respect of any application
shall lapse as soon
as a notice in terms of subsection (3) is served
on or delivered to the owner of the building in question in respect
of such
building.
[7]
2014
(4) SA 474
(CC) at para 28.
[8]
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at para 18.
[9]
[1993] ZASCA 89
;
1993
(4) SA 110
(A) at 116F-117A.
[10]
Amler’s
Pleadings, Tenth Edition (2024) LexisNexis, p 390.
[11]
[1995]
2 All SA 190
(A) at para 9.
[12]
[2008] ZACC 11
;
2008
(6) SA 129
(CC).
[13]
Walele
at
paras 27 to 45.
[14]
See
L
Baxter
Administrative
Law
(1984) Juta p 374, footnote 208.
[15]
Supra
,
p 379.
[16]
Amler’s
Pleadings
,
10th ed (2024) p 390.
[17]
Laws
v Rutherford
1924 AD 261.
[18]
See
the discussions in Cora Hoexter and Glen Penfold Administrative Law
in South Africa 3 ed (2021), p 380 – 388 and Lawrence
Baxter
Administrative Law (1984) p 376 – 377.
[19]
[2010]
2 All SA 519 (SCA).
[20]
(1237/09)
[2009] ZAWCHC 9
(12 February 2009).
[21]
[2020]
ZAWCHC 181
(15 December 2020).
[22]
2022
(6) SA 383 (WCC).
[23]
Habitat
Council
at
paras 76 to 77.
[24]
2004
(6) SA 222 (SCA).
## [25]2014
(3) SA 481 (CC).
[25]
2014
(3) SA 481 (CC).
[26]
2017
(2) SA 211 (CC).
[27]
Merafong
at
para 36.
[28]
For
example, this Court has applied the principle in
Vinpro
NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2021]
ZAWCHC 261
(3 December 2021);
Studenteplein
v Stellenbosch
[2022] ZAWCHC 183
(15 September 2022].
[29]
Cilliers,
Loots and Nel,
Herbstein
& Van Winsen’s The Civil Practice of the High Courts of
South Africa
,
5
th
Edition, Volume 2, pp 954 – 957.
[30]
Cilliers
supra, p 967 and pp 971- 973.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Green Point Residents and Ratepayers' Association and Others v Gartner and Others (Leave to Appeal) (6707/2022) [2025] ZAWCHC 595 (22 September 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 595High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)100% similar
Green Point Residents' and Ratepayers Association and Others v Gartner and Others (4859/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 252 (10 September 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 252High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)100% similar
Green Point Residents and Ratepayers Association and Others v Gartner and Others (4859/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 159 (3 June 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 159High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)100% similar
Green Connection NPC and Another v Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment and Others (5676/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 349 (13 August 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 349High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
South African Renewable Green Energy (Pty) Ltd and Others v Coria (PKF) Investments 28 (RF) (Pty) Ltd and Others (6020/2023; 16391/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 458 (9 October 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 458High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)97% similar