Case Law[2025] ZASCA 39South Africa
George Local Municipality v Cape Estate Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others (880/2023) [2025] ZASCA 39 (8 April 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
8 April 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative Law – review – Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) – rectification of zoning scheme map – refusal of rectification application reviewed and set aside – substitution justified in terms of s 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa) of PAJA – declaratory relief – industrial zoning not limited to sawmill use.
Judgment
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## George Local Municipality v Cape Estate Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others (880/2023) [2025] ZASCA 39 (8 April 2025)
George Local Municipality v Cape Estate Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others (880/2023) [2025] ZASCA 39 (8 April 2025)
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sino date 8 April 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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FLYNOTES:
MUNICIPALITY – Zoning –
Rectification
–
Owner
seeking rectification of split zoning of industrial and
agricultural – Used as sawmill and plantation –
Full
court granting declaratory order – Entire erf zoned
Industrial Zone II – Municipality had effectively engaged
in
impermissible, unlawful re-zoning exercise – Effect of
condition for site plan – Sufficient information for
determination – Extent of the industrial use associated with
the sawmill – Substantial compliance with condition
–
Appeal dismissed.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 880/2023
In the matter between:
GEORGE
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
APPELLANT
and
CAPE
ESTATES PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
(FORMERLY
MAGNOLIA RIDGE
PROPERTIES
77 (PTY) LTD)
FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE
APPEAL AUTHORITY,
GEORGE
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
SECOND
RESPONDENT
DEPUTY
DIRECTOR PLANNING AND SENIOR
MANAGER:
LAND USE MANAGEMENT
THIRD
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
George Local
Municipality v Cape Estate Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others
(880/2023)
ZASCA 39 (8 April 2025)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, KEIGHTLEY and SMITH JJA and
VALLY and MOLITSOANE AJJA
Heard:
21 February 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication
on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and released to SAFLII. The date for hand
down is deemed to be 08 April 2025 at 11h00.
Summary:
Administrative Law – review – Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) – rectification
of
zoning scheme map – refusal of rectification application
reviewed and set aside – substitution justified in terms
of s
8(1)(
c
)(ii)(
aa
) of PAJA – declaratory relief –
industrial zoning not limited to sawmill use.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (
Nziweni, Ndita and Fortuin JJ
sitting as court of appeal):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Keightley
JA (Mocumie and Smith JJA and Vally and Molitsoane AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The first respondent, Cape Estates Properties
(Pty) Ltd (Cape Estates), is the owner of Erf 2[...], George (Erf
2[...]). This appeal
is concerned with the zoning of that property.
Specifically at issue is a decision by the appellant, the George
Local Municipality
(the Municipality), to refuse an application (the
rectification application) by Cape Estates for rectification of the
zoning of
Erf 2[...] depicted in the Municipality’s 2017 Zoning
Scheme Map
(the 2017 zoning map).
[2]
The 2017 zoning map
depicted Erf 2[...] as
having a split zoning: 4,1 hectares of the property was zoned
‘Industrial Zone II’ (industrial),
with the remaining
approximately 7 hectares zoned ‘Agricultural Zone 1’
(agricultural). Cape Estates took the view
that the split zoning of
Erf 2[...] in the 2017 zoning map was erroneous. It contended that
the entire 11,1875 hectares of Erf
2[...] should have been depicted
as having an industrial zoning. The rectification application was
aimed at correcting this averred
error. After both the rectification
application, as well as a subsequent internal appeal to the
Municipality’s Appeal Authority
(the appeal authority) failed,
Cape Estates instituted review proceedings in
the
Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (the high court).
Thulare J, sitting as the court of first instance, dismissed
the
review application. However, the review succeeded on appeal to a full
court of the high court (the full court). The appeal
against the full
court’s decision comes before this Court by way of special
leave.
[3]
In its application to the high court Cape Estates sought
an order
reviewing and setting aside the rejection of its internal appeal.
Instead of seeking a remittal of the to the appeal authority,
Cape
Estates prayed for an order upholding the internal appeal. In
addition to the review relief, Cape Estates applied for a declaratory
order to the effect that the industrial zoning of Erf 2[...] was not
restricted to sawmill use.
[4]
In upholding the appeal, the full court granted the declaratory
order, the review relief and the order of substitution sought by Cape
Estates. Its order read:
‘
1.
It is hereby declared that:
1.1
The entire extent of Erf 2[...], George is
zoned “Industrial
Zone II”; and
1.2
The zoning of Erf 2[...], George is “Industrial
Zone II”
without any restrictions as to the use of the property to sawmill
purposes only.
2.
The decision of the (Appeal Authority) taken on 1 November 2018,
dismissing the
appellant’s appeal is hereby reviewed and set
aside in its entirety and replaced with the following order:
2.1
“The appeal by Magnolia [Ridge] Properties 77 (Pty) Ltd against
the refusal on 10
January 2018 by the Municipality’s Deputy
Director Planning and Senior Manager Land Use Management, of the
Applicant’s
requests for rectification of an error on the
Munciplay’s Zoning Scheme Map relating to Erf 2[...] is upheld
. . .’
By
way of explanation, Magnolia Ridge Properties 77 (Pty) Ltd was the
name under which Cape Estates was previously registered.
Factual
background
[5]
Erf 2[...] has a complicated history of use, subdivision
and zoning.
It is this history that frames the issues to be determined in this
appeal, and it is necessary to set it out in some
detail.
[6]
Initially Erf 2[...] formed part of a larger property,
being the
Remainder Kraaibosch 195/1, George (Kraaibosch 195/1). There was a
sawmill on one part of the property, which had been
in use since
1943. The rest of Kraaibosch was under pine plantation. Kraaibosch
195/1 had never been zoned. In 2021, the then owner
of the property
(the owner) wished to obtain official confirmation of the applicable
zoning. It engaged town planners to apply
for a zoning certificate on
its behalf (the 2001 zoning application). At that time, the statutory
instrument regulating the zoning
request was the Land Use Planning
Ordinance 15 of 1985 (LUPO). Section 14(1) of LUPO provided that:
‘
With
effect from the date of commencement of this Ordinance [1 July 1986]
all land referred to in section 8 shall be deemed to be
zoned in
accordance with the utilisation thereof, as determined by the council
concerned.’
[7]
The 2001 zoning application described Kraaibosch 195/1
as being
259,4973 hectares in extent. In light of s14, the existing use of the
property was an important component of the 2001
zoning application.
In this regard, the application recorded that ‘. . . the Urbans
Industries sawmill. . . occup[ies] ±18
hectares of the
property (and) . . . [t]he rest of the property is under pine
plantation.’ The sawmill has been in use since
1943 and the
remainder was used all these years as a plantation.
[8]
The Municipality’s Director: Planning and Economic
Development
(the Director) compiled a report, dated 7 May 2001, containing
recommendations to assist the Planning Committee’s
determination under s14(1) of LUPO (the Director’s report). The
Director’s report recorded ‘support …
(for) the
zoning as Industrial Zone 1 (Industry) for the existing activities. .
.’ As to the remainder of the property, the
recommendation was
that it:
‘
. . .[S]hould be
zoned Agricultural Zone 1 seeing that it is covered with plantations.
For any extensions to the existing sawmill,
a land use application
will however be required. Future development can then be managed in a
holistic manner.’
[9]
The recommendations (recommendations 1 and 2) in the
Director’s
report were:
‘
1.
That the application for the determination of the zoning for
Kraaibosch 195/1, Division
George as Industrial zone 1 (Industry) be
granted in terms of Section 14(1) of [LUPO], subject to the
conditions contained in Annexure
A and imposed in terms of Section
42(1) of the Ordinance.’
2.
That the above recommendation will entail an amendment to the Zoning
Map and
an addition to the Registrar of Departures set out in the
Annexure hereto.’
[10]
The conditions (conditions 1, 2 and 3) referred to in Annexure A were
the following:
‘
1.
The approval granted as per recommendation, lapses should the
undermentioned conditions
not be complied with to the satisfaction of
the Council;
2.
That a site plan be submitted showing the location of the saw mill
with all structures and the surrounding plantations with access
and
other routes
;
3.
That the zoning of Kraaibosch 195/1, Division George be Industrial
Zone 1 (
for only the existing saw mill
) with the remainder of
the property zoned Agricultural Zone 1.’ (Emphasis added, words
in brackets in the original.)
As
will become apparent later, it is condition 2 that is central to the
appeal against the review relief granted by the full court.
[11]
On 22 May 2001, the Planning Committee of the Municipality met and
resolved
to adopt recommendations 1 and 2, as well as conditions 1, 2
and 3 in the same terms as those recorded in the Director’s
report (the 2001 zoning determination). On 6 June 2001, the
Municipality wrote to the owner’s urban planners advising them
that ‘[d]uring a meeting held on 22 May 2001 Council decided
that the determination of the zoning for Kraaibosch 195/1, division
George as Industrial zone 1 (for only the existing saw mill) be
granted in terms of Section 14(1) of [LUPO], subject to the
conditions
contained in Annexure A . . . ’ (Words in brackets
in the original.)
[12]
The effect of the 2001 zoning determination by the Municipality was
that the
entire Kraaibosch 195/1 was designated as having a split
zoning, meaning part industrial and part agricultural. The nub
of
the dispute between the parties is the extent of the industrial
zoning associated with the sawmill activities on that part of
Kraaibosch
195/1 that ultimately became, through further subdivision,
Erf 2[...].
[13]
It is not disputed that the owner did not directly respond to the
requirement
in condition 2 by submitting the site plan as described.
However, on 31 May 2001, that is between the time that the 2001 the
zoning
determination was made and the subsequent letter formally
advising the owner the outcome, the owner’s land surveyors
submitted
a subdivision application to the Municipality (the 2001
subdivision application). This was aimed specifically at subdividing
the
sawmill site from the remainder of Kraaibosch 195/1. In the
application, the sawmill site for which approval was sought was
referred
to as Portion A.
[14]
The 2001 subdivision application was accompanied by, among others, a
sketch
plan illustrating the proposed subdivision of Portion A from
the remainder of Kraaibosch 195/1 (the subdivision plan), a copy of
the locality plan and a diagram of the property. The subdivision plan
showed the proposed Portion A, measuring 17,3 hectares, to
be
subdivided from Kraaibosch 195/1 measuring 259,4793 hectares in
total. The sawmill was depicted as being located on the proposed
Portion A. In the legend inserted at the bottom of the subdivision
plan, Kraaibosch 195/1 was described as being zoned ‘Agricultural
Zone 1’ and ‘Industrial Zone 1’.
[15]
In the 2001 subdivision application it was stated that the
subdivision was
intended for ‘industrial purposes’. The
application repeated that Kraaibosch 195/1 had already been zoned as
industrial
and agricultural. The motivation given for the subdivision
was the following:
‘
The portion of
the property that is to be subdivided in terms of this application
has been used since 1943 for sawmill purposes
and thus assumes
Industrial Zone 1
zoning
in terms of Section 14 of [LUPO]. The primary reason for the owner
requiring to subdivide the land is to separate the sawmill
from the
remainder of the property which is used for commercial purposes. This
will enable the owner to inject valuable capital
into the sawmill
enterprise from outside sources and thus upgrade the sawmill with
modern machinery. …. The owner requires
to separate
the
sawmill portion of the property
from
the remainder in order to be able to inject capital to upgrade the
factory to modern standards.’ (Emphasis added.)
[16]
The subdivision (the 2002 subdivision) was approved sometime between
23 January
2002 and 8 February 2002 by the Municipality’s
Development Control Committee (DCC). The uncertainty about the date
of the
2002 subdivision decision arises because there is no record of
the actual resolution approving the subdivision. The review record
included a document headed ‘Agenda Executive Committee Meeting
30 January 2002. Minutes Development Control Committee Meeting
23
January 2002’ (the agenda/minutes document).
[17]
Although there was some dispute about the status of the
agenda/minutes document
it is unnecessary to engage in any debate on
that issue. Suffice to note that the scribe recorded that ‘
The
Urban’s Saw Mill is situated on the proposed portion A. This
portion is also zoned Industrial
zone 1
for the activities
on the property.’ (Emphasis added.) Further, that ‘the
Directorate supports the proposed subdivision
of the Urban’s
Saw Mill from the bigger property. The remainder of the property is
covered with plantations and therefore
zoned Agriculture zone 1.’
The document also records, under the heading ‘Resolved’,
that ‘the application
for the subdivision of Kraaibosch 195/1,
Division George
in two portions (Portion A = ± 17,3 ha;
Remainder
= ± 242,17 ha)
in terms of Section 24 of
[LUPO] be approved’. (Emphasis added.) The approval was subject
to certain conditions but these
are not relevant to the appeal.
[18]
On 8 February 2002, the Municipality advised the owner’s land
surveyors,
who had made the subdivision on the owner’s behalf,
that the DCC had approved the subdivision application. The approval
was
stated to be on the same terms as those under the heading
‘Resolved’ in the agenda/minutes document. On the same
date
the Municipality’s stamp was affixed to the subdivision
plan, reflecting Portion A as comprising the 17,3 hectares of land,
part of which was occupied by the sawmill.
[19]
In 2008 it became necessary to apply for a further subdivision
affecting Portion
A (the 2008 subdivision). This was because of a
re-alignment of the N2 national road which had the effect of moving
the new road
reserve further south. As a consequence of the
re-alignment and new road reserve, Portion A of the 2002 subdivision
was now split
into four sections: Portion F, 195/57, Portion J and
Portion L. The site of the sawmill was on Portion F. According to
Cape Estates,
Portion F contained most of the buildings and
operations of the sawmill. This was not disputed by the Municipality.
The subdivision
plan accompanying the 2008 subdivision application
recorded Portion F as being
±
10,3 hectares in extent,
and zoned as ‘Industrial Zone 1’. The 2008 subdivision
was approved. Affixed to the subdivision
plan was the stamp of the
Municipality, dated 16 July 2008. An additional stamp recorded
‘Subdivision approved in terms of
Section 25(1) of the Land Use
Ordinance 15 of 1985 subject to the conditions contained in line
covering letter.’ This stamp
bore the signature of the Director
Planning and Development.
[20]
In December 2008, the Municipality devised a draft Spatial
Development Framework
(SDF) map. It reflected that Portion F
(previously Portion A) was zoned Industrial 1. It is common cause
that this draft SDF map
was never adopted for reasons that are not
clear from the record.
[21]
In the meantime, Cape Estates (under its former name, Magnolia Ridge
Properties
77 (Pty) Ltd), had taken transfer of Portion F in 2007. In
2010 it obtained a certificate of registered title in respect of what
had been identified as Portion A, later Portion F, in the 2008
subdivision. In the certificate of registered title the property
acquired its present designation as Erf 2[...]. A diagram by the
Surveyor General attached to the certificate of registered title
depicted Erf 2[...] as measuring 11,1875 hectares.
[22]
The last stage of Erf
2[...]’s complicated zoning and subdivision history took place
in 2017. In August and September of that
year the Municipality
published the George Integrated Zoning Scheme By-Law
[1]
(the Zoning By-Law) and the 2017 zoning map. The Zoning By-Law set
out the procedures and conditions relating to the use and development
of land in the different zones, while the zoning map indicated the
zoning of the municipal area into land use zones.
[2]
As noted earlier, what precipitated the litigation culminating in the
present appeal was the split zoning of Erf 2[...] in the
2017 zoning
map.
[23]
Believing that the 2017 zoning map had erroneously designated only a
portion
of Erf 2[...] as industrial, rather than the entire erf, Cape
Estates sought to exercise its rights under s 8 of the Zoning By-Law
by instituting the rectification application. Section 8 provides:
‘
(1)
If the zoning of a land unit is incorrectly indicated on the zoning
map, the owner of an affected
land unit may submit an application to
the Municipality to correct the error.
(2)
An owner contemplated in subsection (1) must apply to the
Municipality in the form
determined by the Municipality and must-
(
a
)
submit proof of the lawful land use rights; and
(
b
)
indicate the suitable zoning which should be allocated.
(3)
The onus of proving that the zoning is incorrectly indicated on the
zoning scheme
map is on the owner.
. . .
(5)
If the zoning of a land unit is incorrectly indicated on the zoning
map, the Municipality
must amend the zoning map.
(6)
If the correct zoning of a land unit cannot be ascertained from the
information submitted
to the Municipality or the records of the
Municipality, a zoning determination in terms of the Bylaw on
Municipal Land Use Planning
should be processed and the outcome of
such zoning determination must be recorded on the zoning scheme map.’
[24]
The town planners appointed by Cape Estates to submit the
rectification application
on its behalf explained that the basis for
the application was that:
‘
The allocation of
a zoning of Industrial Zone II is correct, but not the extent as
currently indicated on the Zoning Scheme Map.
The extent of the …
Industrial Zone II zoning is currently indicated as approximately 4,1
ha on a portion of Erf 2[...],
George with the remainder of the
property indicated as Agricultural Zone I. The total extent of Erf
2[...], George should be indicated
as having a zoning of Industrial
Zone II.’
[25]
In support of the rectification application, the planners referred to
the 2001
zoning determination, which they asserted designated a split
zoning of industrial, for the sawmill portion of Kraaibosch 195/1,
and agricultural for the remainder. They pointed out that the
motivation for the 2002 subdivision was to separate the land on which
the sawmill activities took place, with its industrial zoning, from
the remainder of the larger Kraaibosch 195/1. The rectification
application underlined that the Municipality had endorsed the
subdivision plan, which showed no split zoning for Erf 2[...].
[26]
The gist of the
rectification application was that the original zoning and use rights
accorded under the 2001 zoning designation
were preserved, post-
LUPO, by the Western Cape Land Use Planning Act, 2014 (LUPA).
[3]
According to Cape Estates, in 2001 the entire portion of what was now
Erf 2[...] had been certified as industrial. When adopting
a new
zoning scheme and zoning map the Municipality had to apply the zoning
that was already in existence. It could not undertake
a new zoning
exercise and accord a different, split zoning to Erf 2[...]. The
effect of the 2017 Zoning Map was erroneously to
reduce the size of
the existing Industrial zoning of Erf 2[...] from the entirety of the
property, to 4,1 hectares.
[27]
In a letter dated 10 January 2018 (the refusal letter), the
Municipality stated
its reasons for rejecting the rectification
application. Referring to the 2001 zoning certification, the
Municipality recorded
that the industrial zoning was limited to the
‘existing (sawmill) activities’ only, and that a land use
application
was stated to have been necessary for any extensions to
the existing sawmill. Moreover, and significantly for this appeal,
the
refusal letter recorded that there was no proof that there had
been compliance with condition 2 attached to the 2001 zoning
certification,
which had required the submission of a site plan.
[28]
For this reason, the Municipality explained that it had relied on
other information
to determine the extent of the sawmill site. It had
considered building plans dated 1984 and 1990 and aerial photographs
from 1985
and 2002 showing the area of land disturbed by the sawmill
activities. These were attached to the refusal letter. As to the 2002
subdivision, the refusal letter stated that the zoning of the two
erven had not been recorded in the subdivision approval, and
that, in
any event, a subdivision application does not provide any zoning
rights. For these reasons, the refusal letter concluded
that the
zoning as indicated on the 2017 zoning map was accurate.
[29]
In its internal appeal against the refusal of the rectification Cape
Estates
advanced substantially the same arguments as it had advanced
in the rectification application. The appeal authority provided
several
reasons for its rejection of that appeal. In the main, they
mirrored the reasons provided by the Municipality in the
rectification
refusal. The appeal authority concluded that ‘[i]n
the absence of the requested site plan of the existing saw mill with
all
structures or only the existing saw mill,
these records are
the most appropriate determination to make an informed decision of
the extent of the saw mill, in determining
the effect of the decision
taken by the District Municipality in 2001
.’ (Emphasis
added.) The records referred to were the building plans and aerial
photographs identified in the rectification
refusal.
Issues
and analysis
The
review
[30]
As far as the review relief is concerned, the parties were agreed
that in compiling
the 2017 zoning map the Municipality could not
embark on a new rezoning exercise. Its powers were limited to
applying the zoning
accorded to Erf 2[...] in the 2001 zoning
determination. They were also agreed that the core issue
determinative of the appeal
was whether Cape Estates had complied
with condition 2 of the 2001 zoning certification. On that score, the
Municipality accepted
that if the finding was that condition 2 had
been complied with then its appeal in respect of the review must
fail. For its part,
Cape Estates accepted that the purpose of
condition 2 was to define the precise extent of the land zoned for
industrial purposes.
Save for these points of commonality, the
parties adopted divergent approaches to the core issue and its
determination.
[31]
The Municipality proceeded from the premise that because the site
plan required
by condition 2 was not provided by the owner, the 2001
zoning decision of the Municipality was ‘inchoate’. That
being
the case, the Municipality submitted that it remained open to
it to ‘complete’ the original zoning exercise in 2017,
when it compiled its 2017 zoning map. It did so by giving effect to
what it interpreted as the intention behind the 2001 zoning
decision,
namely, to zone only the actual footprint of the sawmill itself as
industrial. In the absence of the site map required
under condition
2, the Municipality contended that all it had done in 2017 was to
undertake the clerical exercise necessary to
finalise the 2001 zoning
determination. It had used the information then available to it to
arrive at ‘the best objective,
logical and practical
determination for the zoned area’. Based on that information,
it concluded that the industrial zoning
of Erf 2[...] was limited to
4,1 hectares which it calculated to be the extent of the sawmill
footprint.
[32]
The difficulty with the Municipality’s primary premise is that
it is
contrary to the clear terms of the conditions attached to the
2001 zoning determination. Condition 1 expressly stated that ‘[t]he
approval
lapses
should the undermentioned conditions not be
complied with.’ (Emphasis added). Under the express terms of
condition 1 the
zoning determination could not limp along in an
incomplete state for an indefinite period: either there was
compliance with condition
2 within a reasonable time, or, failing
this, the conditional zoning determination lapsed.
[33]
It cannot rationally be contended that condition 2 could have
remained unsatisfied
for a period of 16 years without lapsing. If, as
the Municipality avers, the owner did not satisfy condition 2, the
effect of condition
1 was that the 2001 zoning determination lapsed.
This would have caused the zoning status of Erf 2[...] to revert to
‘undetermined’.
In this instance, by 2017 there would
have been no industrial zoning in respect of Erf 2[...] at all, and
hence no power to determine
its extent. It follows that the
Municipality proceeded on the incorrect legal premise, namely that it
had the power to finalise
what it incorrectly assumed to be an
incomplete zoning exercise by conducting its own determination of the
extent of the industrial
zoning of Erf 2[...]. Based on this
incorrect legal premise, what the Municipality effectively did in
2017 was to engage in an
impermissible, unlawful re-zoning exercise.
[34]
However, this error on its own does not mean that Cape Estates was
entitled
to rectification in the terms it sought. It wanted the 2017
zoning map to be rectified so that Erf 2[...] was zoned industrial to
its full extent. A rectification in these terms would only be
possible if condition 2 had been complied with. This is why the issue
of compliance with condition 2 lies at the heart of the appeal in
respect of the review relief. If there was no compliance, for
the
reasons explained above, the 2001 zoning determination would have
lapsed, and there would have been no industrial zoning at
all. The
effect of that state of affairs would be that the rectification
application, and consequently, the review of its refusal,
would have
been ill-founded. On the other hand, if condition 2 was satisfied,
the review would have had to succeed. Hence, the
cardinal question:
was there compliance with condition 2?
[35]
As I indicated earlier, it is common cause that the owner did not
directly
respond to the requirement in condition 2 by formally
submitting to the Municipality a site plan ‘showing the saw
mill with
all structures’. According to the Municipality, this
was fatal to the review application. Cape Estates contends that this
is not so, as there was substantial compliance with this condition.
[36]
It is significant that absolute compliance with the conditions was
not required.
This is plain from the terms of condition 1, which
stated that the zoning determination would lapse if conditions 2 and
3 were
not complied with ‘to the satisfaction of the Council’.
It is also important to bear in mind that conditions generally
are
imposed for a purpose. The purpose of condition 2 was to enable the
Municipality to determine what portion of the larger Kraaibosch
195/1
property was associated with the sawmill and, hence, what the extent
was of the use described by the owner. From this it
follows that the
question is whether the Municipality was satisfied that this purpose
had been met. It is in this respect that
the zoning and subdivision
history of Kraaibosch 195/1 and Erf 2[...] is key.
[37]
The original motivation for the 2001 zoning determination application
and for
the subsequent subdivision of Kraaibosch 195/1 in 2002 was to
distinguish, and subsequently separate, the smaller portion of the
property associated with the sawmill use from the larger remainder of
the property associated with agricultural use. As recorded
earlier,
the owner made this clear in both the zoning determination
application and the subsequent 2001 subdivision application.
In the
former application, it was indicated expressly that the sawmill
occupied approximately 18 hectares of Kraaibosch 195/1.
[38]
The existing use of the land was critical to the zoning determination
because
s 14 of LUPO provided for a deemed zoning based on the
existing use of the land in question. For this reason, the
information provided
by the owner about the extent of the claimed
industrial use associated with the sawmill activities was important.
Section 14 stipulated
that the Municipality had to make the final
determination of the deemed zoning based on the existing use of the
land. There is
no indication from the manner in which the
Municipality treated the 2001 zoning determination that it was
dissatisfied with the
information provided by the owner that the
extent of the sawmill use was approximately 18 hectares.
[39]
The purpose of the request for a site plan, the parties agree, was to
determine
the precise extent of the industrial zoning. It is
significant that the owner’s submission of its subdivision
application,
together with the subdivision plan, was contemporaneous
with the 2001 zoning determination. The motivation for the
subdivision
dove-tailed with that for the zoning determination,
namely to shave off the sawmill portion, Portion A, from the
remainder of Kraaibosch
195/1. Although the site plan did not include
‘all structures’ associated with the saw mill, as stated
in condition
2, it is clear from my earlier description of what
information was included in the subdivision plan that it provided
other information
critical to the determination of the precise extent
of the use associated with the saw mill, and hence of the industrial
zoning.
[40]
It must have been apparent to the Municipality when it considered
both applications
in 2001 and 2002 that the sawmill use (and hence
industrial zoning) expressly referred to by the owner extended to the
entire portion
of land that became Portion A, measuring at least 17,3
hectares. Even if the approximation of 18 hectares referred to in the
2001
zoning application was insufficiently precise, the subdivision
plan, submitted almost at the same time, provided the required
precision.
[41]
Had the Municipality not been satisfied with the information provided
in the
2001 zoning application, or in the 2001 subdivision
application as to the extent of the industrial use, one would have
expected
that it would have raised queries and engaged with the owner
on this score. There is nothing in the record indicating that it did
so. On the contrary, the record shows that the Municipality
consistently treated the property that became Erf 2[...] as being
zoned industrial in its entirety. It did not dispute the information
provided by the owner in the 2001 zoning application that the
extent
of the sawmill use was approximately 18 hectares before making its
zoning determination. Zoning was a prerequisite for the
approval of a
subdivision application. The Municipality accepted the information
provided by the owner in both subdivision applications
that the
property was zoned industrial. This was echoed in the 2008 draft SDF
map, which reflected Portion A as being zoned industrial.
It is so
that the draft was not adopted. However, it is indicative of the
Municipality’s understanding (at least until it
did an
about-turn in 2017) that the effect of the 2001 zoning determination
was that the entire extent of what is now Erf 2[...]
was used for
industrial purposes.
[42]
The Municipality submitted that no store could be placed on the 2001
subdivision
application, and subsequent approval, for purposes of
assessing whether there had been compliance with condition 2. This
was for
two reasons. First, because the DCC, which was responsible
for the subdivision decision, did not exercise zoning powers or
functions.
The second reason was that the 2001 zoning determination
was expressly limited in condition 3 to ‘only the existing saw
mill’.
Consequently, the Municipality argued, the intention was
that only the actual footprint of the sawmill itself was zoned
industrial,
and the subdivision plan did not show this detail.
[43]
The difficulty with these submissions is that they are divorced from
the context
in which the applications and decisions were made. It is
established on the facts that the owner never provided information to
the Municipality indicating that the existing industrial use was
limited to the actual footprint of the sawmill. Nor did the
Municipality understand the application to be so limited.
Consequently, condition 3 simply cannot sensibly be read to mean that
only the footprint of the sawmill was zoned industrial. The fact that
the Municipality’s subdivision authority, the DCC,
plainly also
understood the industrial zoning in the same way as the owner
underscores this point. Cape Estates did not contend
that the DCC
authorised the zoning. The important point is that the DCC never
queried the extent of the industrial zoning described
by the owner in
either the 2001 or 2008 subdivision applications. In fact, as I have
already noted, nor did the powers-that-be
within the Municipality who
had zoning authority at the time.
[44]
I conclude that the effect of the 2001 zoning determination was that
the entire
portion of the property associated with the sawmill was
conditionally zoned industrial. Condition 2 was aimed at determining
the
precise extent of that portion. Its purpose was not, as the
Municipality subsequently contended, to determine the extent only of
the actual sawmill itself. Thus, to achieve the purpose of condition
2 it was not necessary to map out the sawmill buildings, because
the
zoning was not limited to them. The subdivision plan achieved the
purpose of condition 2 by providing all the information necessary
to
make a precise determination of the extent of the industrial use
associated with the sawmill. It follows that there was substantial
compliance with condition 2.
[45]
For these reasons, the full court was correct in granting an order
reviewing
and setting aside the appeal authority’s decision to
dismiss Cape Estate’s internal appeal against the refusal of
its
rectification application. What of the order substituting the
decision of the appeal authority with one upholding the internal
appeal? The Municipality submitted that the order of substitution was
not justified as planning issues fall within the constitutional
domain of the Municipality. Accordingly, it should be for the
Municipality and not the courts to consider the internal appeal.
It
submits that the full court erred in not ordering that the internal
appeal be remitted to the appeal authority for fresh determination.
[46]
Section 8(1)(
c
)(ii)(
aa
)
of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000 (PAJA)
gives courts the power, in exceptional circumstances, to substitute
the administrative action under review rather than remitting it to
the administrator concerned. The question of exceptional
circumstances
must be determined in the context of what is just and
equitable in the circumstances. Considerations include whether the
court
is in as good a position as the administrator to make the
decision, as well as whether the decision is a foregone
conclusion.
[4]
[47]
In this case, the nub of the review was whether there had been
compliance with
condition 2. The essential inquiry was a legal one,
involving the interpretation of the conditions attached to the 2001
zoning
determination and the purpose, in particular, of condition 2.
These are issues generally well suited to judicial determination.
They do not engage the discretionary powers accorded to the
Municipality and its appeal authority. The effect of the full court’s
determination that there had been compliance with condition 2 was
that the refusal of the rectification application could not survive.
Consequently, a remittal back to the appeal authority would serve no
purpose: it would have been bound to implement the court’s
decision and the outcome of any remittal would have been a foregone
conclusion. Thus, exceptional circumstances existed warranting
the
full court’s order of substitution. The appeal must fail in
this respect as well.
The
declaratory relief
[48]
The Municipality submitted that the full court erred in granting an
order declaring
that the industrial zoning of Erf 2[…] was
‘without restrictions as to the use of the property to sawmill
purposes
only’. It contended that the effect of the 2001 zoning
determination was to limit the industrial zoning further such that
only sawmill use (and no other primary or consent use) was permitted.
The appeal in this regard turns on an interpretation of the
documents
recording the zoning determination.
[49]
The 2001 zoning determination resolution recorded simply that ‘the
application
for the determination of the zoning for Kraaibosch 195/1
… as Industrial zone 1 (Industry) be granted in terms of
Section
14(1) of [LUPO], subject to the conditions contained in
Annexure A and imposed in terms of Section 42(1) of [LUPO].’ No
mention
was made in the resolution to the sawmill, or to sawmill use.
In fact, no mention is made either to the agricultural zoning that
was also determined in respect of the remainder of the property. To
find these references, regard must be had to the conditions
attached
to the resolution. Both conditions 2 and 3 referred to the saw mill,
with condition 3 being primarily relevant. It stated
that ‘the
zoning of Kraaibosch 195/1 … be Industrial Zone 1
(for only
the existing saw mill)
with the remainder of the property zoned
Agricultural Zone 1.’ (Words in brackets in the original,
emphasis added.)
[50]
The Municipality contends that condition 3 must be interpreted as
limiting
not only the extent of the industrial zoning determined, but
also the nature of the permitted use. It relies on the words in
brackets
to support its argument that condition 3 gave permission
only for sawmill use on that portion of the property zoned
industrial.
The Municipality submitted that the latter limitation is
plain from the language used.
[51]
It does not seem to me to be obvious from the words in brackets that
this is
what was intended. In my view, the words may as easily be
read as doing no more than limiting the extent of the industrial
zoning
to the land associated with the sawmill activities. This
interpretation becomes even more persuasive when condition 3 is
considered
in its broader context.
[52]
To begin with, the Municipality determined a split zoning for
Kraaibosch 195/1
based on the existing uses of part industrial,
relating to the sawmill, and part agricultural, relating to the pine
plantations.
The primary focus of the determination must have been to
demarcate the extent of the industrial zoning, on the one hand, and
the
agricultural zoning on the other. In this context, the words ‘for
only the existing sawmill, with the remainder . . . zoned
Agricultural’ seem to me to be serving this exact purpose. The
words in brackets described that part of the property associated
with
the sawmill and hence to be zoned industrial. This was necessary,
too, because as I noted earlier, the resolution itself did
not deal
with the demarcation of the split zoning, between industrial and
agricultural at all. That function was served by condition
3.
[53]
Moreover, the Municipality accepted that the zoning scheme applicable
at the
time made no provision for sawmill activities either as a
primary or a consent use. The restriction to sawmill use, if this is
what the Municipality intended, would have been erroneous and
unlawful. It was submitted by the Municipality that even if this was
so, the restricted use would remain in effect until reviewed and set
aside. This submission is misdirected. The interpretation
of
condition 3 cannot proceed from the premise that the Municipality
intended to act beyond the scope of its powers by imposing
an
unlawful use restriction. It must proceed from the premise that the
Municipality knew the extent of primary and consent uses
associated
with industrial zoning in 2001. As such, the sensible interpretation
of the words appearing in brackets in condition
3, must be that they
served no purpose other than to define the extent of the industrial
zoning, distinct from the agricultural
zoning for the remainder of
Kraaibosch 195/1.
[54]
For these reasons, I find no merit in the appeal in respect of the
declaratory
relief.
Order
[55]
There being no merit in any of the grounds advanced in support of the
appeal,
I make the following order:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
R
M KEIGHTLEY
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
R Paschke SC and K Reynolds
Instructed
by:
Du Plessis Hofmeyer Malan Inc, Somerset West
c/o
Webbers Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
P Hathorn SC and A E Erasmus
Instructed
by:
Raubenheimers Inc, George
c/o
Symington & De Kok Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
George
Integrated Zoning Scheme By-law, Provincial Gazette Extraordinary
7821 (1 September 2017).
[2]
This is in terms of s 4 of the Zoning Scheme By-Laws, read with s 25
of the Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act, 16
of 2013
(SPLUMA).
[3]
Sections
33(1)(
a
)
and (
b
)
of LUPA provide that the existing zoning map, register and scheme
regulations in existence in terms of section 8 of LUPO immediately
before the commencement of LUPA remain in force; and a use right and
a lawful zoning in terms of the zoning scheme remains in
force.
Section 78(1) further provides that any approval, designation,
consent, right or authorisation issued, granted or in force
in terms
of LUPO, and in existence immediately before the commencement of
LUPA remains in force and is regarded to have been
issued or granted
in accordance with LUPA.
[4]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa and Another
[2015]
ZACC 22
;
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC);
2015 (10) BCLR 1199
(CC) para 35
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