Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 71South Africa
Great Afro Trading CC t/a Somerset Cold Storage v Ports Regulator of South Africa and Another (D11098/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 71 (14 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
14 October 2024
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAKZDHC 71
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Great Afro Trading CC t/a Somerset Cold Storage v Ports Regulator of South Africa and Another (D11098/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 71 (14 October 2024)
Great Afro Trading CC t/a Somerset Cold Storage v Ports Regulator of South Africa and Another (D11098/2021) [2024] ZAKZDHC 71 (14 October 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAKZDHC/Data/2024_71.html
sino date 14 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no: D11098/2021
In
the matter between:
GREAT
AFRO TRADING CC
t/a
SOMERSET
COLD
STORAGE
APPLICANT
and
# THE
PORTS REGULATOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
PORTS REGULATOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
FIRST RESPONDENT
#
# TRANSNET
PORTS AUTHORITY OF SOUTH AFRICA SECOND
RESPONDENT
TRANSNET
PORTS AUTHORITY OF SOUTH AFRICA SECOND
RESPONDENT
ORDER
The
following order is made:
1.
The
application
is
dismissed
with
costs
,
such
costs
to
include
costs
of
one counsel on
scale
B.
JUDGMENT
Sibiya
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
The applicant,
Great Afro Trading CC
,
seeks the
review and setting aside of a ruling made by the first respondent
,
the Ports
Regulator of South Africa
(Ports
Regulator)
dated 05 November 2021. The contested ruling, concerns appeal
proceedings before the Ports Regulator in which
it
found
that
it has jurisdiction to
determine
the validity
of
administrative action
taken
by the second
respondent,
Transnet Ports
Authority of South Africa
(Transnet
)
.
[2]
The
application was
launched
in two
parts.
Part A
,
which
sought to
interdict the
respondents
from
continuing the
proceedings under case
no:
RA2020
/
11/0020
,
was dealt with
in the
urgent
court on 2
December 2021 and adjourned
sine
die.
This
judgment
is
in
respect
of Part B.
[3]
The
applicant,
in
the
notice
of
motion
,
seeks
an
order
in
the
following
terms:
"
1.
The
first
respondent
'
s
ruling
dated
5 November
2021 finding
that
the first
respondent has jurisdiction
to
determine
the
lawfulness
of
administrative action
is
reviewed
and
set aside;
2.
The
ruling
of
the
first respondent
dated
5
November
2021
is
replaced with:
"
The
first
respondent has
no
jurisdiction
to
determine the validity of administrative action;
3.
Further or
alternative
relief
as
is
just
and
equitable
i
n
terms of section
8
of
the
Promotion of
Administrative
Act 3
of
2000.
4.
Costs against
the Respondents
jointly
and severally
i
n
the
event
of
their
opposition.
"
Background
[4]
The
essential
facts giving rise
to
the dispute
,
which are
largely
common
cause
,
can
be summed up as follows. The applicant and Transnet entered into a
short-term
lease
agreement
during November 2003
.
The lease
pertained to immovable property
at
Mayden
Wharf
,
Port of
Durban. This property belongs to Transnet.
The
lease
agreement
was
initially
for
a period
of
six months
,
commencing
in December
2003
.
Upon the
expiry of
the six
months, the
applicant
remained in
occupation of
the
property
on a month-to-month
lease
.
[5]
Between
2009 to 2017 the applicant and Transnet engaged
in
negotiations in respect
of
Transnet's provision of a
long-term
lease
agreement over the property.
To
this
effect,
the parties exchanged numerous
letters.
Reference
will
only
be made
to
the letters
which
have a bearing on the
issues
raised in
the
review
application.
Transnet
,
by
letter
dated
29
May
2017
,
informed
the
applicant
of
its
intention to
conduct
a bid process in respect of
leased
properties
at the Port
of
Durban
,
including
those
leased
by
the applicant.
[1]
Dissatisfied
,
the
applicant lodged an appeal
with
the
Ports
Regulator
,
challenging
Transnet's decision.
I
shall
refer
to
this
appeal
as
the
'
first
appeal
'
.
[6]
The applicant
and
Transnet
reached an
amicable settlement
while
the first
appeal was
pending.
This
settlement
is
central
to
the
present
dispute.
It
is
thus necessary
to
set
out
in some detai
l
the
terms
of
the
settlement
,
and
the
factual
contentions
that
surround
it. I
have
had regard to
the correspondence
exchanged
between the parties
that
records
the
settlement
they
reached.
The
terms
of
the
settlement are
to be found
in
two
letters,
one
from
Transnet's
attorneys, and the other
in
response,
from
the
applicant's
attorneys. On
13
March
2018
Transnet's
attorneys
addressed
the
first
letter
to
the
applicant's attorneys
in
which
they
confirmed an
'
amicable
settlement'. Transnet agreed
to
draft
a
lease
agreement and
an
Acknowledgement
of Debt
,
while
the
applicant would withdraw
the
first
appeal.
This
arrangement is
evidenced by
the
applicant's
attorneys
'
letter dated
17 April
2018
,
which
confirmed
the
appeal's
withdrawal
based on
Transnet's
commitment
to
conclude
a
new
long-term
lease on mutually agreed terms and conditions.
[7]
On
30
April 2019
,
the
acting
Port
Manager,
Ms Nokuzola Nkowane
,
sent a
letter
to the
applicant
,
the
contents
of
which
advised
the
applicant
that
Transnet was in the final
stages
of drafting
a
long-term
lease. Because
of
the
import
of
this
letter
,
and
its importance, it
is
necessary to
quote
it in
full.
[8]
It reads:
'This
letter serves
to confirm that TNPA is
in
the final
stages of drafting
a twenty-year
lease for
Great Afro Trading cc
,
which lease
is
envisaged to
be signed pursuant
to
the successfu
l
outcome of
Transnet Governance Procedures which are currently underway.
Transnet
has been made aware that Great Afro Trading has applied
for
bank
financing
for their new
refrigeration
plant.
In
the
interim
,
whilst
the outcome of
the
aforementioned
governance processes
are
awaited
,
the
existing
lease
agreement
signed
in
2003
remains in force on a month
to
month
basis
with
all
the same
terms
and
conditions
'
[2]
[9]
Some
time
elapsed
and
the
applicant
,
not
having
received
a
draft
lease
agreement, addressed a
letter
on 5 June 2020
to the
Transnet Group
Chief Executive. The contents of
this
letter are not
before me
,
but
it appears to have enquired about the
provision of
a
long-term
lease.
Transnet
responded
by
letter
dated
25 August
2020.
In
this
letter
Transnet
purported to
terminate the month-to
-
month
lease
that
was
in place. The following was stated in this regard:
'
It
is
regrettable
that the
lease
with
Great
Afro which
expired
in
2003
has
continued
on
a
monthto-month
basis. While
we have taken
note
of the history
and attempts
to
secure a
long-term
lease,
these
are unfortunately not supported by
the
leasing
governance
frameworks.
TNPA
is
therefore
unable
to
grant any
lease without
comp
l
ying
with
the
requirements of an open,
fair
and
transparent process.
Against
the
above
considerations
,
TNPA
hereby
i
ssues
to
Great
Afro
a
twelve
(
12)
months
'
notice
of termination of the month-to-month
lease,
effective
from
01
September 2020
to
01
October
2021. Thereafter
,
TNPA
will
be
proceeding with an open and competitive
tender
for
the
site
,
in
which
you
are
welcome to
participate.
'
[3]
[1
0]
Aggrieved by
this turn of events
,
the applicant,
on
17
November
2020, lodged
an appeal with
the
Ports
Regulator
in
terms of s
46
of the
National Ports Act
12
of 2005
(Ports
Act).
This
appeal
('second
appeal
'
)
is
the subject
matter
of
the present proceedings. In
its
founding
papers
in
the
second appeal
,
the applicant
sought an order setting aside
the
decision of
Transnet
to
terminate
the
month-to-month
lease
agreement. It
also sought an order directing
that
Transnet
provide
it
with
a
written long
term
lease
agreement for
a period of twenty
years.
[11]
The
second appeal
was
opposed
by
Transnet
who
raised
two
preliminary points
in
its
answering
affidavit.
First
,
it
denied
that
it
was
bound
to
conclude
a
lease
agreement
with the applicant. It contended that the
'
in
principle
'
agreement
it
reached
with
the
applicant
was
subject
to
the
approval of Transnet's governance structures. Second
,
and
in
the
alternative
,
it
contended
that
if it were
bound
by
the
settlement agreement
,
it
could not
lawfully
implement
that
agreement.
This
was
so
because any
lease
agreement
would
have
to
comply
with
the
provisions
of
the
Ports
Act.
In
particular
,
the
applicant
would
be
required
to
obtain
a license to operate a
port
service
as contemplated
in
s
57 of
the
Ports
Act.
[4]
[12]
The
applicant's
response
was
to
raise
a
point
in
limine.
It
contended
that
Transnet's
defence,
in
effect
,
amounted
to a collateral challenge.
The
applicant
contended
that
Transnet was
not
permitted
in law to resile from the
settlement
agreement.
If
the
settlement agreement
was
unlawful,
as Transnet contended,
then
only
a court of
law
could
set
it
aside.
This
is
because
only
a court of
law
enjoys
the
power
to
review
the
lawfulness
of
an agreement
,
reached
by
an
organ
of
state
,
on
the
principle
established
in
Oudekraal
Estates
(Pty)
Ltd
v
City
of Cape Town and Others.
[5]
I
shall
refer
to
this
principle, compendiously, as
the
Oudekraal
principle.
The
ports
regulator's
ruling
[13]
The
Ports Regulator
issued
a
written ruling on the question of its jurisdiction on 5 November
2021. The Ports Regulator dismissed
the
applicant's
point
in
limine
and
held
that
it had jurisdiction to determine the lawfulness or unlawfulness of
the
settlement
agreement. The Ports Regulator reasoned that
it
enjoyed
a wide discretion in terms of s 46(2) of the Ports Act to determine
the consequences that
flow
from
an
invalid administrative act
.
This
included the power to set aside an agreement
reached
by
Transnet or to make any other competent order. The Ports Regulator
considered
itself
bound
by the
judgment
of
the Constitutional Court in
Aquilla
Steel
(South
Africa)
(Pty)
Ltd
v
Minister
of
Mineral
Resources
and Others
[6]
in
concluding
that
the requirement
that
an allegedly unlawful administrative act be challenged
'
in
the
right
proceedings
'
was
broad enough to encompass a statutory body
,
such
as
itself
,
that
is
entrusted
to adjudicate
upon
disputes
within
its
statutory
remit.
The
Ports
Regulator
in this regard, reasoned
as
follows:
'...
the
suggestion
that the
Ports
Regulator does
not
have jurisdiction to consider
a
collateral
challenge
is entirely
inconsistent
with the
concept
that the
appeal
is
a
"
wide
appeal
".
It
also
runs
contrary
to the
l
egislature
'
s
stated
intention
that
the Ports
Regulator
must
exercise
regulatory
functions
and monitor
the
activities
of
the
respondent.
In
our view
,
it
i
s
in
conceivable
that the
legislature would preclude the Ports
Regulator
from
pronouncing
upon
the
lawfulness
of
the
conduct
of
the
respondent.
If
that
were
so
,
it
would
mean that very
few
d
i
sputes
concerning
the
conduct
of
the respondent would find their way to this
body
.
That hardly
accords with the express powers
vesting
on this
body
which
are
wide
enough
to
encompass
the
i
nvest
i
gation
and
determination
of
any
conduct that
falls
with
in
the
provisions
of
the Act.
The
very
power
reposing in
the Ports
Regulator
requ
i
res
that it
determines whether
any
conduct
of
the respondent
accords
with
the
Act.
If
such
conduct
is at odds
with the Act
,
then
the
Ports
Regu
l
ator
is perfectly
entit
l
ed
to make
such
a
determination
and
conclude
that
such
conduct is
unlawful.
By
parity of
reasoning
,
it logically
follows
that
where
the
respondent
'
s
conduct
f
alls
short
of
its
statutory ob
li
gations
,
then the
Ports
Regulator
i
s
sim
ilarly
entitled
to
say so
.
Such
pronouncement
of
unlawfulness
is
inextricably
part of the
statutory
powers
that vest in
this
body.
Consequently
,
it
would
be odd
if the
Ports
Regulator were
denuded of its
statutory
powers to
determine the
lawfulness
of the
respondent
'
s
conduct
towards ports users.
The
interpretation
relied upon by
the appellant has no support in the statutory provisions
that
govern
the
Ports
Regulator
,
nor
does
it
find
favour
with
the
authorities that we
have
discussed
above
.'
[14]
I turn now to
address the submissions made before me, and the applicable
law
,
in light
of
the factual contentions set out above.
The
review
[15]
Counsel
for
the
applicant
,
Mr
Veerasamy
,
submitted
that
the
Port
Regulator
erred
in
finding
that
it
has
jurisdiction to determine the lawfulness of Transnet
'
s
administrative action. He averred that
it
is
only
a High Court
that
has jurisdiction to
adjudicate
a collateral challenge raised by an organ of state. He contended
that
if the legislature
wished
for the Ports Regulator to
have
a
similar status
to
that
of
a
High
Court
,
it
would
have legislated
in
specific
terms as it did when
it
established
the
Competition
Appeal Court.
Section 36
of
the
Competition
Act 89 of 1998
makes
it
clear
that the Competition Appeal Court
is
a
court of
law,
and
that its status
is
similar
to that of a High Court
.
In
support of the argument that the Ports Regulator
is
ousted
from exercising
reviewing
powers
,
Mr
Veerasamy
,
submitted
that the Ports Regulator as a Tribunal
is
in
a
similar position as the Competition Tribunal. He referred the court
to the Constitutional Court decision of
The
Competition
Commission
of
SA
v
Group
Five
Construction Ltd
.
[7]
This
case established that
the
Competition
Tribunal does not have powers to review an administrative action
in
terms
of PAJA and also
to
conduct
legality
reviews.
It is
the
Competition Appeal Court that enjoys
the
power
to
judicially
review
administrative action
,
and
that
is
because
it
is
a
court of
l
aw.
[16]
Counsel for Transnet
,
Mr
Pammenter
,
agreed
with
Mr
Veerasamy
'
s
submission that the Ports Regulator does not have power
to
conduct
reviews
brought before
it
in
terms
of PAJA. The Ports Regulator was not established for
that
purpose
,
unlike a court
of
law
.
On the
question of whether the Ports Regulator has the powers
to
conduct a
legality
review
,
Mr
Pammenter
submitted
that the Ports Regulator
is
a creature of
statute and
thus
reliance
should
be
had
to the provisions of the Ports Act that established it. He averred
that the Ports Regulator
,
by being
empowered
to
monitor the
activities of Transnet
in
order
to
ensure that
Transnet performs
its
functions in
accordance
with the Ports Act
,
as provided in
s
30(1)(c)
,
is in fact
exercising a legality review of Transnet's administrative action.
[17]
In response to
Mr
Veerasamy
'
s
submission
that the legislature would have legislated in specific terms if it
wished to afford the Ports Regulator reviewing powers
,
Mr
Pammenter
submitted
that it is not always the case that the legislature would
specifically use the words
"
reviewing
powers
"
when it
affords a Tribunal such powers
.
He averred
that a cue can be taken from the provisions of the Special
Investigating Units and Special Tribunals Act 74 of 1996
('
SIU
Act'
)
for
which the legis
l
ature
d
i
d
not legislate in specific terms to afford the Special Tribunal its
review
i
ng
powers
.
He
stated that the Special Tr
i
bunal
attains its rev
i
ewing
powers from s 8 of the SIU Ac
t.
He averred
that the wide language employed in s 8
(
2
)
of the SIU
Act
,
namely
"
any
civ
i
l
proceedings
",
points to the
Special Tribunal
'
s
jur
i
sd
i
ction
to conduct legality rev
i
ews.
Mr
Pammenter
submitted
further that the Ports Regulator was correct in find
i
ng
that
i
t
has jurisdiction to determine the lawfulness of T
r
ansne
t'
s
admin
i
strative
act
i
on
due to the language employed
i
n
s 46
(
2
)
o
f
the Ports Act.
He concluded that the powers granted in s 46(2
)
a
r
e
precisely the same powers a High Court has when it adjudicates a
review of a matter before it.
Discussion
[18]
The
Oudekraal
doctrine
requires that an admin
i
strative
action that is a
ll
eged
to be
i
nvalid
should
be
challenged
i
n
the
right
forum
.
The
a
ll
egedly
unlawfu
l
adm
i
nistrat
i
ve
act
i
on
must be challenged by the
ri
ght
actor
in
the
r
ight
p
r
oceedings
.
Until
that occurs
,
for
reasons that uphold the ru
l
e
of
l
aw
,
the
administra
ti
ve
act
i
on
stands
.
[8]
This
i
s
because organs of state are not permitted to engage
in
se
l
f-help
,
and
their decisions are presumed to be lawful until set aside by a
competent forum
.
Wha
t
t
hen
are the
'
r
i
ght
proceedings
'
before
wh
i
ch
the administrative action of an organ of state may be challenged?
[19]
Mr
Pammenter
contended
that the
'r
ight
proceedings
'
are
not confined to proceedings before a court of law
.
He
submitted that the
'
right
proceed
i
ngs
'
include
proceedings
before
a
tr
i
bunal
that
is
empowered
to
review
the
lawfulness
of
administrative
action taken by an organ of
state.
There
is support for this proposition in the judgment
of
the Constitutional Court
in
Ledla
Structural Development
(Pty)
Ltd and others v Special Investigating Unit.
[9]
In
Ledla
the
Constitutional Court held that a Special Tribunal
is
not a
court
of
law
,
and
hence it is not a tribunal
as
contemplated by
PAJA.
Nonetheless
,
it
found that a Special Tribunal enjoys the power to conduct a
legality
review.
The
Constitutional Court found that this power
was
to be found
in
s
8 of SIU Act
,
which
conferred a broad remedial jurisdiction upon a Special Tribunal
to
adjudicate
upon any civil proceedings brought before it by
the
Specia
l
Investigating
Unit.
[20]
The
powers
of
the
Ports
Regulator
are
to
be
found
in
the
Ports
Act.
Two provisions
are of particular relevance to the present dispute. Section 30(1
)(c)
of
the
Ports Act
empowers
the
Ports
Regulator to
'monitor
the
activities
of the
Authority
to ensure that
it performs
its
functions in
accordance with this Act'. Section 46(2)
provides
that after
considering an appeal,
the
Ports
Regulator must:
'(
a
)
confirm
,
set aside or
vary
the
decision
;
or
(b)
substitute
the decision of the Authority for its own
'
.
[21]
If I
am
to accept the applicant's submission
that
it is
only a
High
Court
that
is
empowered to
determine the validity of Transnet's administrative action
,
it will
mean
the Ports Regulator is ousted from exercising
its oversight
function as provided for
in
s 30(1
)(c).
As I see
it,
the words used
in
s
30(1
)(c)
and
s 46(2) are
clear
enough to
provide a sensible interpretation of the
legislature's
intention
to
afford the Ports Regulator reviewing
powers.
This
i
s
the
case
even where Transnet has not
filed
a
counter-application to
review
and set aside
its
own
invalid decision.
[22]
In
Gobela
Consulting
CC
v
Makhado
Municipality
,
[10]
the
Supreme
Court
of
Appeal
(SCA)
found
that the High Court was
,
in
the
absence
of a counter-application seeking the review and setting aside of the
contract concluded between
the
appellant
and
the
municipality
,
entitled
to find that the contract
in
question
was invalid or unlawful. In
this
regard, the SCA
reasoned
as
follows:
'
It
is
clear
from
the
court
a
quo
'
s
judgment
that
it
took
into
account
that despite
the
absence
of a frontal
challenge in the form of a counter-application
,
the
validity
and
lawfulness
of
Gobela's appointment
were squarely raised in the pleadings. Another important
consideration
in
considering
whether
the
court
a
quo
was
justified
in
entertaining the
municipality
'
s
collateral challenge
is
that
by
not
declaring
the
contract
invalid
and
unlawful,
the
untenable
result
wou
l
d
be that the court would be giving
l
ega
l
sanction to
the
very
result which s 217 of the Constitution and other all
procurement-related
prescripts
sought to prevent.
.
.
'
(Footnotes
omitted.)
[23]
In my view,
the Ports Regulator, by virtue of the provisions of ss 30(1
)(c)
and 46(2) of
the Ports Act, enjoys the power to conduct a legality review.
It
is
empowered
to monitor the activities of Transnet. This necessarily entails the
power
to
determine
whether Transnet has acted
lawfully.
To find that
Transnet acted unlawfully
is
to conduct a
legality review. This conclusion is fortified by the provisions of s
46(2). The Ports Regulator is empowered, after
considering an appeal,
to
'
set
aside' the decision of Transnet. This power to set aside a decision
is
a
remedial power exercised by a court of law when
it
conducts a
review.
There
is no reason in principle why these powers, when conferred upon the
Ports Regulator, should not
include
the
power to
conduct a legality review, when such a review falls within the powers
conferred upon the Ports Regulator to monitor the
activities of
Transnet. This interpretation accords with a purposive reading of the
Ports Act, and avoids the anomalous result
that the Ports Regulator
would be denuded of the power to effectively exercise
its
oversight
function in terms of s 30(1)(c) of the Ports Act.
Conclusion
[24]
For these
reasons,
I
find
that the
Ports Regulator,
in
its
ruling
dated 5
November
2021,
correctly dismissed the applicant's preliminary objection
to
the Port
Regulator
'
s
jurisdiction to conduct a legality review of Transnet's
administrative action. There
is
no need to
deal withs 8 of PAJA given the order I am about to grant.
I
find that the
Ports Regulator has jurisdiction to determine the lawfulness of
Transnet's administrative action as envisaged in ss
30(1
)(c)
and 46(2) of
the Ports Act.
[25]
It
is
trite that
costs follow a successful party
.
In determining
the scale of
costs
to
grant
,
I have
considered that
the
matter was not
complex to warrant the employment of
two
counsel. I am
therefore granting costs of one counsel.
Order
[26]
Accordingly
,
the following
order is made:
1.
The
application
is
dismissed
with
costs
,
such
costs
to
i
nclude
costs
of
one counsel on
scale B.
# B
PSIBIYA
B
P
SIBIYA
Acting
Judge of the
High
Court
Kwazulu-Natal
Div
i
sion
,
Durba
n
Appearances
For
the applicant:
I
Veerasamy
Instructed
by
:
Mooney
Ford Attorneys
.,
Umhlanga
.
For
the second respondent:
J
Pammenter SC (w
i
th
M
Mazibuko
)
I
nstructed
by:
TKN
Incorporated.
,
Durban.
Heard
:
24
July 2024
Delivered:
14
October 2024
[1]
Page
10
6
of t
h
e
index
t
o
app
l
ication
case
:
RA2020
/
11
/
0020
.
[2]
Page
122
of
the
Index
to
application
under
case:
RA2020
/
11
/
0020.
[3]
Page
36
of the
i
ndex
to
applicat
i
on
under
case
:
RA2020
/
11
/
0020
.
[4]
See
para 27
and
28
of the
Second
Respondent's
opposing affidavit where the fo
ll
owing
was
argued:
'
27
...
even
i
f
the Respondent
i
s
contractua
ll
y
bound by the
aforement
i
oned
"
in
principle
"
sett
l
ement
agreement
to
conclude
a
l
ease
w
i
th
the
Appellant
,
(
which
i
s
denied
)
then
the Respondent contends that If
such
lease
agreement
were
,
itse
l
f
,
to
authorise
the
Appellant
to
operate
a
port
terminal
from
the
premises
,
i
t
would
fall foul of
sect
i
on
56
(
5
)
of
the
Ports
Act
read with section
56
(
1
).
That
i
s
because
a
procedure
which was
"
fair
,
equitable
,
transparent
,
competitive
and
cost
effective
",
was
not fo
ll
owed
;
If
the Appellant
seeks
to
use the premises for
a
purpose
other than
providing
a
port
serv
i
ce
,
this
would offend
against
the
prov
i
s
i
ons
of
sect
i
on
11
(
1
)
of
the
Ports
Act
which provides that the main function of the Authority
i
s
,
inter
alia
,
to
own
,
manage
,
control
and
adm
i
nister
ports to
ensure
efficient
and
economic
funct
i
on
i
ng
.
A
lease for
a
purpose
other than
providing
for
a
port
service
would
not ensure suffic
i
ent
and economic
f
u
nct
i
on
i
ng
of the port.
28.lt
is
accordingly
submitted
that
the
in
principle
settlement
agreement cannot
lawfu
ll
y
be g
i
ven
effect
to.
Therefore
,
the not
i
ce
which the
Respondent
gave to the
Appe
l
lant
to vacate the premises
,
i
s
perfec
tl
y
lawfu
l
and
it
shou
l
d
be
given
effect to
..
.'.
[5]
Oudekraal
Estates
(Pty)
Ltd v City of Cape Town
(
2004]
ZASCA 48
;
2004
(6)
SA
222
(
SCA
)
('
Oudekraa
l).
[6]
Aquila
Steel
(S
Africa)
(
Pty)
Limited v M
i
nister
of Mineral Resources and Others
[2019]
ZACC
5
;
2019
(
4
)
BCLR
429
(
CC)
;
2019
(
3
)
SA
621
(
CC)
at
para
95.
[7]
Competit
i
on
Commiss
i
on
of South Africa v Group
F
i
ve
Cons
tr
uctio
n
Ltd
[2022]
ZACC 36
;
2
023
(
1
)
BCLR
1
(
CC
);
[2023]
1 CPLR
1
(
CC
)
.
[8]
See
A
qu
ila
Stee
l
above
fn5 para 9
5
.
[9]
Ledla
Structural
Development
(Pty)
Ltd
and Others v Special Investigating Unit
[2023]
ZACC
8; 2023
(6)
BCLR
709
(CC);
2023
(2)
SACR
1
(
CC
)
para
65
('L
edla
'
).
[10]
Gobela
Consulting
CC
v
Makhado Municipality
[2020]
ZASCA
180
para
21.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Talksure Trading (Pty) Ltd v Naidoo and Another (D4630/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 50 (28 July 2023)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 50High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
Sydwell Trading CC and Others v Sean Pillay and Company (Pty) Ltd (4581/2021) [2023] ZAKZDHC 24 (16 May 2023)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 24High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
Ixia Trading 616 (Pty) Limited v Von Maltitz and Another (D8163/2024) [2024] ZAKZDHC 75 (18 October 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 75High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
Interlagos Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others v Sundale Free Range Dairy (Pty) Ltd (D8288/2024) [2025] ZAKZDHC 42 (11 July 2025)
[2025] ZAKZDHC 42High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
Renian Distributors (Pty) Ltd v Crown Footwear (Pty) Ltd and Another (3898/2022) [2024] ZAKZDHC 4 (1 February 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 4High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)98% similar