Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 291South Africa
Jack and Others v Saldanha Bay Municipality and Others (15284/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 291 (9 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
9 October 2024
Judgment
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## Jack and Others v Saldanha Bay Municipality and Others (15284/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 291 (9 October 2024)
Jack and Others v Saldanha Bay Municipality and Others (15284/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 291 (9 October 2024)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case number:
15284/2023
In the matter between:
PETER
JACK
First
Applicant
ELSA
FOURIE
Second
Applicant
EBEN
FOURIE
Third
Applicant
DONALD
DE BEEER
Fourth
Applicant
RONEL
STANDER
Fifth
Applicant
JOHAN
VAN DER MERWE
Sixth
Applicant
MIKE
RUSSON
Seventh
Applicant
and
SALDANHA
BAY MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
JOHAN
JACOBS
Second
Respondent
LEENTJIESKLIP
CHALET OWNERS ASSOCIATION
Third
Respondent
Coram:
Acting Justice P Farlam
Heard:
16 August 2024, further submissions 19 August 2024
Delivered:
9 October 2024
JUDGMENT
FARLAM
AJ
:
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The applicants and the second respondent lease sites in the
Leentjiesklip
caravan park on the edge of the Langebaan beach, in an
area falling under the control of the first respondent (“the
Municipality”).
The applicants allege that the Municipality’s
approvals of building plans for the house occupied by the second
respondent
(“Jacobs”) were unlawful and fall to be
reviewed and set aside. They also seek an order directing Jacobs to
demolish
a cellar constructed below the house on his leased stand in
the caravan park.
[2]
Jacobs is
the only respondent to oppose the application.
[1]
The Municipality has abided the application, after being assured that
no costs would be sought against it in that eventuality.
The third
respondent, the Leentjiesklip Chalet Owners Association (“LCOA”),
which was merely cited by virtue of its
interest in the matter, has
understandably not participated at all.
[3]
I address the grounds of review below, after outlining the applicable
regulatory framework, before turning to the further relief sought.
But before doing so, comments are apposite on Jacobs’ challenge
to the first applicant’s standing, as well as the applicants’
treatment of the record provided by the Municipality.
# THE FIRST APPLICANT’S
STANDING
THE FIRST APPLICANT’S
STANDING
[4]
As mentioned, the applicants all rent erven in the Leentjiesklip
caravan
park (“the Caravan Park”). On the face of it,
each applicant has an interest in the rules and practice of the
Caravan
Park being adhered to and enforced. Jacobs has nevertheless
placed the standing of the first applicant (“Jack”) in
dispute. This is because Jack is not an ‘
immediate
neighbour
’ of Jacobs but instead resides about 550 metres
away in the Caravan Park, with many other stands in between.
According to
the second respondent, that means that Jack’s
consent was not required for the building works and that he
consequently does
not have a “direct and substantial interest”
in the review application.
[5]
That
submission is wrong for several reasons. Significantly, it fails to
appreciate that the Municipality’s impugned approvals
involved
administrative action, and that the applicants’ challenges
thereto accordingly implicated section 33 of the Constitution
(the
right to just administrative action) and were therefore governed by
the standing provisions pertaining to breaches of constitutional
rights, enumerated in section 38 of the Constitution.
[2]
The more restrictive common-law standing rules are therefore not of
application, and it is unnecessary for Jack to have a direct
and
substantial interest in Jacobs’ building approvals; it is
enough that he has a sufficient personal interest in the lawfulness
of them,
[3]
or that he satisfy
one of the other constitutional standing grounds.
[4]
In any event, as will be apparent from the discussion of the review
grounds, the applicants are relying on non-adherence with a
municipal
resolution which was intended to be binding on all residents of the
Caravan Park, as well as alleged flouting of the
terms of a standard
lease agreement, informed by that resolution, which pertains to all
occupiers. As lessees and residents in
the Caravan Park, all the
applicants have a direct interest in challenging non-compliance with
the resolution, at least.
[5]
That Jack’s consent was not required for the building plans
under the lease agreement, as a result of his not being an immediate
neighbour, does not detract from his standing to advance other review
grounds.
## The applicants’
non-compliance with rule 53
The applicants’
non-compliance with rule 53
[6]
As
mentioned, the Municipality’s impugned approvals constitute
administrative action. They are accordingly governed by the
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”), which
gives effect to the right to just administrative
action in section 33
of the Constitution. A review of administrative action must thus
accord with PAJA and the regulations promulgated
thereunder, most
notably for present purposes the Administrative Review Rules,
[6]
which effectively make Uniform Rule 53 applicable to reviews other
than legality reviews.
[7]
In terms of
Uniform Rule 53, a review applicant
inter
alia
(
a
) is
required to extract relevant documents from the record provided by
the decision-maker(s) under rule 53(1)(
b
)
and provide the registrar and the other parties with copies thereof
(rule 53(3)), and (
b
) may
thereafter file a supplementary affidavit which makes reference to
those documents (and attaches especially pertinent
ones) and
identifies any further review grounds or prayers arising from the
record of decision (rule 53(4)). It is only the selected
portions of
the record which should be regarded as evidence in the review
application.
[7]
While an
applicant may in some instances consider it appropriate to place
reliance on the entire record of decision (“RoD”),
the
applicant should at least explain why this is so. If the entire RoD
is intended to be placed before the court, it would moreover
be
preferable if it were paginated separately.
[8]
There was wholesale non-compliance with those requirements in this
case.
The applicants’ attorneys merely made available the
entire indexed RoD received from the Municipality’s attorneys
and
at some stage added the whole RoD, with the Municipality’s
index, to the paginated application papers immediately after the
founding affidavit and returns of service. The applicants did not
indicate which documents in the RoD, if any, were considered
“necessary for the purposes of the review” (rule 53(3)).
Nor did they file a supplementary founding affidavit, or thus
seek to
rely on anything contained in the RoD in augmentation of their
founding affidavit (in terms of rule 53(4)) prior to the
respondents
being called upon to present their answer to the review. The
applicants consequently created the impression that they
would not be
relying on any portions of the RoD. Yet, compounding the
irregularity, the applicants proceeded to cross-refer to
pages of the
RoD on numerous occasions in reply and sought for the first time to
place emphasis on those documents in that context.
[9]
Jacobs did not object to the applicants’ approach. Nor did the
Municipality,
whose attorney appeared at the start of the hearing
merely to confirm the terms on which the Municipality was abiding. I
shall
nevertheless not have regard to the portions of the RoD relied
upon for the first time in reply, or any other portions of the RoD
not mentioned in the answering affidavit, when deciding this
application.
## The regulatory framework
The regulatory framework
[10]
Because the applicants lease sites in a caravan park which is
situated on land owned by
the Municipality, the parties’
respective rights and obligations are regulated in the first instance
by the Saldanha Bay
Municipality Public Amenities By-Law (“the
By-law”), which defines ‘
public amenity
’ as
meaning
inter alia
‘
any land, … camping area,
caravan park, … which is the property of, or is possessed,
controlled or leased by the municipality
and to which the general
public has access …
’.
[11]
In terms of section 15 of the By-law, the Municipality ‘
may
determine and allocate a portion in a caravan park to be permanently
occupied by caravans or mobile homes
’ (ss (1)), and
‘
may determine conditions additional to those contained in
this by-law for the use of caravan parks that fall under the control
of
the municipality
’ (ss (3)). Section 8 of the By-law
provides that the Municipality ‘
may enter into an agreement
with any person in terms of which a public amenity or any part
thereof may be used for the purpose and
subject to the conditions set
out in the agreement
’.
[12]
As set out below, there is a standard lease agreement, as
contemplated in section 8 of
the By-law, which regulates all
occupiers’ use of the stands in the Caravan Park (“the
Lease Agreement”). The
Municipality has also determined
conditions for the use of the Caravan Park, in terms of section
15(3), most recently in a resolution
passed by the Council on
15 August 2015 (“the Resolution”). When considering
any application for building plan
approvals by an occupier of the
Caravan Park, the Municipality would consequently be required to have
regard to relevant provisions
in both the Lease Agreement and the
Resolution.
[13]
The
Resolution – which was headed “PFC&P21/8-15:
MUNICIPAL BUILDINGS AND TERRAINS: LEENTJIESKLIP HOLIDAY RESORT:
CONTRACT CONDITIONS” – appears to have been designed to
address and regularise unauthorised constructions at the Caravan
Park. To that end, it repealed an earlier resolution of October 2014
and introduced a number of additional conditions for building
in the
Caravan Park, which were required to be included in the standard
lease agreement between the Municipality and all lessees
of stands in
the Caravan Park (defined above as the Lease Agreement).
[8]
[14]
Of particular relevance for present purposes is clause xvi) of the
Resolution, which provided
‘that due to a lack of an adequate
sewer system,
no additional permanent residence be allowed
as
the camp was mainly developed for short term holiday purposes’
[underlined emphasis added].
[15]
That no permanent structures would be allowed in the Caravan Park was
also confirmed by
clause iii), which listed the improvements recorded
in August 2014 that would ‘
be regarded as minor improvements
that may be allowed …
with the understanding that
the improvements be of such a nature that it can easily be removed
and not be regarded as permanent
structures and that the Municipality
will not compensate any tenant for any minor improvements in the
event that the mobile home
must be removed
’
[bold emphasis in original].
[16]
In similar vein, it is stipulated in clause x) of the Resolution:
‘
that the
following improvements be allowed according to the lease agreement:
enclosing the front
porch/verandah (original roof structure) of which the extent is not
exceeding the total floor area of the existing
home with the same
material as the original mobile home”.
[17]
As regards the process for approvals, it was recorded in clause v) of
the Resolution ‘
that as the Saldanha Bay Municipality is the
Landlord in this matter, approval from the latter first be obtained
before building
plans are submitted for approval’
.
[18]
Potentially relevant, too, to the demolition relief sought by the
applicants is clause
ix), in which it was resolved that ‘
where
illegal structures/additions were constructed without the
Municipality’s prior approval, a contravention levy of R30-00
per square meter (m
2
) per month be paid
until the illegal structure / addition is approved by the
municipality or demolished by the tenant and that
the application of
the levy be determined in collaboration with the LCOA’
.
[19]
The terms
of the Resolutions were apparently communicated (verbatim) to the
then lessees in a letter from the Municipality dated
16 May 2016,
which also attached a copy of the Lease Agreement.
[9]
It would seem from the applicants’ leases appended to the
founding affidavit that only some of the directions contained in
the
Resolution were expressly included in the Lease Agreement when it was
amended following the Resolution. The Lease Agreement
is nevertheless
required to be read with the Resolution in its entirety, as the
Resolution prescribed additional terms of occupiers’
use of the
Caravan Park, in terms of section 15(3) of the By-Law. Insofar as may
be necessary, the remaining contents of the Resolution
could be
regarded as impliedly or tacitly included in the Lease Agreement.
[20]
As is evident from the Resolution, as well as section 8 of the
By-law, the Lease Agreement
is the primary document governing the
lessees’ use of their stands in the Caravan Park. Each tenant
was required to conclude
such an agreement with the Municipality
prior to taking occupation.
[21]
The applicants placed particular reliance on a clause of the Lease
Agreement, headed “Maintenance”,
which they indicated to
be clause 19 thereof (though it is clause 20 in some versions of the
applicants’ post-2015 leases).
That clause states
inter alia
(underlined emphasis added):
‘
No construction
(including the erection of shade nets and/or lean-to’s) of any
nature whatsoever shall be allowed unless a
building plan has been
submitted to the relevant council for approval and subsequent
approval thereof and
all
immediate neighbours have consented thereto. The consent of the
immediate neighbours must be in writing
.’
[10]
[22]
The applicants drew attention, too, to a further clause of the leases
concluded from 2017
onwards (which they referred to as clause 20,
though it was also numbered as clause 20(a)), which provides that:
‘
The Tenant must
… at all times during the lease period ensure that any
maintenance and improvement work to the leased property
be done
strictly in accordance with the clauses titled “Use” and
“Maintenance”. Should the Tenant carry
out any
maintenance and improvement work contrary as prescribed
[sic]
in
the said clauses, the Landlord shall be entitled, without prejudice
to any of his rights contained in the clause titled “Failure
by
Tenant” also be entitled
[sic]
to request the Tenant in
writing to at own cost remove such contradiction and restore the
leased property to the satisfaction of
the Landlord.’
[23]
Referred to in that clause, and also otherwise germane, is the clause
of the Lease Agreement
headed “Use” (contained in either
clause 12 or clause 13 of the applicants’ attached leases),
which speaks to
the kinds of improvements which can lawfully be made
on stands in the Caravan Park. It provides that:
‘
The Tenant may
use the property to park and occupy one mobile home thereon together
with a sun porch and glass enclosure, as the
Landlord in his sole
discretion may approve, and which discretion must be exercised in a
reasonable manner.’
# THE APPLICANTS’
GROUNDS OF REVIEW
THE APPLICANTS’
GROUNDS OF REVIEW
[24]
The applicants have sought to impugn the Municipality’s
building plan approvals on
three broad bases. The applicants have
contended that:
24.1.
the structure which was approved by the Municipality, and built by
Jacobs, constitutes a “permanent
structure”, and was
accordingly in contravention of the Resolution;
24.2.
the approvals also violated section 7 of the National Building
Regulations and Building Standards Act, 103
of 1977 (“the
Building Act”) in the following respects:
24.2.1.
the Municipality ‘
could never be satisfied that the
applications and building comply with the requirements of the
[Building] Act and any other applicable
law as required by section
7(1)(a) because of the Resolution …’
;
24.2.2.
the Municipality ‘
could also not have been satisfied under
section 7(1)(b)(ii)(aa)(ccc) that the structure would not ‘probably
or in fact derogate
from the value of adjoining or neighbouring
properties’
;
24.3.
the immediate neighbours did not give their consent to the building,
as required by the Lease Agreement,
and the approval process was
moreover procedurally unfair by virtue of not giving directly
affected persons in the Caravan Park
an opportunity to comment on the
building plans.
[25]
It is also
not altogether clear exactly how the applicants’ challenges
should be considered to relate to the section 6(2)
PAJA review
grounds in terms of which all judicial review applications must be
framed.
[11]
It would however
seem that the remaining review grounds were intended to at least
involve challenges in terms of sections 6(2)(
b
),
6(2)(
c
),
6(2)(
e
)(iii),
and 6(2)(
f
)(i)
of PAJA – and thus involve contentions that, respectively:
there was non-compliance with a mandatory and material procedure
or
condition prescribed by an empowering provision; the process was
procedurally unfair; the municipal officials failed to take
account
of relevant considerations; and the approvals contravened a law.
[26]
I shall address the review grounds in that context, commencing, for
convenience, with the
contention referred to in paragraph 24.3 above
(the complaint that the immediate neighbours’ consent was not
obtained). But
before doing so, a comment is appropriate on the
applicants’ argument that it could be inferred from the
Municipality’s
lack of opposition that the Municipality
considered the application to be well-founded. I disagree with that
contention. As submitted
by Jacobs’ counsel, the Municipality’s
decision to abide the review could have been informed by various
considerations
and therefore does not imply an acceptance of the
merits of any of the review grounds. That having been said, the fact
that the
Municipality has not filed an answering affidavit and
consequently not denied any allegations in the founding affidavit,
nor furnished
any reasons, as it was entitled under Rule 53(1)(
b
)
to do, is nevertheless a complicating factor for Jacobs. For only the
Municipality’s officials could provide firsthand evidence
of
what exactly the Municipality considered when granting the impugned
approvals.
## Non-compliance with the
consent requirement in the Lease Agreement
Non-compliance with the
consent requirement in the Lease Agreement
[27]
As mentioned, it is stipulated in the Lease Agreement, which all
occupiers of sites in
the Caravan Park must conclude, that
construction of any nature on a site in the park requires both the
approval of the Municipality
and the written consent of all
“immediate neighbours”.
[28]
Jacobs’ site is stand 53. As is evident from an aerial
photograph of the relevant
portion of the Caravan Park adduced by the
applicants [annexed at the end of this judgment], and would anyway
follow from a sequential
numbering of stands, Jacobs’ immediate
neighbours include the occupiers of stands 52 and 54. In addition, as
the aerial photograph
shows, sites 51 and 56 are also immediately
adjacent to Jacobs’ stand; while sites 59 and 58 are directly
opposite, across
a (narrow) road, and the lessees thereof would
accordingly, in my view, qualify as immediate neighbours in terms of
clause 19 of
the Lease Agreement as well.
[29]
Elsa and
Eben Fourie, the second and third applicants, lease site 52; Mike
Russon, the seventh applicant, leases site 54; and Donald
Wayne de
Beer, the fourth applicant, leases site 58 together with his wife.
All of them are therefore immediate neighbours of Jacobs.
So, too, in
my view, is the occupier of site 59 (whom the court was advised in a
note furnished after the hearing is leased by
Dr Van Rooyen, who is
not party to these proceedings), as well as the lessee of site 51,
who was indicated to be Ms IC Boswell,
and the lessee of site 56,
whose identity was not revealed in the application papers.
[12]
[30]
In terms of his lease agreement with the municipality, the prior
written consent of all
those persons was therefore required before
Jacobs could commence construction of any kind on his site (stand
53). There was not
such consent.
30.1.
The case of
both Jacobs and the Municipality in this regard
[13]
is that:
30.1.1.
written consent was provided by
the LCOA and two immediate
neighbours: (i) Elsa and Eben Fourie (the second and third
applicants, and the occupiers of stand
52), who sent an email on 21
August 2019; and (ii) Lynne Jones, the daughter of IC Boswell
(the lessee of stand 51), who sent
an email on 29 August 2019;
and
30.1.2.
the other neighbours were aware
of the proposed construction and did
not object.
30.2.
That version is even on its own terms inadequate.
30.2.1.
Elsa and
Eben Fourie did not expressly agree to the construction of a
cellar;
[14]
nor, it seems, was
their consent sought in 2022, before the Municipality granted a fresh
approval (pursuant to the resubmission
of the application for stand
53 in May 2022) on 5 September 2022.
[15]
Even if Lynette Jones could give consent for her mother, the lessee
of stand 51, without any indication of authorisation,
[16]
her approval was also only given in response to the August 2019
application, and not the further submission in May 2022. There
is
furthermore no suggestion of consent from Russon or De Beer (the
lessees of stands 54 and 58), or the consent of whoever leases
(or
leased) site 56.
30.2.2.
The absence of an objection from
an immediate neighbour was also
hardly sufficient. For what is required by the “Maintenance”
clause in the Lease Agreement
is written consent, not tacit
acquiescence.
[31]
Although the relevant clause of the Lease Agreement does not
stipulate that the written
consent of immediate neighbours is a
prerequisite for municipal approval (merely for construction), it
must, in my view, follow
from that clause that the Municipality would
have to consider whether the neighbours have consented before
deciding whether to
grant approval. It would neither be sensible nor
appropriate for the Municipality to disregard that requirement when
considering
whether to approve submitted building plans. To do that
would be to invite wholesale disregard of the Municipality’s
own
condition (immediate neighbours’ consent), as well as to
oblige municipal officials to spend time on an endeavour which could
be futile (if the immediate neighbours’ consent were not
forthcoming). As a matter of logic and practicality, the immediate
neighbours’ consent is therefore, under the current regulatory
scheme, a jurisdictional prerequisite, which the Municipal
Council
should satisfy itself has been complied with, before considering
whether to approve a municipal plan.
[32]
There is no indication that the Municipality considered that factor
in this instance; nor
it appears, could it have been so satisfied,
either in 2019 or in 2022. The impugned approvals were thus
arrived at as a
result of a failure by municipal officials to apply
their minds properly to all relevant considerations. They accordingly
fall
to be set aside in terms of section 6(2)(
e
)(iii) of PAJA.
[33]
As I understood the applicants’ submissions, they also
contended that:
33.1.
the absence of the immediate neighbours’ consent meant that
there had been disregard of a mandatory
and material procedure or
condition prescribed by an empowering provision (rendering the
approvals reviewable in terms of section
6(2)(
b
) of PAJA); and
33.2.
the failure of the Municipality to engage with the neighbours
resulted in the process being procedurally
unfair (triggering section
6(2)(
c
) of PAJA).
[34]
While it is unnecessary for me to reach a final conclusion on those
submissions, I should
mention that the first submission seems to have
merit; but the second does not.
34.1.
The term
“empowering provision” is defined in section 1 of PAJA as
“a law, a rule of common law, customary law,
or an agreement,
instrument or other document in terms of which administrative action
was purportedly taken”. While it may
well be that not all
contracts would qualify as empowering provisions,
[17]
and the impugned approvals were moreover not taken in terms of the
Lease Agreement in this case, it could in my view be concluded
that a
condition in the Lease Agreement – an agreement contemplated by
section 8 of the By-law, which, in terms thereof,
may prescribe the
purposes and conditions of use of the Caravan Park (a public amenity)
– was a mandatory and material condition
prescribed by an
empowering provision.
34.2.
The
procedural unfairness contention has less to commend it. The
applicants’ arguments confusingly blurred the absence of
the
immediate neighbours’ consent with the Municipality’s
failure to engage with the neighbours prior to approving
the plans
(two potentially distinct issues). It was, as indicated, necessary in
the light of the Lease Agreement for the immediate
neighbours both to
be consulted and to consent. Insofar as any immediate neighbour was
not approached for comment (and requested
to consent), the absence of
consent would on its own be fatal. There would not seem to be any
duty to engage with interested persons
outside of the strictures of
the Lease Agreement,
[18]
unless it was proposed to adversely affect the rights or legitimate
expectations of other occupiers of the Caravan Park, which
I do not
understand the Municipality to have intended to do (though whether
they in fact encroached on occupiers’ rights
is a different
matter and addressed in the context of other review grounds). I
therefore do not think that there is an independent
procedural
unfairness review ground in this context.
## The disregard of the
Resolution
The disregard of the
Resolution
[35]
As is evident from the summary of the review grounds in paragraph 24
above, the Resolution
(passed by the Municipality on 15 August
2015 in respect of the Caravan Park) is central to the first and
second review grounds,
which can conveniently be discussed together.
[36]
The applicants’ arguments in this regard are straightforward.
Their case is that
the Resolution only permitted temporary
structures, yet the approved building included a concrete cellar
which is by its nature
permanent.
[37]
Jacobs
strongly disputed that his improvements were permanent. There was
thus a dispute of fact on this score. In the light of my
conclusions
above, it is unnecessary for me finally to resolve this dispute, and
in the light of what is stated in the next two
paragraphs, I also
deem it inappropriate to do so. I therefore merely mention that
prima
facie
it is difficult to conceive of a concrete structure as a temporary
edifice, and the construction of a concrete cellar would also
appear
to be at odds with the “Use” clause in the Lease
Agreement (quoted in paragraph 23 above). This may therefore
be an
instance – though I put it no higher than that – where a
factual dispute could be resolved on the papers in favour
of the
applicants,
[19]
and where a
court could ‘
take
a robust, common-sense approach to a dispute on motion’
.
[20]
[38]
As indicated, I consider it undesirable to express a firm opinion on
this issue in this
application. This is not only because of the
factual dispute and Jacobs’ allegations about other similar
structures which
appear to have been permitted, but also, and more
especially, because it does not appear that the Municipality has
itself properly
considered this question, and the Municipality has
moreover unhelpfully provided no input on this issue. That itself
indicates
a further irregularity with the impugned approvals: namely,
that the Municipality failed to have due regard to whether the
approved
plans would permit a permanent structure, in contravention
of the stipulation in clause xvi) of the Resolution that “no
additional
permanent residence be allowed” (due to a lack of an
adequate sewer system and the fact that the camp was mainly developed
for short term holiday purposes).
[39]
The Municipality approved Jacobs’ August 2019 application for
permission to improve
his property, to
inter alia
“add a
cellar”, around 21 September 2019, on the basis that the
“repairs and renovations … be regarded
as a temporary
structure”. The authorisation in October 2020 was to similar
effect. There is however no indication that the
Municipality –
which, as mentioned, did not file an answering affidavit or provide
reasons – considered whether the
proposed cellar would indeed
be a “temporary structure” and thus complied with the
Resolution. Nor is there anything
to suggest that the Municipality
gave due consideration to this issue when it considered the
resubmitted plans and granted its
approval of them in September 2022.
[40]
A
resolution of a Municipal Council must be paid due heed by a
municipality.
[21]
The
officials were accordingly required to consider whether clause xvi)
of the Resolution (among others) was being complied with;
but the
Municipality appears not to have done so – and it bears
reiteration that the Municipality has, importantly, not alleged
that
it did give due cognisance to this important question, let alone
furnished evidence to corroborate that. The apparent failure
to
consider whether the improvements were temporary or permanent was
particularly egregious in 2022, as there had already been
a complaint
that Jacobs had constructed what looked like a concrete swimming
pool, which had caused the Municipality to instruct
him to ‘
remove
all illegal construction work’
:
a demand that was apparently treated merely as a stop-work order. On
this basis, too, the impugned approvals are susceptible to
review
under section 6(2)(
e
)(iii)
of PAJA.
## The alleged derogation
from the value of adjoining properties
The alleged derogation
from the value of adjoining properties
[41]
The remaining review ground involves an allegation that the
Municipality could not have
been satisfied, as required by section
7(1)(
b
)(ii)(
aa
)(ccc) of the Building Act, that the
proposed building on site 53 ‘
would not ‘probably or
in fact derogate from the value of adjoining or neighbouring
properties’
.
[42]
It is now
settled that a local authority must positively satisfy itself that
the disqualifying factors in subsection 7(1)(
b
)(ii)
do not exist
[22]
–
rather than proceeding from the premise that it should approve plans
unless satisfied that the proposed building will probably,
or in
fact, trigger one of the disqualifying factors (or, in other words,
unless it is satisfied that one of the disqualifying
factors
does
exist).
[23]
It is not apparent
whether the Municipality formed the requisite view in this regard,
not least because the Municipality did not
file an affidavit or give
reasons to explain its position. I nevertheless have significant
reservations about this review ground,
as it seems entirely
speculative. There was no suggestion prior to the bringing of this
application that the Jacobs’ house
would detract from the
values of neighbouring properties; nor indeed were there any other
actual objections from neighbours. Nor
did the applicants adduce an
iota of evidence to show that there probably or would in fact be a
derogation in the market value
of any neighbouring property
[24]
– as, for example, the Constitutional Court in
Walele
contemplated that an applicant might do.
[25]
It was not sufficient for the applicants merely to assert, as they
did, that Jacobs’ construction was likely to have a deleterious
effect on neighbouring properties’ values by virtue of looking
superior to them. Assuming that the building was in accordance
with
the Resolution and Lease Agreement, and thus the conditions imposed
under the By-law, that was not a likely inference from
the approved
plans. It was more probable that the new structure would have no
effect on the neighbouring properties, or might even
enhance their
value (by showing what was possible). There is consequently nothing
on the papers to indicate that the Municipality
could not reasonably
have been satisfied that the approved structure would not be likely
to derogate from the value of other properties
in the Caravan Park.
As in
Camps
Bay Ratepayers
,
[26]
the applicants’ real complaint appears to be a section 7(1)(
a
)
one: i.e., an argument that the Municipality could not have been
“satisfied that the application in question complies with
the
requirements of [the Building] Act and any other applicable law”.
That complaint has been addressed above.
# THE FURTHER RELIEF SOUGHT
BY THE APPLICANTS
THE FURTHER RELIEF SOUGHT
BY THE APPLICANTS
[43]
In their notice of motion, the applicants sought an order that Jacobs
be directed to demolish
the building, basement and foundations
constructed on his stand. However, at the hearing, they only
persisted in seeking the removal
/ demolition of the basement or
cellar, which was alleged to be a permanent structure, and thus
forbidden under the Resolution
and the Lease Agreement.
[44]
The applicants did not separately motivate this relief in the
founding affidavit. Nor did
they identify the empowering provision
which would permit that relief. The impression created is that the
applicants believed that
this relief was self-evident and would
follow as a matter of course. But, if so, they were badly mistaken.
[45]
In terms of section 8 of PAJA, the usual relief in the event of a
judicial review succeeding
is for the matter to be remitted back to
the decision maker for reconsideration (ss 8(1)(
c
)(i)).
It is only in exceptional cases that a court will grant an order
“substituting or varying the administrative action
or
correcting a defect resulting from the administrative action”
(ss 8(1)(
c
)(ii)). Other relief in terms of section 8(1)
of PAJA must moreover be motivated as “just and equitable”.
[46]
While
section 21 of the Building Act permits a demolition order if a
magistrate “is satisfied that such erection is contrary
to or
does not comply with the provisions of this Act or any approval or
authorization granted thereunder”, that section
is only
applicable in the event of an application being brought by a local
authority or the Minister. Persons (such as the applicants)
bringing
an application to review and set aside the unlawful approval of
building plans by a local authority would not have standing
to pursue
remedies provided for in section 21. Such persons would be restricted
to seeking a mandamus, in appropriate circumstances,
compelling the
municipality to act in terms of section 21;
[27]
and the applicants have not sought such relief. Or they could invoke
the court’s common-law discretion in circumstances where
a
party’s rights have been encroached upon.
[28]
[47]
I do not
consider a demolition order to be just and equitable in this context.
This case does not involve a situation such as the
one considered by
the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Lester
,
[29]
where a person has undertaken building works without any approval or
authorisation. Whether or not Jacobs commenced construction
before
all approvals were granted (as the applicants alleged), the fact is
that Jacobs’ building plans were all approved
by the
Municipality. If, as I have concluded, the Municipality acted
irregularly in so approving, the approvals must be set aside,
and the
applications must be returned to the Municipality for
reconsideration. It would not be fair or just to compound Jacobs’
prejudice by ordering him to demolish part of the building that was
previously authorised, but has now lost its authorisation.
That would
also, in any event, be inappropriate when it is unclear what will
happen on reconsideration. Were I to order that the
building’s
basement and foundations be demolished in the interim, I would
effectively be substituting my own decision for
that of the
Municipality.
[48]
There would
also be the further problem that, as pointed out by the Supreme Court
of Appeal in
BSB
International
,
a court would have to be satisfied, before granting a partial
demolition order, that the structural integrity and safety of the
building would not be compromised.
[30]
That is a material consideration in the present case, given that the
applicants seek the demolition of the foundations or cellar,
which
may well undermine the rest of the building.
[49]
As noted above, the Municipality also has a discretion as to how to
deal with non-compliant
structures. There are evidently other
non-compliant concrete structures in the Caravan Park which the
Municipality has seemingly
tolerated. For this reason, too, it would
be inappropriate for me to direct what should happen to the building
and other improvements
on site 53 of the Caravan Park in the absence
of municipal authorisations. Nor, in any event, has any case been
made out for why
the court should insert itself into that process.
# CONCLUSION AND COSTS
CONCLUSION AND COSTS
[50]
For
the reasons given above, the two impugned municipal approvals of
building plans for stand 53 (granted on 26 September 2019 and
18
August 2022
[31]
) must be
reviewed and set aside. While it is unclear what exactly was entailed
by the Municipality’s decision to approve
the erection of a
temporary building on stand 53 on 7 October 2020, that decision
should also fall together with the aforementioned
building approvals.
[51]
The applicants have not however made out a case
for the further relief sought in prayer 4 of the notice of motion
(demolition) and
that relief is therefore refused. The default order
in such circumstances – the remittal of the applications back
for reconsideration
– should instead be made, save that, in
order to cater for the potential amendment of the earlier building
plan application(s),
it would seem appropriate to leave open the
possibility that Jacobs might submit a fresh application to the
Municipality, which
would then have to be considered in the light of
this judgment. It will be the prerogative of the Municipality to
decide what to
do in the event of any of the second respondent’s
repairs, renovations and improvements not being authorised (and
potentially,
too, what should happen prior to any valid
authorisation), and no order is therefore appropriate in that regard.
[52]
The applicants have been substantially successful and should
accordingly be awarded their
costs of suit. I considered whether to
deduct the costs attributable to the irregular treatment of the RoD,
but, as the prejudice
occasioned thereby was minimal, and anyway not
objected to by Jacobs, I shall not do so.
[53]
There was no case made out for why counsel’s costs should not
be on the default scale
envisaged by Uniform Rule 67A(3), read with
rule 69, and, insofar as may be necessary, I shall accordingly order
that this scale
of taxation (scale A) applies.
# ORDER
ORDER
[54]
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
Condonation is granted to the second respondent for the late delivery
of his answering
affidavit.
2.
The decision of the first respondent (“the Municipality”)
on 26 September
2019 to approve building plans submitted by the
second respondent for repairs and renovations at site 53,
Leentjiesklip Caravan
Park, Langebaan (“the Caravan Park”)
is reviewed and set aside.
3.
The decision of the Municipality on 7 October 2020 to approve the
erection of
a temporary building on site 53 of the Caravan Park is
reviewed and set aside.
4.
The decision of the Municipality on 18 August 2022 to approve
building plans
submitted by the second respondent for repairs and
renovations at site 53 of the Caravan Park is reviewed and set aside.
5.
The Municipality must, in the light of this judgment, reconsider the
second respondent’s
application to the Municipality for the
approval of building plans for the building at site 53 at the Caravan
Park, as submitted
in May 2022, alternatively consider any amended
application which the second respondent submits in respect of site
53.
6.
The second respondent is to pay the costs of the application on a
party and party
basis, with counsel’s costs being taxed on
scale A.
_________________
P
FARLAM
For
the applicant
: Adv C L Burke
Instructed
by
: Barnaschone Attorneys (Mr N Barnaschone, Ms E Van der Merwe,
Mr K Creighton)
For
the first respondent
: Marais Müller Hendricks Inc. (C S
Hendricks)
For
the second respondent
: Adv J-H Gous
Instructed
by
: Schoeman & Hamman Inc. c/o Cloete Baker & Partners
[1]
Jacobs’
answering affidavit was filed out of time and he accordingly had to
seek condonation for the late delivery thereof.
As no real prejudice
was occasioned by the late filing and the condonation application
was consequently not opposed, I accordingly
indicated at the hearing
that condonation would be granted (as it is, in paragraph 1 of the
order below).
[2]
See
e.g.
Giant
Concerts CC v Rinaldo Investments (Pty) Ltd
2013 (3) BCLR 251
(CC) para 29, and High Court decisions such as
Premier
of KwaZulu-Natal and others v KwaZulu-Natal Gaming and Betting Board
and others
[2019] 3 All SA 916
(KZP) para 44.
[3]
Or,
more precisely, that he can show that the impugned decisions have
the capacity to affect his own legal rights or interests
(
Giant
Concerts
para 30).
[4]
It
would appear from the founding affidavit that the applicants rely
for standing not only on s 38(a) (own interest), but
also on
subsections 38(c) & (e) (i.e., that they seek to bring their
review in the interests of a group or class of persons
(the
residents of the Caravan Park as a whole) and in the public
interest, as well).
[5]
In
the terminology employed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Tavakoli
and Another v Bantry Hills (Pty) Ltd
2019 (3) SA 163
(SCA), the applicants were all members of the
“specific class” for which the Resolution was enacted
and the Lease
Agreement was drawn up, pursuant to the By-law, which
also had specific application to them.
[6]
Published
together with the Promotion of Access to Information Rules, under GN
R1284 in Government Gazette 42740 of 4 October
2019, which took
effect from 4 November 2019.
[7]
Venmop
275 (Pty) Ltd v Cleverlad Projects (Pty) Ltd
2016
(1) SA 78
(GJ) at 90A-C (para 17).
[8]
It
was resolved in clause xvii) of the Resolution (the final clause
thereof
)
“that the lease agreement attached as annexure ‘A’
to the report (PFC&P15/10-14 of 8 October 2014) be
amended per
addendum to accommodate the changes above.”
[9]
This
is not disputed on the papers, though surprisingly, given the
importance of this letter, it was not attached by the applicants
to
the founding affidavit. (Nor was it included in the RoD.)
[10]
It is also stated earlier in that clause that: ‘
The
tenant shall for the duration of this agreement, maintain the
property and mobile home in a good condition. … Maintenance
shall include that the tenant must comply with all Municipal
ordinances, regulations and park rules. … It is expressly
agreed that maintenance only includes repair work in accordance with
the original style and material of the premises
.’
[11]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004
(4) SA 490
(CC) paras [25] to [26].
[12]
None of the other applicants would appear to constitute “immediate
neighbours” as contemplated in clause 19 of the
Lease
Agreement, though Ronel Stander (the fifth applicant) and Johan van
der Merwe (the sixth applicant) lease stands (sites
60 and 61,
respectively), which are on the other side of sites 58 and 59, and
thus only separated from site 53 (Jacobs’
stand) by sites 58
and 59 and a road. As noted, when dealing with standing, the site
leased by Peter Jack (the first applicant)
is some distance away
from Jacobs’ stand and Jack would therefore not even qualify
as a neighbour of Jacobs.
[13]
The
Municipality’s position was recorded in a memorandum dated 29
November 2023 from the Senior Manager: Legal Services
to the Senior
Manager: Administration, which was annexed to the answering
affidavit, after earlier being included in the RoD.
[14]
Their 21 August 2019 email states that they consented to the
‘
restourasie
van huis 53 (dak, sonkamer, waskamer agter die huis en stoep) soos
voorgestel deur Mnr and Mev Jacobs’
–
or, in other words,
the
restoration of house 53 (roof, sunroom, washroom behind the house
and stoep), as proposed by Mr and Mrs Jacobs.
[15]
Although
the application submitted in May 2022 was apparently the same as the
one lodged in August 2019, fresh consents even from
the persons who
had earlier indicated their approval would, in my view, have been
required, not least because of the developments
that had occurred in
the meantime, including alleged deviations from the earlier approved
plan and the visible evidence of what
was being contemplated for
stand 53.
[16]
Jones’
email of 29 August 2019, sent to the caretaker of the Caravan Park,
Lise Geldenhuys, on 29 August 2019, stated that
she
has ‘
had
a look at these plans [for stand 53] and give my approval to proceed
with them’
.
[17]
Cf
.
the dissenting judgment of Rogers AJA (as he then was) in
South
African National Parks v MTO Forestry (Pty) Ltd
2018 (5) SA 177
(SCA) paras [53] to [54].
[18]
Walele
v City of Cape Town and Others
[2008] ZACC 11
;
2008
(6) SA 129
(CC) paras [31] to [45].
[19]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634I-635C.
[20]
Soffiantini
v Mould
1951
(3) SA 307
(O) at 308.
[21]
Manana
v King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality
[2011]
3 All SA 140 (SCA) para [21].
[22]
Walele
supra
fn.18
para
55;
Camps
Bay Ratepayers and Residents’ Association v Harrison
2011 (4) SA 42
(CC) para 33;
Trustees
,
Simcha
Trust v Da Cruz and Others
2019 (3) SA 78
(CC) para [22].
[23]
As
held by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
True
Motives 84 (Pty) Ltd v Mahdi and Another
2009 (4) SA 153
(SCA) para 21, overruled in
Turnbull-Jackson
v Hibiscus Coast Municipality and Others
2014 (6) SA 592 (CC).
[24]
As
explained in
Camps
Bay Ratepayers
supra
fn.22
para
38, “value” must in the context of the section but
understood as “market value”.
[25]
Walele
supra
fn.18
para
[55].
[26]
Camps
Bay Ratepayers
supra
fn.22
paras
[41] to [43].
[27]
BSB
International Link CC v Readam South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
2016
(4) SA 83
(SCA) para [23].
[28]
BSB
International
supra
paras [24] to [26], [39].
[29]
Lester
v Ndlambe Municipality and Another
2015 (6) SA 283
(SCA). It appears from the judgment that Lester had
not only built without approval, but had disregarded various court
orders
against him, resulting in seven court applications over more
than a decade.
[30]
BSB
International
supra
fn. 27
para
29.
[31]
The
notice of motion seeks to set aside approvals granted on 26
September 2019 and
5 September
2022
.
It is not however apparent why the applicants have referred to the
second approvals being given on 5 September 2022, as the
founding
affidavit refers to the building plan being endorsed on
18 August
2022
,
and the Municipality’s memorandum of 29 November 2023 likewise
states that the new building plan application was approved
on 18
August 2022.
sino noindex
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