Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 56South Africa
MEC for Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal and Another v Mtubatuba Local Municipality and Others (D2562/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 56 (15 August 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## MEC for Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal and Another v Mtubatuba Local Municipality and Others (D2562/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 56 (15 August 2023)
MEC for Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal and Another v Mtubatuba Local Municipality and Others (D2562/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 56 (15 August 2023)
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sino date 15 August 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
MUNICIPALITY
– Provincial intervention –
Interdict
–
Municipality
preventing ministerial representative from accessing office and
performing duties – Chapter 4 of IGRFA
which prescribes
settlement of intergovernmental disputes amongst organs of state
does not apply because the municipality
is under intervention –
Applicants entitled to approach court – Conduct of taking
the law into their hands and
preventing representative from taking
up his appointment is unlawful – Interdict granted –
Constitution, s 139(1)(b)
–
Intergovernmental Relations
Framework Act 13 of 2005
, Ch 4.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no: D2562/2023
In
the matter between:
THE
MEC FOR CO-OPERATIVE GOVERNANCE AND
TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS, KWAZULU-NATAL
FIRST
APPLICANT
DR
SIYABONGA NTULI
SECOND
APPLICANT
and
MTUBATUBA
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
FIRST
RESPONDENT
MUNICIPAL
MANAGER: MTUBATUBA MUNICIPALITY
SECOND
RESPONDENT
SPEAKER:
MTUBATUBA MUNICIPALITY
THIRD
RESPONDENT
MAYOR:
MTUBATUBA MUNICIPALITY
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
ORDER
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives by email, and released to SAFLII.
The date for hand
down is deemed to be 15 August 2023 (Tuesday) at 09:30am
In
the premises, the following order is made:
1.
The respondents are hereby interdicted and restrained from preventing
the second applicant from taking up his
position as ministerial
representative at the Mtubatuba Local Municipality.
2.
The respondents are hereby directed to facilitate the second
applicant’s appointment as ministerial representative
at the
Municipality by providing him with access to the offices used by the
ministerial representative and all necessary facilities
and by
co-operating with the second applicant to enable him to fulfil his
statutory duties at the Municipality.
3.
No order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Mathenjwa
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for interdict restraining the respondents from
preventing members
of the public and officials of the Department of
Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs gaining access to
Mtubatuba Local
Municipality (the Municipality) offices for official
business and further restraining and interdicting the
respondents from
preventing the second applicant from taking up his
position as ministerial representative at the Municipality.
Parties
[2]
The first applicant is the MEC for Co-operative Governance and
Traditional Affairs,
KwaZulu-Natal responsible for local government
in the province of KwaZulu-Natal.
[3]
The second applicant is Dr Siyabonga Robsen Ntuli who has been
appointed as the ministerial
representative at the Municipality
pursuant to intervention in terms of s 139(1)
(b)
of the
Constitution.
[4]
The first respondent is Mtubatuba Local Municipality which has its
administrative
offices at Lot 1[...] N[...] M[...] Road, Mtubatuba
KwaZulu-Natal.
[5]
The second respondent is Thamsanqa Vincent Xulu who is cited in his
capacity as the
Municipal Manager of the Municipality. The
third respondent is Sibongile Jullie Shezi who is cited in her
capacity as the
Speaker of the Municipality. The fourth
respondent is Mandla Zungu who is cited in his capacity as the
Executive Mayor
of the Municipality.
Factual
background
[6]
On 13 March 2019 the Provincial Executive Council of KwaZulu-Natal
resolved to intervene
at the Mtubatuba Municipality in terms of s
139(1)
(b)
of the Constitution. The intervention has been
extended on various occasions and is still in force. Subsequent to
the intervention
a ministerial representative was appointed at the
Municipality for the period of the intervention. On 1 February 2023
the previous
MEC for Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs,
KwaZulu-Natal, appointed the second applicant as ministerial
representative
at the Municipality. The appointment of the second
applicant has since been continuously extended by the first
applicant.
[7]
The respondents opposed the appointment of the second applicant as a
ministerial representative
at the Municipality. Reasons advanced for
their opposition relate to certain allegations against the second
applicant which they
contend would render him disqualified to be a
ministerial representative at that Municipality. The applicants
dispute those allegations
and persisted with the appointment of
the second applicant. Thus, there is disagreement between
the applicants and
the respondents over the appointment of the second
applicant. Subsequently, on 27 February 2023 when officials
from the first
applicant’s department arrived at the
Municipality for purposes of introducing the second applicant as
ministerial representative,
they found the main gate to the
entrance and all buildings at the Municipality locked. On 28 February
2023 again, the second
applicant arrived to assume duties as
ministerial representatives at the Municipality, but he was
prevented from doing so
because the entrance gate to the Municipality
was locked. Furthermore other councillors of the Municipality and
general members
of the public were locked outside and could not
access the Municipality premises. That gave rise to the current
dispute that led
to the applicants launching this application.
[8]
On 14 March 2023 the matter came before Moodley J and an order
was issued
interdicting the respondents from causing the
entrance gates to the Municipality offices being blocked during
normal operating
office hours and requesting the South African
Police Services to come to the assistance of the second
applicant and officials
of the first applicant’s department to
exercise the rights conferred in the order. Furthermore, the learned
judge issued
a rule nisi calling upon the respondents to show cause
why they should not be restrained and interdicted from preventing the
second
applicant from taking up his position as ministerial
representative at the Municipality.
[
9]
It appears from the respondents’ opposing papers that their
opposition to the
application before me is mainly based on their
contention that the appointment of the second applicant lacks
rationality and offends
the rule of law. It further appears that the
respondents have launched a court application challenging the
appointment of the second
applicant, and that application is pending
before another court. Therefore, I do not express any view on that
matter which is pending
before another court.
[10]
The issue for determination in this application is whether or not the
prevention of the second
applicant from assuming his duties as
ministerial representative in terms of his appointment by the first
applicant at the Municipality
is unlawful, and whether the
respondents should be restrained and interdicted from preventing the
second applicant from assuming
his duties at that Municipality
Application
for postponement
[11]
At
the commencement of the hearing Ms
Lennard
for
the first to fourth respondents made a substantial application for
postponement of the matter. Reasons advanced being
that
the senior counsel who is seized with the matter was not available
and will return to the country on 23 August 2023. Mr
Moerane
SC
for
the applicants opposed the postponement. He referred this court to
its judgment in
Nongoma
Local Municipality and Others v MEC for Cooperative Governance and
Traditional Affairs (KwaZulu- Natal) and Others
,
[1]
where in a similar situation the court refused postponement for a
similar reason being that the senior counsel seized with the
matter
was abroad. Mr
Moerane
further
highlighted that there are currently about 50 senior counsels
practicing in this Division, therefore, the respondents could
have
engaged one of the senior counsels available in the absence of their
usual senior counsel. I have had regard to the
fact that on 23
May 2023 directives were issued for the parties to file their heads
of argument, and they complied accordingly.
According to the
respondents’ attorneys, the respondents learned on 1 August
2023 that the matter was set down for hearing
on 11 August 2023, but
still did not make arrangements for the appointment of another senior
counsel. The reasons advanced for
seeking the adjournment are not
satisfactory and the application for adjournment is refused.
Parties’
submissions
[12]
Mr
Moerane
submitted
that the second to fourth respondents have acted unlawfully in
preventing the second applicant from taking up office at
the
Municipality and discharging his duties as ministerial representative
and the applicants are entitled to the interdict and
mandamus they
seek. The conduct of the respondents to take the law into their
hands, the argument went, amounts to self-help. In
support of his
argument the court was referred to the Constitutional Court judgment
of
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security and Others
[2]
where it was held that self-help is repugnant to the values upon
which our constitution is founded. With regard to the respondents’
contention that the applicants have not made a reasonable effort to
resolve the matter before launching this application, he submitted
that Chapter 4 of the Intergovernmental Relations Framework
Act
[3]
(IGRFA)
which
prescribes settlement of intergovernmental disputes amongst organs of
state does not apply in the present matter because the
Municipality
is under intervention in terms of s 139 of the Constitution.
Alternatively, the argument went, based on the
nature of the
present matter the applicants were entitled to approach
the court for resolution of the matter.
[13]
Ms Lennard submitted that the duty imposed upon organs of state
involved in intergovernmental
disputes to make every effort to avoid
litigation is applicable to the present matter. The applicants
failed, the argument went,
to make reasonable efforts to resolve the
dis before launching this applicant and this court should refuse to
hear this application.
Furthermore, it was argued, the applicants in
their affidavits averred that the appointment of the second applicant
would expire
on 23 April 2023, and the applicant’s
counsel in their heads of argument had averred that the second
applicant’s
appointment was extended, was still in force and
the letter of extension was attached to their practice notes, but
such letter
was not attached to the practice notes. It was further
submitted that the second applicant’s appointment had expired,
the
applicants no longer have prima facie rights and the application
should be dismissed.
[14]
In response, the applicants’ counsel requested to hand into
court the letters extending
the second applicant’s
appointment which were omitted from the applicants practice notes. I
allowed the handing into court
of the letters showing that the
appointment of the second applicant was extended and still in force.
Reasons being that the issue
of extension of the second
applicant’s appointment was raised by the applicants in their
heads of argument, but they
omitted to attach those letters. In
response to the applicants’ heads, the respondents’
submitted their heads
of argument, but did not raise the omission of
the second applicant’s letters of appointment to
the applicants’
practice notes nor the expiry of
the second applicant’s appointment. The issues regarding the
omission of the
letters of appointment and expiry of the second
applicant’s appointment was raised for the first time by the
respondents’
counsel at the hearing of this matter. It is
accepted that counsel was entitled to raise the issue because
it arose from
the applicant’s own case. Under these
circumstances I considered it fair to allow the applicants to hand in
the letters that
they omitted to attach in their practice notes. It
is now clear that the appointment of the second applicant was
extended
and is still in force.
Analysis
[15]
As pointed out in paragraph 9 above the issues regarding the
suitability of the second applicant
to be appointed as a ministerial
representative at the Municipality is not before this court,
it is pending before
another court. Furthermore, there is no longer
any uncertainty regarding the expiry of the second applicant’s
appointment
since the letters extending his appointed clarifies the
issue that his appointment is still in force. This then brings
me
to the respondents’ contention that the applicants had
failed to comply with the constitutional duty imposed on organs of
state to make every effort to resolve intergovernmental dispute
before resorting to court.
[16]
Section 41(3) of the Constitution directs an organ of state involved
in an intergovernmental
dispute to make every reasonable effort to
settle the dispute by means of mechanisms and procedures provided for
that purposes
and to exhaust all available remedies before
approaching a court to resolve the dispute. Chapter 4 of the IGRFA
makes provision
for mechanisms and procedures for settlement of
intergovernmental disputes between organs of state. Section 39 of the
IGRFA
provides that the provisions of Chapter 4 of the IRFA
does not apply to disputes concerning an intervention in terms of ss
100
or 139 of the Constitution. Therefore it is not in dispute
that the provisions of Chapter 4 of IGRFA is not applicable to
the
present matter because the dispute relates to a s 139 intervention.
[17]
It is appropriate to have regard to the nature of
the dispute in the present
matter which relates to taking
the law into one’s own hands in preventing the second applicant
from performing
his duty in terms of his appointment as
ministerial representative at the Municipality. Taking the law into
one’s hands
offends the rule of law,
[4]
which is one of the founding values of our constitutional
democracy.
[5]
The principle of
taking the law in to one’s own hands and self-help is inimical
to a society founded on the rule of
law and principles of
democracy.
[6]
Reasons being that
the practice of self-help does not only create disorder, chaos and
vigilantes in society, but is likely
to put at risk or even
lead to the death of innocent people . In the present matter innocent
members of the public were prevented
from accessing the Municipality
premises and consequently from accessing services because the
entrance to the office was blocked.
The conduct of taking the
law into their hands and preventing the second applicant from taking
up his appointment at the
Municipality is unlawful and the
respondents should be restrained and interdicted accordingly.
Costs
[18]
The applicants submitted that the second to fourth respondents should
bear the costs of this
application because they associated themselves
with the conduct of those people who blocked the entrance to, and
prevented the
second applicant from assuming duties at the
Municipality premises. The respondents submitted that the issue of
costs should be
reserved for determination together with the review
application pending before another court because by then the court
would have
formed a clear picture regarding the conduct of the
litigants in this litigation. In determining the issue of costs I
have had
regard to the conduct of the parties involved in the
litigation.
[7]
The papers before
court show that that people who were wearing t-shirts of a political
party were blocking the entrance and prevented
the second applicant
from entering the Municipality. The second to fourth respondents are
cited in their capacities as office bearers
of the Municipality
without attributing any role played by them in blocking the entrance
to the Municipality. With regard to reservation
of costs for
determination by the court adjudicating the review application, in my
view it may not be appropriate for that court
to determine the issue
of costs for a matter heard by another court. I am not convinced that
the conduct of the second to fourth
respondents in this litigation
justifies that they personally bear the costs of this application.
Further, in my view, it is not
desirable to order the Municipality to
bear costs, in an instance such as the present, where the conduct of
blocking the entrance
and preventing the second applicant from taking
up his appointment is attributed to people wearing colours of a
political party,
whose role to the Municipality is not determinable.
Order
[19]
In the premises, the following order is made:
1. The
respondents are hereby interdicted and restrained from preventing the
second applicant from taking up his
position as ministerial
representative at the Mtubatuba Local Municipality.
2. The
respondents are hereby directed to facilitate the second applicant’s
appointment as ministerial representative
at the Municipality by
providing him with access to the offices used by the ministerial
representative and all necessary facilities
and by co-operating with
the second applicant to enable him to fulfil his statutory duties at
the Municipality.
3. No
order as to costs.
MATHENJWA
AJ
Date
of hearing: 11 August 2023
Date
of judgment: 15 August 2023
Appearances:
For
the applicants:
Adv
Moerane SC
Assisted
by:
Adv M
Mabonane
Instructed
by:
Tembe
Kheswa Nxumalo Inc.
Durban
For
the respondents:
Adv.
U Lennard
Assisted
by:
Adv
N Xulu
Instructed
by:
SM
Mbatha Inc.
Durban
[1]
Nongoma
Local Municipality and Others v MEC for Cooperative Governance and
Traditional Affairs (KwaZulu-Natal) and Others
(846/2023P)
[2023] ZAKZPHC 73 (3 July 2023).
[2]
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security
and
Others
2014
(5) SA 112
(CC);
2014 (7) BCLR 788
(CC) para 21.
[3]
Intergovernmental
Relations Framework
Act
13 of 2005
.
[4]
Chief
Lesapoo v North West Agricultural Bank
and
Another
[1999] ZACC 16
;
2000
(1) SA 409
(CC) para 22.
[5]
Section
1
(c)
of
the Constitution.
[6]
Chief
Lesapo
above
fn 4 para 11.
[7]
Catling
and Another v Constas NO and Another
(2647/2016)
[2016] ZAGPJHC 350 (17 September 2019) para 39.
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