Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 81South Africa
Westville Ratepayers Association v Ethekwini Municipality (D9343/2023;D9946/2023;D9947/2023;D9948/2023;D9949/2023;D9950/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 81 (27 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
27 October 2023
Headnotes
at which it wanted to submit
Judgment
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## Westville Ratepayers Association v Ethekwini Municipality (D9343/2023;D9946/2023;D9947/2023;D9948/2023;D9949/2023;D9950/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 81 (27 October 2023)
Westville Ratepayers Association v Ethekwini Municipality (D9343/2023;D9946/2023;D9947/2023;D9948/2023;D9949/2023;D9950/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 81 (27 October 2023)
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sino date 27 October 2023
FLYNOTES:
MUNICIPALITY – Ratepayers –
Rates
boycott
–
Municipality
adopted draft budget with tariff increases that association
objected to – Applicants seeking to interdict
municipality
from disconnecting services – Relying on dispute in terms of
section 102(2) of Systems Act – Specific
amount claimed by
municipality must be in dispute – Association’s
dispute is about various issues not contemplated
in the section –
Case on selective enforcement at best speculative and unsupported
by the papers – Applications
dismissed.
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE NO. D9343/2023
In
the matter between:
# WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
APPLICANT
WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
APPLICANT
and
# ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
CASE NO. D9946/2023
In
the matter between:
# ANGELA MERRILL
COCKERELL
FIRST APPLICANT
ANGELA MERRILL
COCKERELL
FIRST APPLICANT
#
# WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
and
# ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
CASE NO. D9947/2023
In
the matter between:
# SUSAN JANE
MERCER
FIRST APPLICANT
SUSAN JANE
MERCER
FIRST APPLICANT
#
# WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
and
#
# ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
CASE NO. D9948/2023
In
the matter between:
# AHMED MAHMOOD
KADWA
FIRST APPLICANT
AHMED MAHMOOD
KADWA
FIRST APPLICANT
#
# WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
and
# ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
CASE NO. D9949/2023
In
the matter between:
# UNITA
GOVENDER
FIRST APPLICANT
UNITA
GOVENDER
FIRST APPLICANT
#
WESTVILLE
RATEPAYERS ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
and
# ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
CASE NO. D9950/2023
In
the matter between:
# ABDUR RAHMAN
KADER
FIRST APPLICANT
ABDUR RAHMAN
KADER
FIRST APPLICANT
#
# WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
WESTVILLE RATEPAYERS
ASSOCIATION
SECOND APPLICANT
and
# ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
ETHEKWINI
MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
Coram:
Thobela-Mkhulisi AJ
Heard:
14 September 2023
Delivered:
27 October 2023
# ORDER
ORDER
## The following order is
granted:
The following order is
granted:
1.
The applications under case numbers D9343/2023,
D9946/2023, D9947/2023, D9948/2023, D9949/2023 and D9950/2023 are
dismissed.
2.
The applicant(s) in each application shall pay the
costs of such application, and where two applicants have launched the
application
their liability for costs shall be joint and several, the
one paying the other to be absolved.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
## Thobela-Mkhulisi AJ
Thobela-Mkhulisi AJ
Introduction
[1]
On 8 September 2023 six applications came before
me on the basis of urgency. Each application stems from the same
dispute between
the Westville Ratepayers Association (the
Association) and eThekwini Municipality (the Municipality), and
accordingly these applications
were heard together and are dealt with
in a similar way in this judgment.
## The parties
The parties
[2]
The applicant in case number D9343/2023 is the
Association, a voluntary association
established
on
25
January
2022.
The
first
applicant
in
case
number D9946/2023 is Angela Merrill Cockerell, a
sales representative residing in Westville. The first applicant in
case number
D9947/2023 is Susan Jane Mercer, the chairperson of the
Association. The first applicant in case number D9948/2023 is Ahmed
Mahmood
Kadwa, a medical vascular surgeon who resides in Westville.
The first applicant in case number D9949/2023 is Unita Govender, a
paralegal who resides in Westville. The first applicant in case
number D9950/2023 is Abdur Rahman Kader who also resides in
Westville.
[3]
The Association is cited as the second applicant
in each of the applications by the individual applicants.
[4]
The Municipality is the respondent in each
application.
## The relevant facts
The relevant facts
[5]
The Association, in its application issued in
August 2023, and as the only applicant under case number D9343/20323
(the main application),
set out the relief it seeks in its notice of
motion as follows:
‘
KINDLY
TAKE NOTICE THAT that (sic) application will be made on behalf of the
abovenamed applicant at 09:30am on 1 November 2023
or so soon
thereafter as Counsel may be heard for an order in the following
terms:
1.
That the Respondent be and is hereby interdicted
and restrained from disconnecting municipal services
inter
alia
water supply, electricity supply
and refuse collection to the persons so listed in annexure ‘X’
hereto, pending the
finalisation of a dispute lodged by the applicant
on 30 June 2023.
2.
The Respondent is directed to produce written
reasons for any decision taken by it in respect of the dispute within
30 days of the
finalisation of the dispute.
3.
That the First Respondent be directed to pay the
costs of this application.
4.
Further and/or alternative relief.’
[6]
The Association later filed a supplementary
affidavit to which it attached a draft amended order prayed.
The only amendment to the above was to frame the
order sought in the form of Rule nisi.
At
the hearing of the matter this too was later changed by the
Association and it was submitted that final relief is sought in the
manner initially set out and paragraph 2 is no longer persisted with.
[7]
The Association describes itself as a watchdog
that ensures that municipal services are delivered, and its mission
is to ensure
that local government evinces a character and culture of
respect, dignity and service delivery. In April 2023, the
Municipality
published its draft municipal budget for the 2023/2024
financial year and it looked to adopt this budget at the end of that
month.
The Association lodged a complaint with the Municipality that
it afforded ratepayers insufficient time within which to review and
comment on the draft budget. It sent written requests to the
Municipality for a meeting to be held, at which it wanted to submit
its objections and comments to the draft budget. The Municipality did
not respond to these written requests. Instead, in an email
dated 18
May 2023, the Municipality informed the Association and other
ratepayers associations that a mass meeting would be held
at Moses
Mabhida Stadium to discuss the draft budget. The Association states
that it was given only three days’ notice of
this meeting which
it attended when it was held on 24 May 2023.
At
this meeting the Association delivered a memorandum comprising “an
extensive list of objections highlighting gross non-compliance
with
the public participation process and the concerns detailed in the
Auditor General’s reports which the [Municipality]
had not
responded to”. Those objections include allegations that 615
million litres of water are lost daily which equates
to R2 billion;
that the Municipality’s credit control policy is failing as the
outstanding debt has increased by R4.7 billion;
that the proposed
tariff increase by Umgeni Water is only 5% but the Municipality’s
proposal is to pass on a 15% increase
to ratepayers; that informal
settlements are growing larger every day and 800 000 people live in
informal settlements; and that
the Municipality should postpone any
decision to increase tariffs until an enquiry, purportedly by the
provincial government, has
been completed.
[8]
Notwithstanding receipt of this memorandum and
other similar complaints, the Municipality adopted the draft budget,
inclusive of
the tariff increases that the Association objected to.
This prompted a further meeting between the two sides, held on 22
June 2023,
which the Association states did not go as planned.
Ultimately, on 30 June 2023, the Association lodged a dispute in
terms of section
102 of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act,
No. 32 of 2000 (the Systems Act). The Association describes its
dispute as
being ‘against tariff increases, non-compliance with
the public participation process and a capitulation of historical
failures
resulting in an incorrect budget’. More specifically,
in the dispute declared in terms of section 102, the Association
repeats
some of the complaints listed in the memorandum given to the
Municipality on 24 May 2023, such as Municipality’s proposal
of
a higher than normal tariff which is stated to be adopted without the
approval of the National Energy Regulator of South Africa
(NERSA).
The declared dispute also lists, amongst other complaints, the
failure to take disciplinary action against employees of
the
Municipality who are responsible for unauthorised, irregular and
fruitless expenditure. Finally, the declared dispute records
that the
Association ‘will not pay for any rates and services starting
from 1 July 2023 until and unless the City engages
with [it]’.
[9]
On 7 July 2023, the Association sent further
correspondence to the Municipality that records
inter
alia
, that the electricity tariff
increase approved by NERSA for the Municipality is 15.1% and that
this will have an impact on the
2023/2024 budget, which is not
explained in the letter, save to state that if the Municipality
ignores this recommendation from
NERSA, it will be acting in
contravention of its licence agreement with NERSA, and in that event,
the Association will take the
matter further. The letter also states
that if the Municipality does not accede to an urgent meeting, the
ratepayers are prepared
to go on a boycott and they are prepared to
face any consequences which may result, legal or otherwise.
[10]
The Municipality, on 14 July 2023, responded to
the accusation by the Association that it had not responded to the
several letters
the Association had sent to it, by referring to its
letter dated 29 May 2023.
This letter was a
response to the memorandum from the Association delivered on 24 May
2023, and it stated that ‘in line with
its policies and by- law
credit control measures are being and will continue to be implemented
on accounts that are in arrears,
which measures include
disconnections and penalties’. In response, the Association
sent two letters on 15 July 2023. In the
first letter, the
Association states that the letter from the Municipality demonstrates
disrespect to the provisions of section
102(2) of the Systems Act. In
the second letter, the Association records that the Municipality is
aware of the dispute lodged in
terms of the Systems Act, and that the
consequences of a rates boycott will mean the inability of the
Municipality to meet its
financial obligations, the repayments of its
loans, and that if the Municipality does not convene a meeting with
the Association,
it ‘will proceed with a rates boycott as an
act of protest’. The Association has also written to President
of South
Africa, various provincial departments, the Department of
Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, and other government
bodies.
[11]
After an announcement by the Municipality on the
news that any rates protest will be unlawful, the Association, sent a
further letter
to the Municipality in which it repeated its
previously communicated complaints. Ultimately, on 10 August 2023,
the Association
met with the Municipality where it delivered a list
of further demands to it. In total 11 demands are listed, including
that the
2023/2024 tariff increase be set aside, a tariff increase be
renegotiated which is affordable to everyone, all electricity
disconnections
must seize, and all credit agreements must be
reviewed.
[12]
The Municipality was not persuaded. On 15 August
2023, it delivered to ratepayers that were in arrears tax invoices
for rates, water
and sanitation, sewage disposal, electricity,
cleansing, and solid waste, that contained the following demand:
‘Urgent: Please
note that your account is in arrears. Should
payment not be received we advise that we intend to cut off or
restrict your service
after 14 days’. A further meeting ensued
between the Mayor and the Association, this time on 17 August 2023,
followed by
a further letter on 18 August 2023 that the Association
says was from it, and in which it is demanded that the Municipality
undertakes
that it will not implement its credit control measures
until such time as the matter is resolved at court. However, the
letter
that the Association claims it wrote on 18 August 2023 is, in
fact, a letter from a different association, the eThekwini Ratepayers
Movement (ERPM). Mr Asad Gaffar, the deponent to the affidavits in
the main application, alleges that he is the chairperson of
the
Association and his role in ERPM is not explained anywhere in the
papers.
[13]
On 24 August 2023, the ERPM wrote a further letter
in which it informed the Municipality that it has been forced to
bring an application
to interdict the Municipality from implementing
its credit control measures. The following day, on 25 August 2023,
the Association
launched these proceedings.
[14]
Despite the notice of motion setting the matter
down for hearing on the unopposed roll on 1 November 2023, on 8
September 2023,
the Association filed a supplementary affidavit to
which it attached the list of persons set out in annexure X, which
had been
omitted from its founding affidavit. The supplementary
affidavit explains that the Municipality disconnected electricity
supply
to the first applicants in the applicants by the individual
applicants above. The Association requested the Municipality to give
an undertaking that it would reconnect these applicants’
electricity supply. The Municipality did not give such an
undertaking.
This caused the Association to bring the hearing of its
application forward. This supplementary affidavit was deposed to on 7
September
2023 and the matter set down on an urgent basis on 8
September 2023.
[15]
The Municipality arrived at court to oppose the
now urgent application, but given the short notice it had been given
it had not
prepared answering papers. I adjourned the matter to the
following Thursday, 14 September 2023, when I would again be in
motion
court, and an order agreeing to time periods for the exchange
of papers and the filing of heads of argument was granted by consent.
[16]
In its answering affidavit, the Municipality
opposes the relief sought on the ground that the underlying dispute
is not one that
falls within section 102 of the Systems Act. Further,
the Municipality states that it did respond to the letter from the
ERPM on
4 September 2023. In this letter, the Municipality asserts
that the Association purports to act for ratepayers of the
Municipality,
without stating the names of the ratepayers; that the
letter fails to point out the specifics of what is disputed in the
amounts
billed, as required by section 102 of the Systems Act; and
that the letter, read together with all the documents
contained
in
a
lever
arch file
comprising
of
a
spreadsheet
with
addresses, figures, account numbers and people’s
names, with no further information, does not raise a dispute in terms
of
section 102.
[17]
In reply, the Association raised the selective
enforcement by the Municipality.
It asserts
that on 8 September 2023, the Mayor of the Municipality was published
in two publications, the Sowetan and IOL online,
to have declared war
by announcing
a ‘hit list’ of
persons that would be targeted by the Municipality.
The
mayor was quoted to have said that –
‘
Don’t
think everyone who resides in Westville has decided to withdraw their
rates. It is only two or three streets and we
will be dealing with
those. If they don’t pay us we will cut them off…We have
a list of the people who are withholding
their rates. They gave us
that list in court. We know our first targets. Those who are not
paying us we must cut them off because
it is unlawful to withhold
rates payments.’
[18]
The Municipality did not request an opportunity to
answer the accusation of selective enforcement against it and the
matter was
argued on the basis of the papers as they were.
## The issues
The issues
[19]
The fundamental issue in all the applications is
whether a dispute in terms of section 102 of the Systems Act is
pending between
the Association and the Municipality. If no such
dispute exists, the relief sought by the applicants cannot be
granted.
Selective enforcement by the
Municipality is also in issue.
## Discussion
Discussion
[20]
Prior to turning to section 102, I enquired from
the parties what the precise nature of the relief sought by the
Association was.
Initially, counsel for the Association stated that
the Association seeks interim relief, notwithstanding the amended
order prayed
framed the order in the form of a Rule.
The
Municipality argued that final relief was sought because the manner
in which the order is drafted does not give another court
anything
else to determine. The Association conceded that it seeks final
relief, that the papers are ripe for the issues to be
determined.
[21]
Section 102 reads as follows:
‘
102.
Accounts
.—
(1)
A
municipality may—
(a)
consolidate any separate accounts of persons
liable for payments to the municipality;
(b)
credit a payment by such a person against any
account of that person; and
(c)
implement any of the debt collection and credit
control measures provided for in this Chapter in relation to any
arrears on any
of the accounts of such a person.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not apply where there is a
dispute between the municipality and a person referred to in that
subsection concerning
any specific amount claimed by the municipality
from that person.
(3)
A municipality must provide an owner of a property
in its jurisdiction with copies of accounts sent to the occupier of
the property
for municipal services supplied to such a property if
the owner requests such accounts in writing from the municipality
concerned.’
[22]
It is common cause that the only service the
Municipality disconnected is the supply of electricity. The
individual applicants still
receive the supply of water, sewage
disposal and refuse removal. It is also common cause that the
individual applicants have not
paid the Municipality the amounts that
remain outstanding on each of their bills for all services provided
by the Municipality,
inclusive of the services not disconnected. The
applicants contend that they shall continue to not pay the
Municipality for all
of the itemised amounts on the bills they have
received from the Municipality, and that despite the position taken
by the applicants
to boycott payment for all services, the
Municipality must continue to provide services.
When
I pressed counsel for the Municipality to explain what entitles the
applicants to demand services whilst refusing to pay for
such
services counsel relied on the dispute that the Association states is
pending between the it and the Municipality in terms
of section
102(2).
[23]
In
Croftdene,
[1]
the
Supreme
Court
of
Appeal
provided
a
summation
of
section
102(2). The facts in that case were that Croftdene Mall, developed by
entities which are referred to in that judgment as
‘the
Croftas’, was initially operated as a share block scheme and
later converted into a sectional title scheme. The
Croftas went into
liquidation and the sectional title units they owned in the scheme
were sold to third parties during the liquidation
process. The
eThekwini Municipality held two accounts for the mall, one in the
name of the mall and another in the name of the
Croftas. Sometime
later, the Municipality consolidated the mall’s rates account
with water, electricity and refuse removal.
The mall fell into
arrears on its accounts and in proceedings launched against the
Municipality, asserted that the latter could
not disconnect the
electricity and water services to the mall as a dispute existed
between the mall and the Municipality in the
manner contemplated in
section 102(2) of the Systems Act. One of the issues disputed was the
right of the Municipality to consolidate
the accounts in the manner
that it had done, and to allocate payments made for water and
electricity charges to the ‘undifferentiated
consolidated
historical debt’. The question to be determined was whether
section 102 of the Systems Act empowers a local
authority to
disconnect a ratepayer’s water and electricity supply due to
outstanding debt for municipal rates. At the beginning
of the court’s
analysis, it stated the following about section 102(2):
‘
Section
102(1) of the Systems Act presents no controversy. The question for
determination is whether the respondent was entitled
in the
circumstances of this case, to terminate the services to the property
in order to enforce payment of arrear rates in view
of the provisions
of s 102(2). The provisions of this section exclude the application
of ss (1), “where there is a dispute
between the municipality
and a person referred to in that subsection concerning any specific
amount claimed by the municipality
from that person”. Clause 22
of the policy makes provision for dispute resolution. Clause 22.1
thereof requires a customer
who disputes a municipal account to
submit it in writing to the chief financial officer stating the
reasons therefor and any relevant
facts, information or
representation which the chief financial officer should consider to
resolve it. But, in terms of clause 22.3,
the submission of a dispute
“shall not stop or defer the continuation of any legal
procedure already instituted for the recovery
of arrear payment
relating to such dispute”.’
[2]
[24]
The reference to ‘policy’ is a
reference to the policy a municipality is obliged to have on credit
control and debt
collection in terms of section 97 of the Systems
Act. This policy is not in issue in this application. However, it
seems clear
that what must be in dispute for section 102(2) to be
invoked, is a specific amount claimed by the municipality from that
person.
In this regard, May JA opined that:
‘
It
is, in my view, of importance that s 102(2) of the Systems Act
requires that the dispute must relate to a “specific amount”
claimed by the municipality. Quite obviously, its objective must be
to prevent a ratepayer from delaying payment of an account
by raising
a dispute in general terms.
The
ratepayer is required to furnish facts that would adequately enable
the municipality to ascertain or identify the disputed item
or items
and the basis for the ratepayer's objection thereto. If an item is
properly identified and a dispute properly raised,
debt collection
and credit control measures could not be implemented in regard to
that item because of the provisions of the subsection
.’
[25]
The dispute purported to be in existence between
the Municipality and the Association is not a dispute contemplated in
section 102(2).
The Association’s
dispute with the Municipality is a different dispute about tariff
increases, the failure to discipline officials
of the Municipality,
wasteful expenditure and all of the issues listed in the summary of
the relevant facts above. None of the
matters listed in the
correspondence with the Municipality, whether from the Association or
from the EPRM, are matters in which
a dispute about a specific amount
is raised.
Moreover, the individual
applicants, in their short affidavits filed under the different case
numbers above, are silent about a
dispute with the Municipality, save
that they rely on the allegations by the Association in the main
application, which allegations
turn on a dispute in terms of section
102(2). As submitted by
Mr Goddard SC
in
argument, the Municipality resolved the question of a pending dispute
when it informed the ERPM in its letter on 4 September
2023, that
‘the letter read together with all the documents contained in
the arch lever file do not raise any dispute contemplated
in section
102 of the (Systems Act) read together with the Policy’.
[26]
The Association is embarking on a payment boycott
whilst demanding the provision of services. This is an entirely
different matter,
one that does not fall within section 102(2) and
about which entirely different legal principles apply.
[27]
I turn
next to the submissions made in relation to ‘selective
enforcement’.
Mr
Suleman
for
the
Association
relies
on
Walker
[3]
in
making
the
submission
that
the
utterances by the mayor in the newspaper articles referred to in the
replying affidavit, amount to selective enforcement carried
out by
targeting members of the Association. The facts in
Walker
are
entirely distinguishable from the present facts. In that case,
residents in what was referred to as old Pretoria complained
that
they were charged a metered rate for services whilst residents in
Mamelodi and Atteridgeville were charged a flat rate. Whilst
residents in all three areas owed the Pretoria Council payment, the
council adopted the policy of enforcing payment of arrear charges
in
Old Pretoria whilst encouraging payment in Mamelodi and
Atteridgeville.
[28]
In the application brought by the Association and
in the individual applications, no facts are alleged that evidence
‘selective
enforcement’. The entire argument on selective
enforcement rests on statements which are alleged to have been
uttered by
the mayor in newspaper articles that the Municipality has
a list of the few streets that are withholding payment of their
rates.
There is no evidence in any of the affidavits filed for the
Association, showing as a matter of fact, that the Municipality has
only disconnected the electricity supply of the members of the
Association. The case on selective enforcement is at best speculative
and unsupported by the Association’s own papers which contain a
list of its members that runs to four pages, where the electricity
supply to only five members has been disconnected.
There
is no allegation made that no other disconnections to electricity
have been carried out by the Municipality, nor is any evidence
in
this regard attached to the papers.
It
follows that the submissions made on selective enforcement are
unsupported by facts and must be rejected.
[29]
The
only question that remains is that of costs.
Mr
Suleman
asked
this court to apply the
Biowatch
principle
and to not grant a costs order against the Association and the
individual applicants in the event that they are unsuccessful.
In
Biowatch,
[4]
the
Constitutional Court established the principle that generally, in
litigation between the State and private parties seeking to
assert a
fundamental right, and the State is shown to have failed to fulfil
its constitutional and statutory obligations, the State
should bear
the costs of litigants who have been successful against it, and
ordinarily there should be no costs order against any
private
litigants who have become involved. The present proceedings do not
constitute litigation between private persons and the
State in which
fundamental rights in the Bill of Rights are asserted. Neither the
Association nor the individual applicants make
out a case in this
regard.
The
private parties have been unsuccessful, the
Biowatch
principle
finds no application and I find no reason for why costs should not
follow the cause.
## Order
Order
[30]
The following order is granted:
1.
The applications under case numbers D9343/2023,
D9946/2023, D9947/2023, D9948/2023, D9949/2023 and D9950/2023 are
dismissed.
2.
The applicant(s) in each application shall pay the
costs of such application, and where two applicants have launched the
application
their liability for costs shall be joint and several, the
one paying the other to be absolved.
# THOBELA-MKHULISIAJ
THOBELA-MKHULISI
AJ
Heard
:
14
September 2023
Delivered
:
27
October 2023
For
the applicants:
Mr
Suleman
Instructed
by:
MW
Joosub Attorneys Ground Floor Office No. 2 Business Partners
Building
23 Jan Hofmeyr Road Westville
Durban
Email:
waseem@mwjlaw.co.za
mwjoosubattorneys@gmail.com
Tel:
067 639 6207
For
the respondent:
Ms
Goddard SC together with Mr Ntshebe
Instructed
By:
Luthuli
Sithole Attorneys
Email:
themba@luthulisithole.co.za
nozipho@luthulisithole.co.za
Tel:
031
312 2327
[1]
Body
Corporate Croftdene Mall v eThekwini Municipality
[2011]
ZASCA 188; 2012 (4) SA 169 (SCA).
[2]
Ibid
para 20. See also paras 11-23.
[3]
Pretoria
City Council v Walker
1998
(2) SA 363 (CC).
[4]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources, and others
[2009]
ZACC 14
;
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC).
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