Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 409South Africa
Rosevean Investments 0028 (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others (19001/2020) [2024] ZAWCHC 409; [2025] 1 All SA 516 (WCC); 2025 (3) SA 616 (WCC) (3 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
3 December 2024
Headnotes
of matters relevant to the various disputes and an analysis of the facts and arguments germane to the applicant’s sewerage pipeline claim.
Judgment
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## Rosevean Investments 0028 (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others (19001/2020) [2024] ZAWCHC 409; [2025] 1 All SA 516 (WCC); 2025 (3) SA 616 (WCC) (3 December 2024)
Rosevean Investments 0028 (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others (19001/2020) [2024] ZAWCHC 409; [2025] 1 All SA 516 (WCC); 2025 (3) SA 616 (WCC) (3 December 2024)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case number: 19001/2020
In the matter between:
ROSEVEAN
INVESTMENTS 0028 (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
The
CITY OF CAPE TOWN
First Respondent
CHAPMANS
PEAK HOTEL (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
CARLOS
DE NOBREGA
Third Respondent
KEITH
WOOLL
Fourth Respondent
GREGORY
FRANCOIS
Fifth Respondent
PATRICIA
FRANCOIS
Sixth Respondent
DANIELA
ISRAEL WILSON
Seventh Respondent
Coram:
Acting Justice P Farlam
Heard:
14, 15 August 2024
Delivered
electronically:
3 December 2024
JUDGMENT
FARLAM
AJ
# I.
INTRODUCTION
I.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
While the relief sought in the applicant’s notice of motion is
diffuse
and wide-ranging, this case is, at its essence, about a
sewerage pipeline, which the first respondent (the
City
)
constructed over the property of the applicant (
Rosevean
), and
which has been described by Rosevean as the “
Unsightly
Pipe
”, and by the City as the “
secluded pipe
”.
The key questions are whether the City constructed the sewerage
pipeline across Rosevean’s property in Hout Bay irregularly
or
unlawfully; and if so, what should be done about that at this stage,
slightly more than four years’ later.
[2]
The application also chronicles disputes between Rosevean and its
neighbours,
the second respondent (the
Hotel
) and its manager,
the third respondent (
De Nobrega
), and the fourth respondent
(
Wooll
); but for various reasons those disputes are now
academic or incapable of being pursued. This judgment accordingly
focuses on the
sewerage pipeline issue, before briefly addressing the
remaining matters.
[3]
It is also necessary to address the applicant’s request for an
inspection
in loco
, which was persisted with even in closing
argument, but which, as the parties would have gathered, I was not
inclined to accede
to. I shall address that later in the judgment,
after a summary of matters relevant to the various disputes and an
analysis of
the facts and arguments germane to the applicant’s
sewerage pipeline claim.
# II.
THE BACKDROP TO THE PRESENT DISPUTES
II.
THE BACKDROP TO THE PRESENT DISPUTES
[4]
Rosevean owns immoveable property situated at 5 M[...] Road, Hout Bay
(the
Rosevean property
). Wooll owns the property at 7 M[...]
Road (the
Wooll property
). The Rosevean property and the Wooll
property were created by the subdivision of Erf 1[…] Hout Bay
on 19 December 1994,
with the Rosevean property hence being Remainder
Erf 1[…].
[5]
The fifth and sixth respondents (Gregory and Patricia Francois) are
the
registered owners of 1 M[...] Road; while the seventh
respondent (Daniela Wilson) is the owner of 3 M[...] Road. They have
been joined in the application merely for any interest that they
might have. They have not participated.
[6]
The Hotel, which has been run by De Nobrega for almost 25 years, owns
a property situated on Main Road, Hout Bay (the
Hotel property
),
downhill from (and on the seaside of) the properties on M[...] Road.
[7]
The location of the various properties, and the various sewers, can
usefully
be seen on a conceptual illustration which accompanied the
second and third respondents’ supplementary heads. A copy of
that
illustration, as slightly amended by Rosevean’s legal team
(to show an additional pipeline and, according to them, the precise
configuration of an earlier, now disused, pipeline, which linked to
the Hotel property), is accordingly annexed at the end of this
judgment.
[8]
The disposal of sewerage can be difficult in a road such as M[...]
Road,
located on the slope of a mountain. In December 1994, a
few weeks before the subdivision, an agreement was concluded between
the Hotel and the then owner of Erf 1[…], Mark Stein, in terms
of which sewerage from Nos. 5 and 7 M[...] Road (i.e.,
the
properties belonging to Rosevean and Wooll) would be conveyed in a
pipeline down to the Hotel property below. Although the
parties have
divergent versions as to the origin and precise route of the pipeline
contemplated by that agreement (the
original pipeline
), it
seems that it ran from the Rosevean property to Wooll’s
property, and then down to the Hotel property (potentially via
the
Rosevean property, though that is not material for present purposes).
[9]
Around the middle of 2017, the Hotel (represented by De Nobrega) and
Wooll
reached an agreement in terms of which the sewerage from Nos. 5
and 7 M[...] Road would no longer be piped over the Hotel
property, but would instead be conveyed in a pipe across Wooll’s
property (7 M[...] Road) and from there across 9 M[...] Road
and then
into the City’s sewerage connection on, or next to, No. 9.
After construction of that sewerage line had been completed
(which
according to De Nobrega was in December 2017), the original pipeline,
running over the Hotel property, was no longer needed.
Sometime
thereafter that pipeline became severed at the boundary of the Hotel
property, whether as a result of having been cut
off (on Rosevean’s
version) or simply having broken and fallen down (on De Nobrega’s
version). Rosevean was not told
about the rerouted pipeline at the
time or in the months that followed; it was therefore still for a few
years under the impression
that its sewerage was being discharged via
the Hotel property. It also did not know that the original pipeline
was no longer intact.
# III.
THE DEVELOPMENTS IN 2020
III.
THE DEVELOPMENTS IN 2020
[10]
Rosevean may potentially still have been ignorant of the termination
of the arrangement
provided for by the 1994 agreement had there not
been a discharging of sewerage on its property in May 2020, which
caused it to
investigate the sewerage system in place at that time.
Rosevean then discovered that the original pipeline now ended, and
was open,
at the point where it entered the Hotel property. It also
learned, through a plumber that it engaged to establish the cause of
the sewerage spillage, that a “solid end cap” had
seemingly been placed in the pipeline which led from the Rosevean
property into the Wooll property.
[11]
Rosevean
blames Wooll for the “solid end cap”, and thus too for
the egress of sewerage onto its property. Rosevean also
accuses the
Hotel, and De Nobrega in particular, of cutting off the original
pipeline. These are the neighbour disputes to which
I have referred
in paragraph [2] above. They are however now merely of historical
significance. For the Rosevean property is connected
to the municipal
sewerage system via a pipeline running over No. 7 and No.9
M[...] Road, and the sewerage discharge of mid-2020
is fortunately
now a distant memory. Rosevean is also anyway unable to pursue these
disputes meaningfully in these proceedings
due to disputes of fact on
the affidavits, which it was earlier refused permission to have
referred to oral evidence.
[1]
[12]
What thereafter happened in October 2020 is of more long-lasting
significance. For, in
October 2020, the City installed a sewerage
pipeline over the Rosevean property, which connected Nos. 1 and 3
M[...] Road to the
pipeline which ran from the Rosevean property
through to No. 9 M[...] Road (via the Wooll property) and from there
into the municipal
sewer. The new pipeline – while of
considerable benefit to Nos. 1 and 3 M[...] Road, whose properties
had previously not
been connected to the municipal sewerage system,
and also useful to neighbouring properties – has been
constructed above
ground on the Rosevean property and snakes across a
portion of the property, affixed to the top of wooden poles (about
1.5 metres
above the soil), clad in what appears to be a brown
wrapping. It was therefore not welcomed by Rosevean, which also
alleges that
it impedes the future expansion of its buildings.
[13]
Rosevean appears to believe that the sewerage spillage, the severance
of the original pipeline
and the construction of the new snaking
pipeline were somehow all linked. At least in part as a result
thereof, Rosevean has therefore
sought relief in respect of all three
events. In my view, they are not however necessarily connected. Nor,
as I have mentioned,
are the first two events (the sewerage spillage
and the severing of the original pipeline) of any significance any
longer. It is
only the City’s construction of the new
above-ground sewerage pipeline, joining the properties from No. 1 to
No. 9 M[...]
Road on the same sewerage reticulation network, that
still raises a live controversy.
# IV.
THE CITY’S CONSTRUCTION OF THE CONTENTIOUS PIPELINE
IV.
THE CITY’S CONSTRUCTION OF THE CONTENTIOUS PIPELINE
[14]
Correspondence attached to the founding affidavit indicates that the
impetus for the pipeline
installed by the City in October 2020 was
predominantly the sewerage problems at 1 and 3 M[...] Road, which as
mentioned were not
at the time connected to the municipal sewerage
system (and were therefore reliant on a company collecting raw
sewerage from tanks
on their properties). Wooll and his wife, and De
Nobrega appear to have been particularly concerned about the sewerage
issues at
the top of M[...] Road and to have been anxious for there
to be a pipeline which accommodated all properties on the Main Road
(Hotel)
side of M[...] Road (i.e., Nos 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9).
[15]
De Nobrega had in fact been corresponding with the City about such a
sewer line back in
August 2018, when he had informed the City that
installing a segment of the sewer line on 5 M[...] Road would be
“relatively
easy and low cost” and that the City could
“have easy access from hotel pool slope – the vegetation
has been
cleared to allow easy access”. De Nobrega informed
Ms Arlene Duval, the attorney for Rosevean, of this
correspondence
and the route which was proposed for the sewer line on
26 September 2020 in an email, which
inter alia
stated that
the new line “might be secured to the face of the gabion
retaining wall, which should be a secure structure that
is unlikely
to move” and that it “
will not be visible from your
living areas
”. De Nobrega also advised Ms Duval on that day
that the City had a tender for the work which expired mid/end October
2020
and that they purportedly had to begin the construction in order
to justify the extension of the tender (though correspondence from
a
few days earlier between De Nobrega and the City’s Mr Ishmail
indicated that the City was proposing a temporary solution
under the
current tender, and then a new pipeline, accommodating all the
properties on M[...] Road, under a new tender; but that
De Nobrega
was not prepared to entertain another temporary connection).
[16]
There was a meeting between various affected property owners on
2 October 2020 at
3 M[...] Road. In attendance were De Nobrega,
Wooll and his wife, the owners of the properties situated at 1 and 3
M[...] Road
(i.e., the fifth to seventh respondents) and Oscar
Chavez, the foster son of Rosevean’s sole director, Mrs Storey
(who lives
in Arizona). No City official was present. De Nobrega
apparently gave an overview of the sewerage issue and his proposed
solution
and impressed upon those present the need to solve the
sewerage problem before the City’s existing tender award
expired.
At least a couple of remedial options were seemingly
discussed: a connection point on the Wooll property, and a temporary
line
connecting the properties to the municipal sewerage system until
a permanent solution could be found. None was however supported
by
documentation or drawings, though De Nobrega avers that he walked Mr
Chavez over the installation route that he proposed.
[17]
Ms Duval states that she made various attempts to contact City
officials and obtain relevant
documents in the last week of September
and the first three weeks of October 2020. An engineer engaged by
Rosevean (a Mr Kelly)
also wrote to the City’s Mr Ishmail on 16
October 2020 and attempted to meet with him. Mr Kelly’s letter
to Mr Ishmail
informed him, among other things, that Mrs Storey
was surprised to learn of the correspondence between De Nobrega
and
Mr Ishmail, as she was unaware of the proposed work, and that,
while Rosevean welcomed the formalisation of the new sewer system,
it
wanted an assurance that it would follow the route of what he
believed to be the existing pipeline servitude on its property,
as
shown on a diagram which he attached. (According to De Nobrega –
who seems to be correct on this score – Mr Kelly
misunderstood
the servitude diagram, as it in fact showed a pipeline servitude for
water to the Hotel, and was in favour of the
Hotel.)
[18]
Mr Kelly did not receive a response to that letter (which the City
states only came to
the attention of Mr Ishmail the following week);
but managed to speak to Mr Ishmail telephonically on 23 October 2020.
According
to Mr Kelly, Mr Ishmail told him – to his
considerable surprise – that the installation of the new sewer
line
across the Rosevean property had been completed on 21 October
2020 and that the City was in the process of registering a servitude
across the Rosevean property. On being asked for a copy of the
drawings the contractor used to construct the sewer line and the
proposed servitude diagram, Mr Ishmail apparently stated that there
were no design drawings available. He also declined to provide
the
servitude diagram.
[19]
Rosevean’s version is to some extent disputed by the
respondents. But there is not,
in my view, material divergence on the
key facts, the differences relating more to what one can be inferred,
surmised or concluded
from them.
[20]
The City has confirmed that the tender award which permitted the City
to address the sewerage
problems in 2020, through an external
contractor, expired on 20 October 2020. There was accordingly some
urgency from its side
in resolving the sewerage leakages, which were
affecting Nos. 1, 3, 5 and 7 M[...] Road, as well as the Hotel
property, once Mr
Ismail (a Principal Technician, in the Water and
Sanitation Services Department at the City) was advised of the
problems in September
/ October 2020.
[21]
According to the City, its appointed contractor, Nejeni Construction
and Project Management
CC (
Nejeni
), began preparatory work for
the installation of the new sewerage pipeline on 8 October 2020,
commenced the installation of
the pipeline itself on 13 October
2020 and completed the pipeline by 15 / 16 October, allowing the
City’s officials
and Nejeni to survey the completed works on
20 October 2020.
[22]
As is common cause, Nejeni and the City officials did not access the
Rosevean property
through the front entrance of the property or with
the express permission or acknowledgement of Rosevean when installing
the new
pipeline. According to the City, Nejeni and the City
officials accessed the Rosevean property through 3 M[...] Road (one
of the
immediately adjacent properties). The City is unapologetic
about this: it contends that it had a “
statutory power
”
to access the property in whatever way it wanted in order to
undertake its statutory obligations; and that it was incumbent
on
Rosevean to have objected to Nejeni’s actions at the time, had
it wanted to take issue with them.
# V.
THE PARTIES’ COMPETING CONTENTIONS ON THE SEWAGE PIPELINE ISSUE
V.
THE PARTIES’ COMPETING CONTENTIONS ON THE SEWAGE PIPELINE ISSUE
[23]
As will be
apparent from the summary above, Rosevean asserts that the new sewer
line was installed on, and across, its property
without its knowledge
or consent, and without any notification from the City. According to
Rosevean, it also did not consent to
anyone even accessing the
Rosevean property for purposes of installing the sewerage line and
that access was therefore gained by
the contractor without permission
in October 2020.
[2]
Rosevean
alleges, too, that the location of the sewer line – which Ms
Duval, Mr Kelly and Mrs Storey’s foster son,
Mr Oscar Chavez,
noted, on visiting the property on 2 November 2022, closely aligned
to De Nobrega’s direction – would
not allow the current
dwelling on the Rosevean property to be extended.
[24]
The City has contended, in response, that Nejeni’s work could
not have taken place
without Mr Chavez’s knowledge, given
that he was, on his own version, at the Rosevean property until 15
October 2020.
The City also submits that, as neither Mr Chavez, nor
Ms Duval, nor any other representative demanded that Nejeni cease the
installation
(and for example, did not “
address
correspondence to the [City] requesting that the work stop
immediately
” or bring an “
application to interdict
the [City] from carrying out these works
”) this “
implies
consent or tacit acquiescence by the applicant
”. The City
asserts, too, that at the neighbours’ meeting held on 2 October
2020, Mr Chavez purportedly “
agreed with the installation to
be carried out by contractors deployed by the [City]
” –
though no City official was present at that meeting and so the City
has no firsthand knowledge of what Mr Chavez
may or may not have
indicated then; and the affidavits of De Nobrega and Wooll, when
read with the affidavits of Duval and
Chavez, do not in my view
justify such an assertion.
[25]
The City further alleges (somewhat undermining its tacit consent
contention) that the pipeline
was “
installed along an
extremely steep slope and … is inaccessible to members of the
public
” and is “
furthermore covered by dense
bushes and not noticeable from the vantage point of the applicant’s
property or that of the neighbouring
property owners
”. The
City also states that “
it seems extremely unlikely that the
dwelling could be extended past the retaining walls
”, and
that “
the contractors left ample space for future
extension
”.
[26]
The nub of the City’s contentions is that it acted within the
framework of its legislative
powers and authority, as well as its
rights under the subdivision conditions registered over the Rosevean
property, and that it
did not infringe Rosevean’s property
rights. In essence, it contends that, in terms of its statutory
powers, as read with
the subdivision conditions, its contractors and
officials were entitled to access the Rosevean property from an
adjacent erf without
the express consent of Rosevean, and also
without knowing whether any Rosevean representative was even aware
that they were working
on the Rosevean property. The City submits,
too, that, in the light of the empowering legislation and the agreed
servitude, they
did not need to discuss either the route of the
proposed sewerage pipeline over the Rosevean property, or the look,
height and
composition of the pipeline, with Rosevean.
[27]
What needs
to be decided for purposes of addressing the sewerage pipeline
dispute is whether the City’s understanding of the
legal
position is correct.
[3]
# VI.
WHETHER THE CITY COULD INSTAL THE SEWERAGE PIPELINE AS IT DID
VI.
WHETHER THE CITY COULD INSTAL THE SEWERAGE PIPELINE AS IT DID
[28]
The City has placed some store on the various by-laws and other
legislative provisions
that allow (and require) the City to ensure
that there are adequate sewerage systems. Those enactments do not
however take the
matter further. It is not in dispute that the City
can (and should) install sewerage systems and ensure that suburban
properties
are connected to the municipal sewerage system. What is in
issue is how the City may permissibly go about doing that, and in
particular
what obligations it has to property owners when intending
to instal a sewerage pipeline over their properties. That question
was
not addressed by the statutory provisions to which I was referred
by the City.
[29]
More to the point was Rosevean’s counsel’s reliance on
the law pertaining to
servitudes over private property. For, as was
common ground, the City’s entitlement to instal a sewerage
pipeline over the
Rosevean property ultimately derived from a
servitude imposed on the Rosevean and Wooll properties at the time of
the subdivision
of the original Erf 1[…] Hout Bay, in favour
of the City and neighbouring properties. Absent that servitude, the
City could
not have sought to run a sewerage pipeline across
privately-owned land; or at least would have had to follow a
regulated process
and pay compensation to the property owner. The key
issue is therefore what the servitude allowed the City to do.
[30]
The relevant subdivision condition (clause 3.5 of the conditions
imposed by the Western
Cape Regional Services Council, in terms of
section 42(1) of Ordinance 15 of 1985, on 19 December 1994) reads as
follows:
‘
Subsequent to
the granting of a subdivision in terms of the section 25(1) of the
Ordinance, the person who at any time is the owner
of any land unit
directly involved in the subdivision shall be required, without
compensation –
3.5.1
to allow gas mains, electricity, telephone and television cables
and/or wires, main and/or other waterpipes
and foul sewers and
stormwater pipes, ditches and channels of any other land unit or
units to be conveyed across the land unit
concerned, and surface
installations such as mini-substations, meter kiosks and service
pillars to be installed thereon if considered
necessary by the
Council, in such manner and position as may from time to time be
reasonably required; this shall include the right
of access to the
land unit at any reasonable time for the purpose of constructing,
altering, removing or inspecting any works connected
with the above’
[31]
As I read it, that condition appeared to envisage a sewerage pipeline
running underground,
or at least on the ground, though it was not
prescriptive on this score and in fact indicated that the “
manner
and position
” of any sewer or stormwater pipe could be “
as
may … be reasonably required
”. The condition also
made clear that the landowner must allow the municipality to access
the property “
at any reasonable time
” for the
purpose of constructing, altering or inspecting such pipes. It was
made clear, too, that the landowner was not entitled
to compensation
for any pipe, wire, cable or ditch which was considered to be
reasonably required.
[32]
The rights
and duties conferred by a statutory servitude which allowed the
laying of pipes or conduits on private land were considered
by the
Constitutional Court in
Tshwane
City v Link Africa
.
[4]
I agree with Rosevean’s counsel that this case is relevant in
the present context, even though the servitude in this case
is not a
statutory one, and there are consequently some material differences
between the two scenarios.
[33]
The provision at issue in
Link Africa
was section 22 of the
Electronic Communications Act, 36 of 2005 (
ECA
), which
provides in relevant part [with emphasis added] that, having due
regard to applicable law (ss (2):
“
(1)
An electronic communications network service licensee may
—
(a)
enter upon any land
, including any street, road, footpath or
land reserved for public purposes, any railway and any waterway of
the Republic;
(b)
construct and maintain an electronic communications network or
electronic communications facilities upon, under, over, along or
across any land
, including any street, road, footpath or land
reserved for public purposes, any railway and any waterway of the
Republic; and
(c)
alter or remove its electronic communications network or electronic
communications facilities, and may
for that purpose attach wires,
stays or any other kind of support to any building or other
structure.”
[34]
The
minority in
Link
Africa
would have found that this section infringes section 25 of the
Constitution (the right to property). The majority disagreed. It
held
that “
the
rights s 22 grants are similar to a general servitude
”
[5]
and must thus be exercised with due regard to the constraints to
which general servitudes are subject. The majority then set out
at
some lengths what those constraints are. Because of its relevance to
the present case, it is appropriate to quote a few paragraphs
from
the majority’s exposition:
[6]
‘
[142] …
These [general servitude rights] allow the dominant owner to select
the essential incidental rights of the necessary
premises and to take
access to them as needed for the exercise of the servitude. But the
right is not unrestricted. The dominant
servitude-holder cannot just
barge in. A large part of the argument on behalf of the City of
Tshwane and Msunduzi was premised
on the outrageous notion of the
licensee just barging in, brazenly disregarding municipal protections
and duties and works. That
can never be. It is alien to our law's
conception of rights over another's property. As stated in
Hollmann
[Hollmann and Another v Estate Latre
1970 (3) SA 638
(A) at
645D
]
, exercise of a servitude is subject to the important
condition that incidental rights must be “exercised civiliter”.
[143] This court has
embraced the principle that rights over the property of another must
be exercised civiliter modo. In
Motswagae [Motswagae and Others v
Rustenburg Local Municipality and Another
2013 (2) SA 613
(CC) at para 14
]
, Yacoob J on behalf of the court stated that
“the common law requires that a servitude be exercised
civiliter modo”.
The court translated the Latin into plainer
language. It said this meant that a servitude must be exercised
“respectfully
and with due caution”.
[144] What does it
mean to exercise a right to enter another's property respectfully and
with due caution? Our existing law tells
us. It is bound up with the
facts. And the common law is amply flexible and adaptable enough to
cater for the novel needs the statute
creates. Electronic
communications networks may be constructed over the land of others
only with respect and due caution. This
is the path away from
consigning important statutory provisions, serving a vital public
function, to oblivion…
[150] From this it
appears that the following general principles apply to our common law
of servitudes:
(a)
Servitudes may not be enforced on landowners, except in the case of a
way of necessity. …
(b)
The holder of the right of a general servitude may select the
essential incidental rights to exercise
the servitude, like the
premises needed and the access thereto. This selection must be
exercised in a civil or reasonable manner
(civiliter). Disputes about
this choice must also be determined in court if no agreement between
the parties can be reached.
(c)
Where changed circumstances require it, the common law of servitudes
must be adapted to arrive at a
solution that is just to the parties
and does not prejudice them. In the case of enforced servitudes this
must be done in a manner
that least inconveniences the servient
owner.’
[7]
[35]
The majority also summarised the requirements applicable to “
enforced
general servitudes
” such as those imposed by section 22 of
the ECA as follows:
“
[152] This
means:
(a)
Network licensees may select the premises and access to them for the
purposes of constructing, maintaining,
altering or removing their
electronic communications network or facilities in taking action in
terms of s 22(1);
(b)
this selection must be done in a civil and reasonable manner. This
would include giving reasonable notice
to the owner of the property
where they intend locating their works. The proposed access to the
property must be determined in
consultation with the owner;
(c)
compensation in proportion to the advantage gained by the network
licensees and the disadvantages suffered
by the owner is payable in
respect of the exercise of the public servitudes s 22(1) grants; and
(d)
where disputes arise about the manner of exercising the rights under
s 22(1) or the extent of the
compensation payable, these must be
determined by way of dispute resolution to the extent that it is
possible, or by way of adjudication.
Access to the property in the
absence of resolution will be unlawful.”
[36]
In the
present case we are not concerned with a servitude imposed by
statute; but instead with one imposed under subdivision conditions
which the owner of the as then undivided erf was at liberty to accept
or reject (albeit that a rejection would mean that the erf
could not
be subdivided). No question of compensation can accordingly arise –
and the conditions could thus legitimately
exclude it (as they did).
Nor, in my view, must a dispute between the property owner and the
City as to the manner of the City’s
exercise of the rights be
resolved by adjudication. However, the general
civiliter
modo
requirement would clearly apply, and indeed could be regarded as
implied by the references to reasonableness in the clause 3.5.1.
And,
as noted in clause (b) of paragraph [152] of the majority judgment in
Link
Africa
,
the exercise of a right in a “
civil
and reasonable manner
”
would “
include
giving reasonable notice to the owner of the property where they
intend locating their works
”
and also mean that the “
proposed
access to the property must be determined in consultation with the
owner
”.
[8]
[37]
The
requirement of sufficient notification of and consultation with the
landowner is also consistent with the fact that the City’s
decision to instal a sewerage pipeline over the Rosevean property
would appear to constitute administrative action, with the result
that the procedural fairness requirements in section 3 (and
potentially, too, section 4) of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice
Act, 3 of 2000 (
PAJA
)
would be applicable. As the Constitutional Court noted in
Link
Africa
,
[9]
the Supreme Court of Appeal has, in
MTN
[10]
and
Msunduzi
[11]
held that action taken by a licensee under s 22(1) is administrative
action for the purposes of the PAJA. In a section 22 context,
the
actor (the licensee) would, as the Constitutional Court noted, be a
private entity wielding public power. In the view of the
minority in
Link
Africa
,
[12]
that was an important reason why the licensee’s actions did not
constitute administrative action. The City is, by contrast,
an organ
of state whose actions axiomatically involve the exercise of public
power. The minority’s concern is therefore not
applicable in
the present case; while I would anyway be bound by the Supreme Court
of Appeal’s decisions (which were expressly
not overturned in
Link
Africa
).
[13]
[38]
Rosevean did not rely on PAJA in its affidavits or heads of argument,
though it embraced
the notion that the City’s conduct involved
administrative action in supplementary written submissions which it
handed up
at the hearing, after the legal nature of the City’s
actions had been raised by the court. As the correct characterisation
of the City’s decision to construct a sewerage line over the
Rosevean property is a legal question, Rosevean’s failure
to
raise this contention earlier cannot preclude the Court from taking
cognisance of it. In any event, the City’s notification
obligations also arose under the common law, and PAJA thus reinforces
the already existing position rather than imposing a materially
different obligation.
[39]
Rosevean’s
counsel also sought to rely on the Expropriation Act, 63 of 1975, as
read with the City’s Immovable Property
By-law, 2015, in
support of its argument that Rosevean had to be formally notified of
the proposed sewerage line installation prior
to seeking to construct
it. Rosevean argued that this obligation arose pursuant to section
3(2) of the By-law,
[14]
read
with section 7 of the Expropriation Act.
[15]
There was, however, no expropriation in this instance (nor any
temporary taking of the right to use property); merely a deprivation
of property, which, as section 25 of the Constitution (and the
case-law thereon
[16]
) makes
clear, is something different. While I am aware that the majority in
Link
Africa
remarked that in certain circumstances a servitude may be treated “
as
a kind of expropriation
”,
[17]
the Expropriation Act thus did not, in my view, apply.
[18]
In any event, a notification requirement would, as explained above,
exist under the common law, and so Rosevean’s reliance
on the
Expropriation Act was unnecessary in this context.
[40]
As will be
apparent from the factual summary earlier in this judgment, there is
nothing to indicate that the City notified Rosevean
before installing
the contentious sewerage pipeline.
[19]
That was also doubtless why the City officials and Nejeni entered the
Rosevean property via a neighbouring property, rather than
via the
front entrance of 7 M[...] Road. There can consequently also be no
suggestion that Rosevean was advised by the City of
what it was
proposing to do.
[20]
Whether
deliberately or otherwise, the City officials did not contact
Rosevean during September and October 2020 and were not even
able to
be reached by Rosevean’s representatives (who made various
outreaches) until after the pipeline had been constructed.
The
high-water mark of the City’s position is that Rosevean should
supposedly have been aware that the City’s contractor,
Nejeni,
had entered its property via a neighbouring erf and was constructing
a sewerage pipeline, but did not object. That is clearly
insufficient
to meet the notification and consultation requirements set out above.
It is also anyway undermined by the City’s
reference to the
pipeline as a “
secluded
”
one which was not visible from the dwelling on the Rosevean property
or generally observable.
[21]
At best for the City, its officials and contractor did not know
whether Rosevean was aware that a pipeline was being installed
or
whether Rosevean was amenable to its contractor being on the Rosevean
property, and had no idea whether the design and route
of the
proposed pipeline was objectionable to Rosevean.
[41]
Notwithstanding
its powers under clause 3.5.1 of the subdivision conditions, the City
could not proceed on that basis. Its installation
of the sewerage
pipeline over the Rosevean property between 8 and 20 October 2020 was
therefore unlawful; and Rosevean is entitled
to a declaratory order
to that effect (as sought in prayer 1 of its notice of motion),
[22]
albeit that, as I discuss in the next section, the order should be
suspended to prevent the dislocation that might otherwise ensue.
# VII.
THE APPROPRIATE RELIEF TO BE GRANTED IN RESPECT OF THE SEWERAGE
PIPELINE DISPUTE
VII.
THE APPROPRIATE RELIEF TO BE GRANTED IN RESPECT OF THE SEWERAGE
PIPELINE DISPUTE
[42]
It would clearly be disastrous for the owners and residents of 1 and
3 M[...] Road,
as well as deleterious to Rosevean and the Hotel, if
the sewerage pipeline which currently links 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 M[...]
Road to
the municipal sewerage system below 9 M[...] Road were to be
disconnected on the boundary of 3 and 5 M[...] Road. That would also
be likely to cause a nuisance and a health hazard.
[43]
I do not
however agree with the City that the relief sought by Rosevean
against the City would accordingly be “
incompetent
”,
or that it must be refused in order to avoid a “
sewage
disaster
”.
While an order which was of immediate effect would have that
consequence, a suspension of the order of invalidity for a
suitable
period to allow the City to correct the defect (as envisaged by
section 172(1)(
b
)(ii)
of the Constitution), and a directive which was synchronized with
that suspension, should not cause harm to any of the affected
property owners. There is no suggestion that the City could not
construct an alternative pipeline (potentially underground or partly
underground, or, if excavation is impractical, at ground level
[23]
)
that was less unsightly, and then connect the rest of the existing
pipeline to that new section once completed; and it would also
plainly be possible for the City to notify Rosevean about the
pipeline and its position, and afford it an opportunity to comment
on
the proposal, before doing any further work.
[44]
As the
sewerage pipeline has by this time been in place for almost four
years, and Rosevean has partly been to blame for the slow
pace of
this litigation, it cannot contend for any urgency with regard to
remedial measures. There may anyway be complications
from the City’s
side if there is no appropriate tender award in place. It is also
necessary to provide for a reasonable period
for Rosevean to provide
its comments to the City, and for the City to evaluate them, and,
potentially, too, for any experts that
might need to be involved to
provide input. Bearing in mind the importance of ensuring that the
current functioning sewerage system
is not disrupted until there is a
new sewage pipe in place to convey sewerage over the Rosevean
property, I shall therefore suspend
the order of invalidity for a
period of fifteen (15) months. The directive that the City remove the
existing sewer line over the
Rosevean property will also consequently
only take effect fifteen months after the date of this judgment.
[24]
[45]
That period should be more than sufficient given the City’s and
Rosevean’s
respective rights and obligations in terms of clause
3.5.1 of the subdivision conditions, which, in the interests of
clarity (and
avoiding disputes during the suspension period) I
summarise below.
[46]
In summary, the finding in section VI. above is that (i) the
City could not enter
private property, to do work contemplated by
clause 3.5.1 of the subdivision conditions, without expressly
notifying the owners
and advising when and where they will be
accessing the property and for what purpose, and also making
reasonable accommodations
in response to requests or objections from
the property owner; and (ii) the City was also obliged to advise
Rosevean in this
instance as to the route and design of its proposed
pipeline, to give Rosevean an opportunity to comment thereon, and to
thereafter
take Rosevean’s comments and all other relevant
factors into account before making a final decision as to the nature
and
location of the pipeline.
[47]
In terms of clause 3.5.1, as read with the common law and the
Constitution, the City has
the final decision as to the pipeline.
Rosevean can neither refuse the City entry to its property for
purposes of assessing, constructing
and checking the pipeline, nor
refuse to accept a reasonable route or design of the pipeline.
Provided that the City respects and
seeks to accommodate Rosevean’s
concerns where possible, and that its final decision regarding the
pipeline is consistent
is lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair,
Rosevean must accept what the City has proposed. Rosevean cannot
insist on the City
doing what it (Rosevean) wants; and, as noted
above, it also cannot – as it did previously through Mr Kelly –
insist
on the sewerage pipeline following the servitude of the water
pipeline in favour of the Hotel.
# VIII.THE APPLICANT’S REQUEST FOR AN INSPECTIONIN LOCO
VIII.
THE APPLICANT’S REQUEST FOR AN INSPECTION
IN LOCO
[48]
As mentioned in the introduction, Rosevean’s counsel requested
at the hearing that
there be an inspection
in loco
. The
respondents did not agree to that request. I also expressed
misgivings about it. I was not however asked to make an
in limine
ruling on the issue and the various parties then proceeded to argue
their respective cases, as the applicant seemed to accept would
happen. The applicant nevertheless did not abandon the request and
repeated it in closing argument. It is therefore for necessary
for me
to address it.
[49]
A party’s
right to apply for an inspection
in
loco
during the hearing of an action (i.e., in a trial) is
well-established.
[25]
The
Uniform Rules also expressly contemplate an inspection
in
loco
in
the case of trials, with Rule 39(16)(
d
)
(part of the rule headed “
Trial
”)
providing that “
[a]
record shall be made of … the proceedings of the court
generally (including any inspection in loco and any matter
demonstrated
by any witness in court
”.
[50]
The Uniform Rules do not mention the possibility of an inspection
in
loco
in application proceedings, whether in Rule 6 (which is
specifically devoted to applications) or elsewhere. Nor have I been
able
to find a judgment which holds, after a consideration of the
issue, that inspections
in loco
can appropriately be ordered
in application proceedings.
[51]
There is an
obvious difference between applications and actions in this context.
In actions, the Court is enjoined to consider all
evidence when
deciding whether, on a balance of probabilities, the plaintiff has
proved its case. Any evidence adduced by way of
an inspection
in
loco
would thus simply add (potentially powerfully) to the factual matrix
which the Court must consider when deciding whether to accept
the
plaintiff’s or the defendant’s averments. By contrast, in
applications, the Court is required to accept the respondent’s
factual version, unless it is unsubstantiated, or plainly implausible
and contrived, and can therefore be dismissed out of hand.
That
approach to the assessment of evidence could not be applied to
evidence produced pursuant to an inspection
in
loco
.
For an inspection in loco would produce “real evidence”,
[26]
which could demonstrate definitively whether the applicant’s or
the respondent’s version on a particular issue is correct;
and,
in the event of the incontrovertible physical evidence supporting the
applicant’s averments, the court would presumably
be obliged
the Court to accept the applicant’s version, contrary to the
usual position in applications (for otherwise the
inspection would
have been pointless).
[52]
The position in this regard can be neatly illustrated in the present
case with reference
to a factual issue that was in dispute between
the applicant (Rosevean) and the fourth respondent (Wooll). According
to Rosevean,
the new sewerage pipeline is underground when it
traverses the Wooll property (7 M[...] Road), and thus does not
raise the
same concerns there as on the Rosevean property (5 M[...]
Road), where it is affixed on poles well above ground level. Wooll
denies the accuracy of that assertion, and insists that the sewerage
pipeline is above ground on his property as well. Applying
the usual
test in application proceedings, I would have to accept Wooll’s
version. However, if an inspection
in loco
were to reveal that
Rosevean is correct and that the sewerage pipeline is in fact below
ground on the Wooll property, I could hardly
then ignore the real
position and proceed on the basis that Wooll’s version must
prevail.
[53]
The High Court does of course have the “
inherent power
”
under section 173 of the Constitution to “
protect and
regulate [its] own process
”. The Court would thus have the
power to grant a request for an inspection
in loco
in an
application, should it consider it appropriate. In my view, a court
should nevertheless be cautious about doing so, given
that granting
an applicant’s request for an inspection
in loco
would
effectively mean allowing it to subvert the usual test applicable to
the resolution of disputes of fact in motion proceedings.
That
concern has particular resonance in the present matter given that the
applicant unsuccessfully sought at an earlier stage
to refer issues
to oral evidence in an attempt to get round the difficulties
occasioned by the factual disputes on the papers.
Affording Rosevean
another way of circumventing a factual dispute with Wooll would
accordingly seem inappropriate.
[54]
In any
event, an inspection
in
loco
in
this case appeared to me to be likely of limited utility, given that
the dispute over the construction of the new sewerage pipeline
is
largely a legal one, while the factual disputes besetting the
applicant’s claims against its neighbours would not have
been
addressed by a physical inspection of the property in the second half
of 2024. Furthermore, were an inspection to have been
held, the
hearing would not only not have been able to be completed within the
two days for which it had been set down, but might
have had to be
postponed to a later date, to allow a note on the inspection to be
prepared
[27]
and supplementary
argument to be submitted; and, given the delays that have already
occurred in this matter, that would not have
been in the interests of
justice.
[55]
For various reasons, I consequently did not accede to the applicant’s
request for
an inspection
in loco
during the hearing and
consider it appropriate to dismiss it.
# IX.
ROSEVEAN’S CLAIM AGAINST THE HOTEL AND DE NOBREGA
IX.
ROSEVEAN’S CLAIM AGAINST THE HOTEL AND DE NOBREGA
[56]
Rosevean originally sought the following declaratory and mandatory
interdictory relief
against De Nobrega:
56.1.
an order ‘
declaring that the removal of a section of the
sewer pipe that connected the applicant’s property to the sewer
system on the
property of the second respondent, by the third
respondent was unlawful’
[prayer 3 of the notice of
motion]; and
56.2.
an order ‘
directing that the third respondent reconnect the
sewer line from the applicant’s property by replacing the
section of the
sewer pipe referred to in prayer 3’
[prayer
6 of the notice of motion].
[57]
Rosevean subsequently sought to withdraw its claims against the
second and third respondents,
but without tendering costs. The Hotel
and De Nobrega understandably insisted on their costs. Rosevean then
decided to continue
to seek relief against them, and to persist in
seeking both of the prayers quoted above.
[58]
[59]
At the hearing of this matter, Rosevean’s counsel abandoned the
mandatory interdictory
relief contained in prayer 6 of its notice of
motion (correctly so, as it would not have obtained such relief), and
merely asked
that it be granted the declaratory order sought in
prayer 3 of its notice of motion. A fundamental difficulty with that
declaratory
relief (aggravated by the abandoning of the related
interdictory relief) is however that it is now entirely academic.
Whether or
not the original pipeline should have been severed where
it entered the Hotel property back in 2017/2018 – if indeed it
was
– is of no continued relevance in 2024.
[60]
Section
21(1)(
c
)
of the Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013 (the successor to section
19(1)(
a
)(iii)
of the Supreme Court Act, 59 of 1959) provides that the High Court
has the power ‘
in
its discretion, and at the instance of any interested person, to
enquire into and determine any existing, future or contingent
right
or obligation, notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any
relief consequential upon the determination’
.
That section, like its statutory predecessor, contemplates a twofold
test: first, whether the applicant is a person interested
in an
“
existing,
future or contingent right or obligation
”;
and if so, whether the case is a proper one for the exercise of the
discretion conferred upon it.
[28]
Even aside from the general principle that a court will not pronounce
on academic issues or ones which will have no concrete effect,
[29]
a court should therefore not grant a declaratory order where the
declaratory relief will have no utility or practical
significance.
[30]
[61]
In the circumstances, the declaratory order sought by Rosevean
against the Hotel and De
Nobrega would neither be competent nor
appropriate.
[62]
In addition, there is a dispute of fact as to whether De Nobrega was
responsible for the
pipe being cut off, and indeed whether it was
severed at all, or simply broke. While Rosevean’s version
strikes me as more
plausible, that is not the test in motion
proceedings. It would have been necessary for De Nobrega to have been
cross-examined
in order for that dispute to be resolved. Rosevean
recognised this when seeking a referral of issues to oral evidence.
Having failed
in that endeavour, it must accept that its case against
De Nobrega in this regard is unsustainable.
[63]
A further problem with that relief is that, once there was an
alternative sewerage line
for the Rosevean property, there was no
obligation on the Hotel to allow Rosevean to use its sewer. Under the
agreement concluded
between the Hotel (represented by De Nobrega) and
Stein in 1994, the Hotel guaranteed the use of its sewer for a
minimum period
of ten years up to a maximum period of fifty years,
from the date of the agreement, or such time as the land making up
Erf 1070
was capable of being connected to the municipal system,
whichever is the earlier. As De Nobrega has explained, the Rosevean
property
was not only capable of being linked to the municipal sewer
by December 2017, but was in fact so connected. That being so, the
Hotel was no longer required to grant the Rosevean property access to
its sewer by means of a pipe extending from the Rosevean property
into the Hotel property; and as a result, it was of no moment whether
the original pipeline remained intact.
[64]
The prayers directed at the second respondent (and indirectly the
third respondent) must
consequently be dismissed with costs.
# X.
ROSEVEAN’S CLAIM AGAINST WOOLL
X.
ROSEVEAN’S CLAIM AGAINST WOOLL
[65]
Rosevean also sought declaratory and directory (interdictory) relief
against Wooll. More
particularly, it sought orders:
65.1.
‘
declaring that the blocking of the sewer flow from the
applicant’s property, prior to [the] installation of the sewer
line
on or about 21 October 2020, as referred to in prayer 1, by
the fourth respondent was unlawful’
[prayer 2]; and
65.2.
‘
directing that the fourth respondent remove any blockage of
the existing sewer system referred to in prayer 4’
[prayer
5].
[66]
Rosevean’s counsel indicated at the hearing (correctly) that
the interdictory relief
was no longer needed, though he contended
that Rosevean was nevertheless entitled to its costs in respect
thereof, in light of
Wooll’s alleged capping of its sewerage
line in mid-2020. Rosevean also continued to press for a declaratory
order against
Wooll.
[67]
The difficulties with that declaratory relief are in many ways
similar to the ones which
beset Rosevean’s claim against the
Hotel and De Nobrega, though in reverse order. The first and most
fundamental difficulty
with Rosevean’s claim against Wooll is
that there is an irreconcilable dispute of fact as to whether the
blockage of the
sewerage system on the Rosevean property in mid-2020
was attributable to the actions of Wooll. In the light of its
plumber’s
report, one can understand why Rosevean would have
accused Wooll, but whether its suspicions were well-founded is
something that
could not be determined without oral evidence, which
Rosevean has, as mentioned, been denied. That also disposes of any
suggestion
that a mandatory interdict could be granted against Wooll,
or that he could be mulcted with costs as a result of his alleged
conduct
in 2020.
[68]
Furthermore, the declaratory relief, while still potentially raising
a live issue in December
2020 when this application was brought, has
long since become academic. For this reason, too, it cannot be
granted.
[69]
Rosevean’s claim against Wooll must therefore be dismissed as
well. As Wooll appeared
in person, there are no legal costs for
Rosevean to pay, and Wooll also did not ask for any other costs.
# XI.
CONCLUSION AND COSTS
XI.
CONCLUSION AND COSTS
[70]
Fo the reasons given above:
70.1.
Rosevean is entitled to declaratory and directory relief against the
City in respect of the contentious
sewerage pipeline, albeit that
this relief is to be suspended to avoid the prejudice that would
otherwise ensue to the properties
in and around M[...] Road, Hout
Bay;
70.2.
Rosevean’s claims against the third respondent (De Nobrega) and
the fourth respondent (Wooll) should
be dismissed.
[71]
As it has been successful as against the City, Rosevean is entitled
to its costs for that
part of the application. Considerable portions
of Rosevean’s affidavits and argument were directed at
Rosevean’s claims
against the second and third, and fourth
respondents. The costs award in Rosevean’s favour must reflect
that. The City shall
accordingly be ordered to pay only 50% of
Rosevean’s costs in the main application. (I refer to the main
application to distinguish
it from the interlocutory applications,
which are subject to their own costs orders.)
[72]
As to the scale on which counsel’s costs should be taxed:
72.1.
Given the relative complexity of Rosevean’s case against the
City, it is appropriate to order that
the costs of Rosevean’s
counsel which are recoverable as against the City be taxed on Scale
B.
72.2.
As Rosevean’s case against De Nobrega and the Hotel did not, by
contrast, raise any difficult issues
(and indeed, was effectively
unarguable by the time of the hearing), a lower scale is warranted in
that regard. Counsel’s
costs for that aspect should therefore,
in my view, be taxed (in favour of De Nobrega) on Scale A.
# ORDER
ORDER
[73]
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
It is declared that the installation of a sewer line by the first
respondent across the property of
the applicant, situated at 5 M[...]
Road, Hout Bay, between 8 and 20 October 2020, was unlawful.
2.
The order in paragraph 1 above is suspended for a period of fifteen
(15) months from the date of this
order.
3.
The first respondent is directed to remove the current sewer line,
referred to in paragraph 1 above,
from the applicant’s property
by the end of the period of suspension referred to in paragraph 2.
4.
The applicant’s claims against the second (and indirectly the
third) and fourth respondents
are all dismissed.
5.
The applicant must pay the costs of the second and third respondents
in the main application, with
counsel’s costs being taxed on
scale A.
6.
The first respondent must pay 50% of the applicant’s costs in
the main application, with
counsel’s costs being taxed on scale
B.
ACTING JUDGE P FARLAM
For applicant
: Adv
Paul
Tredoux
Instructed
by
: Arlene Duval & Associates (Cape Town) c/o Mauritz Briers
& Associates (Cape Town)
For
first respondent
: Adv S
Mahomed
Instructed
by
: Marais Muller Hendricks Inc. (Cape Town)
For
second and third respondents
: Adv Andrew
Morrissey
Instructed
by
: Smith Tabata Buchanan Boyes Inc. (Claremont) c/o Smith Tabata
Buchanan Boyes Inc. (Cape Town)
Fourth respondent in
person
[1]
An
interlocutory application by Rosevean to
inter
alia
refer some disputes to oral evidence, which was argued on 3 August
2021 was dismissed on an attorney and client scale by Nyati
AJ, in a
judgment delivered on 21 June 2023.
[2]
Ms Duval
stated in Rosevean’s founding affidavit that she had no
idea
how Nejeni gained access to the Rosevean property for the purpose of
the pipeline installation but could “
state
unequivocally that access was gained without the permission of the
applicant or anyone related in any manner to the applicant
”.
[3]
The
affidavits and submissions of the Hotel and De Nobrega, and Wooll,
are largely irrelevant to this dispute. While De Nobrega
sets out
some useful factual background, he largely focuses on the
allegations directed at him. Wooll’s short affidavit
is
similarly concerned with the prayers and allegations against him
(which mostly concern the question of whether Wooll capped
Rosevean’s sewer line, thereby causing sewerage to spill out
onto its property).
[4]
Tshwane
City v Link Africa and Others
2015
(6) SA 440 (CC).
[5]
Ibid
at para [142].
[6]
Footnotes
have been omitted; case citations have been added in full in square
brackets.
[7]
In
similar vein, the Supreme Court of Appeal stated in
Anglo
Operations Ltd v Sandhurst Estates (Pty) Ltd
2007 (2) SA 363
(SCA) at para [21] (in a passage quoted by the
majority (at fn.114)):
'(i)n
accordance with the principles applicable to servitudes, the owner
of a servient property is bound to allow the holder to
do whatever
is reasonably necessary for the proper exercise of his rights. The
holder of the servitude is in turn bound to exercise
his rights
civiliter modo, that is, reasonably viewed, with as much possible
consideration and with the least possible inconvenience
to the
servient property and its owner.'
[8]
As noted by
the majority in
Link
Africa
(at para 155), it was unnecessary for the relevant provision to have
expressly included those requirements. That is all the more
so in
this instance as clause 3.5.1 expressly requires the municipality to
act reasonably.
[9]
At
para [158] (see also para [75]).
[10]
Mobile
Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd v SMI Trading CC
2012
(6) SA 638
(SCA) at para [21].
[11]
Msunduzi
Municipality v Dark Fibre Africa
[2014] ZASCA 165
at para
[20]
.
[12]
At
paras [65] to [76].
[13]
The majority held
that it was unnecessary for the question of the applicability
of
PAJA to s 22(1) to be determined in the light of the various
statutory provisions and common law principles to which
it had
referred (para [159]).
[14]
Section
3(2) of the Immovable Property By-law states that: “
Subject
to the provisions of the Expropriation Act, 1975 … the City
may
expropriate
immovable property and rights in immovable property or may
temporarily take the right to use immovable property
”.
[15]
Which
is headed “
Notification
that property is to be expropriated or is to be used temporarily
”.
[16]
See
e.g.,
F
irst
National Bank of SA Ltd t/a Wesbank v Commissioner, South African
Revenue Service and Another; First National Bank of SA
Ltd t/a
Wesbank v Minister of Finance
[2002] ZACC 5
;
2002 (4) SA 768
(CC); and
Mkontwana
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality and Another; Bissett and
Others v Buffalo City Municipality and Others; Transfer
Rights
Action Campaign and Others v MEC for Local Government and Housing,
Gauteng and Others (KwaZulu-Natal Law Society and Msunduzi
Municipality as Amici Curiae)
2005 (1) SA 530 (CC).
[17]
At
para 149.
[18]
It
is accordingly irrelevant whether, as the City’s counsel
contended, the applicant was permitted to raise that argument
for
the first time in its heads of argument.
[19]
It
is common cause that, as the City’s counsel acknowledged in
argument, there was no written notice from the City. Nor
was there
even any verbal communication from the City to a Rosevean
representative during the crucial period in 2020. The City
was
accordingly constrained to rely on the interactions at the
neighbours’ meeting on 2 October 2020; but as I have
indicated in paragraph [24]
above,
the discussions there cannot avail the City, whose officials were
not at the meeting.
[20]
The
City seeks to rely on the fact that De Nobrega states that he
pointed out the route he proposed to Chavez during a neighbourhood
meeting, but whatever was conveyed at that meeting can hardly
constitute notice by the City. De Nobrega also in any event
downplays
his role at the meeting his affidavit, stating
inter
alia
that: ‘
At
the meeting I made suggestions having regard to my knowledge of the
sewerage related issues but explained that I am not an
expert in
these matters and that the First Respondent [the City] was the
responsible council to deal with sewerage related issues
.’
[21]
The
City placed some emphasis on this aspect, as shown by its definition
of the pipe as the “
secluded
pipe
”.
It was for example submitted in the City’s supplementary heads
of argument [underlined emphasis in original]:
‘
A
better description of the pipe would be the ‘secluded pipe’
since it is
not visible to
anyone
who attends at the
applicant’s property. This is substantiated by the fact that …
Mr Chavez, who was on the property
for at least 8 days whilst the
secluded pipe was being installed, alleges that he did not even know
there were workmen on the
property.
The fact of the
matter is that this secluded pipe runs across the dense and
mountainous slope of the applicant’s property.
It is neither
visible to the public nor visible to the owners from the vantage
points of their respective properties.’
[22]
In
reaching this conclusion, I have considered and rejected the City’s
in
limine
objection that the applicant has relied on hearsay evidence. I have
also, as indicated above, rejected the City’s argument
(also
framed as an
in
limine
objection,
though in fact a point going to the merits) about the applicant
supposedly being precluded from obtaining the relief
it seeks
against the City as a result of material disputes of fact.
[23]
Particularly
if, as Wooll has stated, the pipeline on his property is above
ground, it may be difficult for Rosevean to contend
that its
pipeline should be buried, though this would ultimately depend on
factors such as the terrain and the gradient, and
the effect on
feasible future development.
[24]
In
410
Voortrekker Road Property Holdings CC v Minister of Home Affairs and
others
2010 (8) BCLR 785
(WCC);
[2010] 4 All SA 414
(WCC), this Court (
per
Binns-Ward J) suspended an interdict for a period of six months,
alternatively four months to allow the Department of Home Affairs
to
regularize its operations. The declaration of unlawfulness that the
Court also made in that case was not suspended. In my
view, it would
however be appropriate, as well in line with section 172(1)(
a
)
of the Constitution, to suspend both orders in this case.
[25]
See
Cilliers
at
al Herbstein & Van Winsen: The Civil Practice of the High Courts
and Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
5
th
ed. Vol. 1 p 900.
[26]
R
v Sewpaul
1949 (4) SA 978
(N) at 980;
Newell
v Cronje and Another
1985 (4) SA 692
(E) at 697A-B.
[27]
See e.g.,
Bayer
SA (Pty) Ltd v Viljoen
1990 (2) SA 647
(A) at 659I-660B, confirming what was stated in
Kruger
v Ludick
1947 (3) SA 23
(A) at 31.
[28]
Durban
City Council Appellant v Association of Building Societies
Respondent
1942 AD 27
at 32;
Cordiant
Trading CC v Daimler Chrysler Financial Services (Pty) Ltd
2005 (6) SA 205
(SCA) at paras [15]-[17];
Minister
of Finance v Oakbay Investments (Pty) Ltd and others; Oakbay
Investments (Pty) Ltd and others v Director of the Financial
Intelligence Centre
2018 (3) SA 515
(GP) at para [52].
[29]
Minister
of Justice and others v Estate Stransham-Ford
2017 (3) SA 152
(SCA) at paras [22]-[23] (where the Court
inter
alia
stated: “
Since
the advent of an enforceable Bill of Rights, many test cases have
been brought with a view to establishing some broader
principle. But
none have been brought in circumstances where the cause of
action advanced had been extinguished before judgment
at first
instance. … It is a prerequisite for the exercise of the
discretion that any order the court may ultimately make
will have
some practical effect either on the parties or on others
.”);
Radio
Pretoria v Chairman, Independent Communications Authority South
Africa
2005 (1) SA 47
(SCA) at paras [39]-[46];
JT
Publishing (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Safety and Security
and Others
[1996] ZACC 23
;
1997 (3) SA 514
(CC) at para
[15]
(and the cases cited at fn. 15).
[30]
See e.g.
Herbstein
& Van Winsen
:
The
Civil Practice of the High Courts and the Supreme Court of Appeal of
South Africa
5
th
ed. Vol. 2 at pp 1438–1440.
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