Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 17South Africa
eThekwini Municipality v Jitesh and Others (D10273/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 17 (2 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## eThekwini Municipality v Jitesh and Others (D10273/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 17 (2 May 2024)
eThekwini Municipality v Jitesh and Others (D10273/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 17 (2 May 2024)
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sino date 2 May 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D10273/2022
In
the matter between:
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
APPLICANT
and
PERSADH
JITESH
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
EXECUTOR: ESTATE LATE KHAN YACOOB
SECOND
RESPONDENT
KWAZULU-NATAL
HUMAN SETTLEMENT
THIRD
RESPONDENT DEPARTMENT
LALLMUM
KALICHARAN
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Coram:
Mossop J
Heard:
2 May 2024
Delivered:
2 May 2024
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The first respondent is interdicted from
conducting and operating a trucking business from any of the
following properties whilst
they are not zoned by the applicant for
industrial purposes in terms of the relevant byelaw, namely:
(a)
[...] S[...] Road, Umkumbaan, with the
formal description of Portion 4[...] of Erf 7[...] Cato Manor,
eThekwini;
(b)
[...] S[...] Road, Umkumbaan, with the
formal description of Portion 4[...] of Erf 7[...] Cato Manor,
eThekwini;
(c)
1[...] U[...] Road, with the formal
description of Remaining Portion of Erf 7[...] Cato Manor, eThekwini;
and
(d)
[...] R[...] Road, Umkumbaan, with the
formal description of Portion 4[...] of Erf 7[...] Cato Manor,
eThekwini;
2.
The first respondent is to pay the
applicant’s costs of suit.
JUDGMENT
MOSSOP
J
:
[1]
This is an ex tempore judgment.
[2]
The applicant is the Ethekwini Municipality, a municipality
established
in terms of the
Local Government: Municipal Structures
Act 117 of 1998
, one of whose duties it is to enforce the byelaws
that apply within its area of jurisdiction. In its notice of motion,
it identifies
four immovable properties within that area of
jurisdiction, namely those situated at:
(a)
[...] S[...] Road, Umkumbaan, owned by the
first respondent;
(b)
[...] S[...] Road, Umkumbaan, owned by the
second respondent;
(c)
1[...] U[...] Road, Umkumbaan, owned by the
third respondent; and
(d)
[...] R[...] Road, Umkumbaan owned by the fourth
respondent,
(collectively referred to
as ‘the properties’)
and
makes the case that the first respondent is unlawfully conducting a
trucking business from the properties. As far as I can make
out, the
properties despite their addresses, are all contiguous to each other.
All of the properties, so the applicant alleges,
are zoned either as
‘special residential 400m
2
’ (properties (a),
(b) and (d) above) or as ‘general commercial’ (property
(c) above). This is not disputed by
the first respondent, who is the
only respondent that has opposed the application.
[3]
It is also not disputed that the first respondent is conducting a
trucking
business from his property and the properties owned by the
other respondents. The applicant claims that such conduct by the
first
respondent is unlawful because he is utilising the properties
for a purpose other than that in respect of which they are zoned.
The
applicant alleges that for a trucking business to be operated, the
property from which it is conducted must be zoned for ‘industrial’
activities. Zoning of property for ‘special residential 400m
2
’
use or for ‘general commercial’ use, as in the case of
the properties, specifically excludes the use of the
property for
industrial purposes and running a trucking business is regarded as an
industrial activity. None of this appears to
be disputed by the first
respondent.
[4]
By virtue
of the allegation that the first respondent is acting in a manner
contrary to the byelaw, the applicant has served contravention
notices on the first respondent, and on the third and fourth
respondents on at least two different dates. In total, eight
contravention
notices have been issued in all.
[1]
The applicant has fined the first respondent in respect of his use of
the properties in a total amount of R20 000.
[2]
None of this has stopped the first respondent from continuing to
conduct his business in breach of the byelaws.
[5]
The first respondent appears not to dispute that he was liable to be
fined
because he stated the following in a statement that he made to
the Durban Metro Police when he was served with the aforementioned
fines:
‘
I,
PERSADH JITESH, the owner of the above-named property, do hereby
acknowledge being served with the Municipal Notice 114 of 2017,
that
I PERSADH JITESH, am guilty of contravening
Section 76
of the
Bye-Law.’
[6]
In his rather threadbare answering affidavit in this
application,
the first respondent tacitly acknowledges his wrongdoing
and indicates that he has instructed an architect to attend to
applications
on his behalf to have the properties marked as (a), (b)
and (d) in paragraph [2] of this judgment rezoned so as to permit him
to
park his trucks thereon. He consequently sought an adjournment of
this application for six months to allow this process to run its
course. The architect that he has engaged to drive this process
confirmed in a supporting affidavit that he had commenced working
on
the rezoning applications. Both of those affidavits are dated 3 June
2023.
[7]
It is now 2 May 2024. Given the glacial speed at which this
division’s
opposed motion roll moves, more than six months have
elapsed since the respondent’s answering affidavits were
delivered.
The first respondent has had the six-month period that he
asked for, and then some. There is no admissible evidence from him of
how far the rezoning applications have proceeded nor is there any
evidence that the properties have actually been rezoned.
[8]
Attached to the first respondent’s heads of argument is a copy
of
his rezoning application. It is dated 7 April 2024. I can
otherwise take no heed of it for it has not been supported by an
affidavit.
It is, furthermore, entirely unacceptable, as the first
respondent’s legal representatives no doubt appreciate, for
heads
of argument to be used as a mechanism for introducing further
evidence.
[9]
In his heads of argument, the first respondent merely repeats that he
is in the process of seeking the rezoning of the properties. That
appears to be his defence. He submits that the application should
be
dismissed with costs. In truth the defence raised is not a defence at
all. It is, rather, an admission that the properties are
not
currently zoned for the purpose that the first respondent is using
them. If that were not the case, no rezoning would be required.
[10]
What is disturbing about the first respondent’s attitude is
that he has been aware
since at least March 2020 that he was
contravening the by-laws and did nothing about it. When this
application was brought he stated
in June 2023 that he was seeking
the rezoning of three of the four properties, yet that rezoning
application is only dated April
2024. He appears to do things at a
pace that only suits himself. That will have to change. The law
applies to all.
[11]
The applicant has made out an overwhelming case for the relief that
it seeks and it is
entitled to that order for so long as the
properties are not zoned for industrial activities. Clearly, if the
properties, or any
one of them, are rezoned for industrial purposes
any interdict preventing the respondent from operating his business
from that
property or properties would not be justified, on the
applicant’s own version. The applicant must have its order,
subject
to the just mentioned qualification. I make it plain that if
one of the properties is rezoned, it may be used for the purposes
that such rezoning permits. It is not the intention of this order
that all the properties must first be rezoned before any one of
them
may be used for such permitted purposes.
[12]
The applicant has, as a consequence, been entirely successful in its
application.
There is therefore no reason to depart from the tried
and tested principle that costs follow the result.
[13]
I accordingly grant the following order:
1.
The first respondent is interdicted from
conducting and operating a trucking business from any of the
following properties whilst
they are not zoned by the applicant for
industrial purposes in terms of the relevant byelaw, namely:
(a)
[...] S[...] Road, Umkumbaan, with the
formal description of Portion 4[...] of Erf 7[...] Cato Manor,
eThekwini;
(b)
[...] S[...] Road, Umkumbaan, with the
formal description of Portion 4[...] of Erf 7[...] Cato Manor,
eThekwini;
(c)
1[...] U[...] Road, with the formal
description of Remaining Portion of Erf 7[...] Cato Manor, eThekwini;
and
(d)
[...] R[...] Road, Umkumbaan, with the
formal description of Portion 4[...] of Erf 7[...] Cato Manor,
eThekwini;
2.
The first respondent is to pay the
applicant’s costs of suit.
MOSSOP J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicant:
Mr
E M Nkosi
Instructed
by:
Linda
Mazibuko and Associates
231-233
Stamford Hill Road
Morningside
Durban
Counsel
for the first respondent:
Ms
I Maharajh
Instructed
by:
Manoj
Haripersad Attorneys Inc.
Care
of:
Abdul
Shaikjee Attorneys
Office
No. 6, 6
th
Floor
The
Spinnaker
188
Mahatma Ghandi Road
Point
Waterfront
Durban
Counsel
for the second respondent:
No
appearance
Instructed
by:
Not
applicable
Counsel
for the third respondent:
No
appearance
Instructed
by:
Not
applicable
Counsel
for the fourth respondent:
No
appearance
Instructed
by:
Not
applicable
[1]
On
19 March 2020 notices were served o
n
the first respondent in respect of properties (a), (b) and (c)
referred to in paragraph 2 above and on the fourth respondent
in
respect of property (d). A notice was served upon the third
respondent on 27 September 2021 in respect of property (c). Further
notices were served upon the first respondent in respect of
properties (a) and (b) on 30 November 2021, as well as on the fourth
respondent in respect of property (d).
[2]
On
1 March 2021 the first respondent was fined R5 000 in respect of his
unlawful use of each of the four properties.
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