Case Law[2024] ZASCA 49South Africa
Gensinger and Neave CC & Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy [2024] ZASCA 49; 2025 (4) SA 84 (SCA) (15 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
15 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative law – interpretation of section 12A(1)(a) of the Petroleum Products Act 120 of 1977 – whether the holders of site and retail licences are persons ‘directly affected’ by the Controller’s decision to grant site and retail licences to applicants to retail petroleum products in the same area as the holders of those licences – whether the holders of such licences have a right to appeal against the Controller’s decision – whether the Controller’s administrative decision is suspended by an appeal against that decision.
Judgment
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## Gensinger and Neave CC & Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy [2024] ZASCA 49; 2025 (4) SA 84 (SCA) (15 April 2024)
Gensinger and Neave CC & Others v Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy [2024] ZASCA 49; 2025 (4) SA 84 (SCA) (15 April 2024)
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sino date 15 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
ADMINISTRATIVE – Appeal –
Decision
suspended
–
Interpretation
of
section 12A(1)(a)
of the
Petroleum Products Act 120 of 1977
–
Whether the holders of site and retail licences are persons
“directly affected” by the Controller’s
decision
to grant site and retail licences to applicants to retail
petroleum products in the same area as the holders of
those
licences – Whether the holders of such licences have a right
to appeal against the Controller’s decision
– Whether
the Controller’s administrative decision is suspended by an
appeal against that decision.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 223/2023
In
the matter between:
GENSINGER
AND NEAVE CC
FIRST APPELLANT
DJ
FUELS (PTY) LTD
SECOND APPELLANT
STEIN
FUELS (PTY) LTD
THIRD APPELLANT
SCHOEVIV
ENTERPRISES CC
FOURTH APPELLANT
and
MINISTER
OF MINERAL RESOURCES
AND
ENERGY
FIRST RESPONDENT
CONTROLLER
OF PETROLEUM
PRODUCTS
SECOND RESPONDENT
SHIPTECH
MATATIELE (PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
MATATIELE
SERVICE STATION
(PTY)
LTD
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Neutral Citation:
Gensinger and Neave CC & Others v Minister of Mineral
Resources and Energy
(223/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 49
(15 April
2024)
Coram:
MOKGOHLOA, MBATHA and WEINER JJA and COPPIN and BLOEM AJJA
Heard:
16 February 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ representatives by email, published on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and released to SAFLII. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 15 April 2024.
Summary:
Administrative law – interpretation of
section 12A(1)
(a)
of the
Petroleum Products Act 120 of 1977
– whether the holders
of site and retail licences are persons ‘directly affected’
by the Controller’s decision
to grant site and retail licences
to applicants to retail petroleum products in the same area as the
holders of those licences
– whether the holders of such
licences have a right to appeal against the Controller’s
decision – whether the
Controller’s administrative
decision is suspended by an appeal against that decision.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court,
Pietermaritzburg (Padayachee AJ) sitting as court of first instance):
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2.
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with
the
following order:
‘
1.
It is declared that the provisions of the Petroleum Products Act 120
of 1977 (the Act) do not oust the common law
principle that there is
a presumption that an administrative decision is suspended by an
appeal against that decision.
2.
It is declared that the applicants’ appeal, in terms of section
12A of the Act, against the decisions
of the Controller of Petroleum
Products to approve the third and fourth respondents’
applications for site and retail licences
and subsequently to issue
those licences to them suspends the Controller’s decisions
pending the finalisation of such appeal.
3.
The costs are to be paid by the third and fourth respondents, jointly
and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved.
4.
The third and fourth respondents’ counter application is
dismissed with costs.’
3.
The application is remitted to the High Court for it to deal with the
application for an interim interdict.
JUDGMENT
Bloem
AJA (Mokgohloa, Mbatha and Weiner JJA and Coppin AJA concurring):
[1]
Two issues call for
determination in this appeal. The first issue is whether holders of
site and retail licences
[1]
under the Petroleum Products Act 120 of 1977 (the Act) are ‘directly
affected’, as contemplated in s 12A of the Act,
by a decision
of the Controller of Petroleum Products (the Controller), the second
respondent, to approve applications for site
and retail licences. The
decision in issue related to the Controller approving applications
for site and retail licences to the
third and fourth respondents, to
whom site and retail licences were subsequently issued in respect of
the same area in which the
appellants, as holders of site and retail
licences, retail petroleum products. I shall refer to the decision to
grant the site
and retail licences and the decision to subsequently
issue the licences as ‘the Controller’s decision’,
unless
the context indicates otherwise. The second issue is whether
an appeal to the Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy (the
Minister),
the first respondent, against the Controller’s
decision has the effect of suspending that decision pending the
outcome of
the appeal.
[2]
The four appellants are
holders of site and retail licences issued to them under the Act in
respect of three outlets. They operate
the three outlets in the
central business district of Matatiele, where petroleum products are
sold or offered for sale to customers.
These outlets are near to each
another. During May 2019, the third respondent made an
application to the Controller in
terms of the Act for a site licence
and the fourth respondent applied for a retail licence in respect of
the same site (applications
for site and retail licences) to enable
them to operate an additional outlet in Matatiele. I shall refer to
the third and fourth
respondents, being Shiptech Matatiele (Pty) Ltd
and Matatiele Service Station (Pty) Ltd, as ‘the respondents’.
The
appellants lodged an objection against the applications,
contending that an additional retailer in Matatiele would
‘cannibalise’
the sales of the existing retailers and
undermine the requirements stipulated in the Act of efficacy and
economic viability. Despite
the objection, the Controller was
satisfied that the respondents’ applications met the
requirements of the Act and the Regulations
regarding Petroleum
Products Site and Retail Licences
[2]
(the regulations) and approved the applications. The Controller
issued the site and retail licences to the respondents on 8 March
2021.
[3]
On 8 April 2021, the
Controller’s office informed the appellants that the
respondents’ applications for site and retail
licences were
successful
[3]
and informed the
appellants that they had 60 days within which to appeal to the
Minister against the Controller’s decision.
The appellants
lodged their appeal on 7 June 2021, within the 60-day period, and
claimed that they understood the common law to
be that the appeal
suspended the Controller’s decision pending the outcome of an
appeal and that, during that period, the
respondents would not act on
the licences to which they had objected. The Department of Mineral
Resources and Energy (the Department)
and seemingly the respondents
adopted the attitude that nothing in the Act or the regulations
‘suspends the issued site and
retail licences pending an appeal
nor is there any provision that prohibits a licencee from
constructing a filling station or commencing
with retailing
activities pending an appeal’.
[4]
Fearing that the
respondents would commence operations as a retailer in Matatiele
before the appeal was finalised, the appellants
approached the
KwaZulu Natal Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg (the high
court) for declaratory orders and an interdict.
They sought an order
declaring that the provisions of the Act do not oust the common law
principle that an administrative appeal
noted against an
administrative decision suspends the decision; and declaring that the
granting of the site and retail licences
to the respondents, and the
subsequent issuing of those licences to them, be suspended pending
the finalisation of their appeal
to the Minister.
[4]
They also sought an order that the respondents be interdicted and
restrained, pending the finalisation of this application and
the
appeal to the Minister, from retailing under the Act from the
designated site in Matatiele and costs.
[5]
The respondents opposed the application. They also instituted
a
counter-application wherein they sought an order declaring that the
appellants were not directly affected by the Controller’s
decision and that the purported appeal against the Controller’s
decision, alternatively against the issuing of the site and
retail
licences, be declared of no force or effect; alternatively, an order
declaring that the appeal lodged by the appellants
lapsed on 6
September 2021; and alternatively, that after that date, the licences
issued to them were not suspended.
[6]
The high court found in favour of the respondents. It
found that the
appellants were not directly affected by the Controller’s
decision; that they were accordingly not entitled
to appeal against
the Controller’s decision; and that, therefore, no proper
appeal had been lodged. It also found that it
was only the
Controller, and not private parties, such as the appellants, who was
entitled to enforce the provisions of the Act.
Thus, the appellants
did not have standing to institute the application for a declarator
against the respondents. The appeal is
with the leave of the high
court.
Statutory
framework
[7]
In terms of s 2B(1) of the Act, the Controller must issue
licences in accordance with the Act. In considering the issuing of
any
licence under the Act, the Controller shall give effect to the
provisions of s 2C and the objectives set out in s 2B(2). Those
objectives
are:
‘
(a)
promoting an efficient manufacturing, wholesaling and retailing
petroleum industry;
(b)
facilitating an environment conducive to efficient and commercially
justifiable investment;
(c)
the creation of employment opportunities and the development of small
businesses in the petroleum sector;
(d)
ensuring countrywide availability of petroleum products at
competitive prices; and
(e)
promoting access to affordable petroleum products by low-income
consumers for household use.’
[8]
Section
2C provides for the
transformation of the South African petroleum and liquid fuels
industry. Section 2C(1)
(a)
and
(b)
provide that, in
considering licence applications in terms of
the Act, the Controller shall promote the advancement of historically
disadvantaged
South Africans; and give effect to the Charter.
[9]
The Charter is set out in Schedule 1 of the Act. In terms
of the
Charter, t
he signatories thereto must provide a
framework for progressing the empowerment of historically
disadvantaged South Africans in
the liquid fuels industry. They have
agreed to create a fair opportunity for entry to the retail network
and commercial sectors
by historically disadvantaged South African
companies
.
[10]
In relevant part, s 2E(1) provides that the
Minister must prescribe a system for the allocation of sites and
their corresponding
retail licences by which the Controller shall be
bound, provided that the Controller shall only be bound by the
provisions of such
a system for the period set out in that regulation
or any amendment
thereto, or any substitution thereof, which
period may not exceed 10 years from the
date of commencement of that regulation. In terms of ss 2E(3)
(a)
,
(b)
,
(c)
and
(d)
the system for the allocation of licences, contemplated in s 2E(1),
must intend to transform the retail sector into one that has
the
optimum number of efficient sites; must intend to achieve an
equilibrium amongst all participants in the petroleum products
industry within the constraints of the Act; must be based on the
objectives referred to in s 2B(2) and 2C; must promote efficient
investment in the retail sector and the productive use of retail
facilities and may in this regard: (i) limit the total number
of site
and corresponding retail licences in any period; (ii) link the total
number of site and corresponding retail licences in
any period, to
the total mass or volume of prescribed petroleum products sold by
licensed retailers; and (iii) use any other appropriate
means.
[11]
Section 12A of the Act provides for appeals and ss (1) reads as
follows:
‘
Any
person directly affected by a decision of the Controller of Petroleum
Products may, notwithstanding any other rights that such
a person may
have, appeal to the Minister against such decision.’
[12]
Chapter 1 of the regulations deals with applications for site
licences while
Chapter 2 thereof deals with applications for
retail licences. In terms of regulation 3(2), an application for
a site
licence must be lodged together with an application for a
corresponding retail licence.
[13]
Regulations 4 and 16 require applicants for a site licence and a
retail licence
respectively to give notice of such applications.
Those notices must be published in a prominent manner and must state:
‘
(a)
the name of the applicant;
(b)
the application number issued by the Controller upon acceptance of
the application;
(c)
the purpose of the application;
(d)
the place where the application will be available for inspection by
any member of the public;
(e)
the period within which any objection to the issuing of the licence
may be lodged with the Controller; and
(f)
the address of the
Controller where objections may be lodged.’
[5]
[14]
Regulation 18(2) provides
that i
n
the case of an application for a retail licence made by a person in
respect of whom s 2D
[6]
of the
Act is not applicable, the Controller must be satisfied that (a) the
retailing business is economically viable; and
(b) the retailing
business will promote licensing objectives stipulated in s 2B(2) of
the Act.
[15]
It is against the above statutory framework that it must be
considered whether
the appellants are directly affected by the
Controller’s decision
, as contemplated
under s 12A(1) of the Act.
If they are not, then they did not
have the right to appeal against the Controller’s decision.
They would then not have had
standing to institute the application
for the relief sought, and the appeal must then be dismissed. If it
is found that they are
directly affected by the Controller’s
decision, then they had the right to appeal against the Controller’s
decision.
The effect of the appeal must then be considered.
Whether
the appellants are directly affected by the Controller’s
decision
[16]
In terms of s 1 thereof, the Act includes any regulation, notice and
licence
issued or given in terms of the Act. It means that the Act
includes the above regulations, since the Minister issued them in
terms
of the Act. The right to appeal must be seen in the context
that, in terms of regulations 4(2)
(d)
and 16(2)
(d),
any
member of the public has the right to inspect the notice of
application for a licence. Regulations 4(2)
(e)
and 16(2)
(e)
provide that the notice for a licence must state the period within
which any objection to the issuing of the licence may be lodged
with
the Controller. The respondents submitted that not every member of
the public has the right to object to the granting of a
licence to an
applicant. They limited the right to lodge an objection to
participants in the application, namely those who made
the
application for a licence.
[17]
The drafters of the regulations intended the process of applying for
a licence
to be transparent, hence the right of any member of the
public to inspect an application. The purpose of allowing objections
is
to ensure that, when the Controller considers whether to issue a
licence, he or she is in possession of as much information as
possible, relevant to that application, to enable him or her to give
effect to the provisions of s 2C and the objectives contained
in s
2B(2)
(a)
to
(e)
of the Act. That information cannot be
obtained from only an applicant. If the above regulations are read
purposively in the context
of the scheme of the Act, they must be
interpreted to mean that any member of the public, inclusive of
holders of site and retail
licences, has the right to lodge an
objection to the issuing of a licence to an applicant. In that way
the Controller will obtain
sufficient information to enable him or
her to give effect to the objectives contained in s 2B(2) and
the provisions of s
2C. The submission made by the respondents can
accordingly not be sustained.
[18]
Once the Controller has decided to approve an application for a
licence, not
every member of the public has the right to appeal to
the Minister against the Controller’s decision. That much is
clear
from s 12A which limits that right to persons who are ‘directly
affected’ by the Controller’s decision. There
is
accordingly a difference between the objection stage and the appeal
stage of the application process. The objection stage is
open to any
member of the public, whereas the appeal stage is open only to
persons who are ‘directly affected’ by the
Controller’s
decision. Whether a person is ‘directly affected’ by the
Controller’s decision depends on
the facts of each case, as
well as the scheme and purpose of the Act.
[19]
To interpret the meaning
of the words ‘directly affected’ in s 12A(1), the
provisions of s 2C and the objectives contained
in s 2B(2) must be
considered. In this case, the applicable objectives are the
facilitation of an environment which is conducive
to efficient and
commercially justifiable investment, the creation of employment
opportunities and the development of viable small
businesses in the
petroleum sector. Where the probabilities indicate that an additional
retailer will sell less volumes of petroleum
products
required
for feasibility, such an investment by the additional retailer will
neither be efficient nor commercially justifiable.
The situation will
be aggravated when the additional retailer causes the existing
retailers to lose volumes in sales. The investments
in all the
retailers, existing and additional, will be at stake. The Controller
will, under those circumstances, neither promote
a retail sector that
has the optimum number of efficient sites, and an efficient retailing
petroleum industry in Matatiele, nor
will he or she develop any of
those small businesses.
[7]
[20]
The appellants submitted that it is immediately apparent from the
wording of
s 12A that the right of appeal is not confined only to an
unsuccessful applicant for a licence, but that the right is extended
to any person ‘directly affected’ by the Controller’s
decision. They submitted that, in this case, they would
be included
in the class of persons directly affected by the Controller’s
decision because first, they lodged an objection
to the granting of
site and retail licences to the respondents, having been invited in
the notice of application to do so; and
second, they have site and
retail licences, which allow them to retail petroleum products at
their respective outlets in the area.
The appellants contended that
the granting of the site and retail licences to the respondents will
negatively affect their respective
outlets, in that customers using
their outlets would be re-allocated to the respondents’ outlet
at their (the appellants’)
expense.
[21]
In support of their
submission that they were “directly affected” by the
Controller’s decision, the appellants
relied on
Cianam
Trading 104 CC v Peters MP and Others (Cianam).
[8]
But
Cianam
is distinguishable. In
Cianam
the court was required to
determine whether the applicant had a right directly affected by the
Minister’s appeal decision.
The issue in the present case is
whether the appellants had the right to appeal against the
Controller’s decision. Section 12A(1)
is not concerned
with the effects of the Minister’s ‘appeal decision’
on a person who is affected thereby. It
concerns the right to appeal
to the Minister by a person directly affected by the Controller’s
decision. Whether the applicant
in
Cianam
was a ‘person
directly affected by [the] decision of the Controller’ was not
an issue before the court. The finding
by the high court that ‘the
applicant has a right to appeal to the [Minister] against the
dismissal of any objection by the
Controller’ was therefore
obiter
.
[22]
The appellants also
relied on
Pine
Glow Investments (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Energy and Others
[9]
(
Pine
Glow
)
for the submission that they were directly affected by the
Controller’s decision. The respondents sought to distinguish
Pine Glow
from
the present case. Their counsel pointed out that in
Pine Glow
the
parties accepted that standing existed provided that the facts showed
that the applicant was suffering losses. He furthermore
pointed out
that there was no legal challenge on whether an objector has the
right to appeal the Controller’s decision and
the right to
challenge the Minister’s appeal decision on review. The
appellants submitted that it was on that basis that
the court found
that the respondents’ challenge to the alleged lack of standing
was staggering. They concluded that the court
found in the
applicant’s favour ‘on the factually based issue of
whether the applicant had shown prejudice, therefore
that it had
standing. That is a different issue to the one which served before
the court a quo.’ In
Pine Glow
two of the respondents
contended
that the applicant, as a wholesaler of petroleum products, failed to
establish that it had standing. They contended that
the applicant
would not be ‘adversely and materially affected’ by the
Controller’s decision awarding the site
and retail licences to
the respondents.
[23]
The
court in
Pine
Glow
found
that t
he
fact that the applicant was a site licence holder, on its own, gave
it a direct interest in the matter.
[10]
The court also considered that one of the respondents was the
applicant’s business tenant because it operated an outlet on
land belonging to the applicant. The applicant received rental income
from that respondent. The court found that, in the event
of a decline
in the number or volume of petroleum products sold by that
respondent, the knock-on effect on the applicant, as holder
of a
wholesale licence, would be inexorable. It was found that the
applicant’s interests were not only direct, but also real
and
not hypothetical. The court considered the applicant’s evidence
to the effect that, if the respondents were to be allowed
to open an
outlet, the applicant stood to lose on revenue. The respondents
expected to pump 350 litres of petroleum products
[11]
per month, which means that the existing retailers in the area,
including the applicant, would absorb the decline in volumes. The
court found that the anticipated decline in volumes and resultant
loss in revenue was material ‘and it will affect the Applicant
negatively insofar as it will diminish its financial margins. Over
and above the financial interest, it cannot be in the interest
of
justice to deny the Applicant’s
locus
standi
where
the granting of another licence may not enhance the constitutional
goals set in the PPA – to ensure the observance of
the
transformative agenda as contained in s 2C of the PPA. The
satisfaction of the transformative agenda does not entail
substituting
one previously disadvantaged individual by another.’
In the circumstances, it was found that
the
Controller’s decision materially and adversely affected the
applicant and that it had accordingly successfully demonstrated
that
it had standing. The reasoning and conclusion of the court in
Pine
Glow
cannot
be faulted.
[24]
In
Giant
Concerts CC v Ronaldo Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
[12]
(
Giant
Concerts
)
it was held that a litigant who approaches the court in its own
interest must show
that
a contested law or decision directly affects its rights or interests,
or potential rights or interests, and that the requirement
of
standing must be generously and broadly interpreted to accord with
constitutional goals
.
Such
a litigant must establish that its rights or interests are directly
affected by the impugned law or conduct. Those interests
must be real
and not hypothetical or academic. The litigant must show that its
interests and the direct effect are not unsubstantiated.
The
appellants in the present case obviously have a commercial interest
in the Controller’s decision. It is that interest
that they
seek to assert. It was also found in
Giant
Concerts
[13]
that a commercial interest in the subject matter of the
transaction
[14]
will be
sufficient to establish own interest standing to challenge that
transaction.
[25]
In the light of
Giant Concerts
and
Pine Glow
it should be determined whether the appellants have
demonstrated
,
factually, that their rights or interests have been or will directly
be affected by the Controller’s decision.
The
right to appeal does not arise from or is not acquired from the
Controller’s decision, but from the effect that the
Controller’s
decision will have on the appellants’
interests. In their endeavour to demonstrate how the Controller’s
decision would
directly affect their interests,
the
appellants commissioned a report by a consulting firm, FTI Consulting
(FTI), for the purposes of commenting on the viability
of an
additional retailer, considering the prevailing circumstances in the
Matatiele area. FTI expressed the view that, based on
the sales at
the existing outlets, the monthly sales of 300 000 litres of
fuel are widely accepted as the lower bound for
a feasible outlet;
that, based on its calculation, the volume of sales at the
respondents’ outlet would be between 162 688
and, at best,
225 000 litres of fuel per month, well below the 300 000
litres per month required for feasibility. FTI
found that there was
no basis to expect that the respondents’ outlet would receive a
high volume of traffic to sustain a
minimum of 300 000 litres of
fuel per month required for feasibility. FTI also considered the
actual fuel volumes at the three
existing outlets in Matatiele and
found a declining trend in monthly fuel sales since March 2020.
FTI concluded that, if no
additional demand for fuel sales could be
created, which was not foreseen, the existing demand for such fuel
would merely be re-allocated.
That will have a negative effect on the
existing outlets, resulting in loss of income and loss of employment
at those outlets.
The drafters of the report also considered that
e
very sale that the respondents’
outlet will make, will negatively impact on the sales at the
appellants’ existing outlets.
The decline in sales at the
appellants’ outlets will in all probability lead to job losses.
[26]
In addition, the appellants relied on the Minister’s decision
on 19 May 2020,
less than a year before the Controller’s
decision was taken in the present case, to uphold the Controller’s
decision
not to grant applications for site and retail licences to
Pearden Investments (Pty) Ltd and Pearden Trading (Pty) Ltd (Pearden)
in respect of a new outlet for the retail of petroleum products in
Matatiele. One of the Minister’s reasons for dismissing
the
appeal was that there was no need for a new outlet in Matatiele if
regard was had to, inter alia, the actual fuel sales for
the existing
outlets in Matatiele and the fact that a new outlet would cause a
re-allocation of sales to itself at the expense
of the existing
outlets. The appellants contended that, since the factual situation
has not improved in Matatiele, the Controller
should, when she
approved the applications in the present case on 8 March 2021,
instead have followed the Minister’s
reasoning in Pearden. The
appellants contended that, on appeal, the Minister will in all
probability make the same decision as
in Pearden, for the same
reasons.
[27]
Regard being had to all the evidence adduced by the parties,
inclusive of the
contents of the FTI report and the Minister’s
decision in Pearden,
I am satisfied that the
appellants have demonstrated, based on the grounds upon which they
relied, that the Controller’s decision
will directly affect
their commercial rights or interests, as contemplated in s 12A of the
Act, in that the sale of petroleum products
at their outlets will be
negatively affected.
Right
to appeal
[28]
In the circumstances, since the appellants will
be directly affected by the Controller’s decision, they have
the right to
appeal to the Minister against the Controller’s
decision. It accordingly means that the appellants had standing to
institute
the application.
The
effect of the appeal on the Controller’s decision
[29]
It
is the accepted common law rule of practice in our Courts that,
generally, the execution of a judgment is automatically suspended
upon the noting of an appeal, with the result that, pending the
appeal, the judgment cannot be carried out and no effect can be
given
thereto, except with the leave of the Court which granted the
judgment.
[15]
Regarding
appeals against administrative decisions, the common law principle is
that, where an administrative decision has been
taken and an appeal
has been noted against that decision,
there
is a presumption that the administrative decision is suspended by the
appeal against that decision, unless the applicable
legislation
provides that such decision is not suspended by an appeal.
Legislation
may expressly or by necessary implication provide that an appeal does
not suspend the decision appealed against.
[16]
The rule of automatic suspension was applied in
Max
v Independent Democrats and Others
[17]
because, among others, there was neither a statutory provision nor a
provision in the code of conduct of the political party in
question
to suggest that the rule should not apply.
[30]
The Act grants a person, who is directly
affected by the Controller’s decision, the right to appeal to
the Minister.
The Act does not provide that an appeal against the
Controller’s decision does not suspend that decision. It
follows that
the Controller’s decision will be suspended when a
person, who is directly affected by the Controller’s decision,
appeals
to the Minister against the Controller's decision. It has
already been found that the appellants are directly affected by the
Controller's
decision. The common law principle is applicable to the
facts of this case, with the result that the appellants’ appeal
in
terms of s 12A of the Act suspends the Controller’s
decision. The Minister has, for no apparent reason, not yet decided
the appellants’ appeal. The respondents’ contention that
the appeal has lapsed, has no factual or legal basis.
Declarato
r
[31]
An applicant seeking a
declaratory order must satisfy the court that he or she is a person
interested in an existing, future or
contingent right or
obligation.
[18]
In
Cordiant
Trading CC v Daimler Chrysler Financial Services (Pty) Ltd
[19]
this Court emphasised that once the applicant has satisfied the court
that it is interested in an existing, future or contingent
right or
obligation, it does not mean that the court is bound to grant a
declarator. The court must consider and decide whether
it should
refuse or grant a declarator, following an examination of all the
relevant factors. The court accordingly has a discretion.
In the
exercise of that discretion, the court considers whether an
applicant, in seeking such a declarator, has standing in terms
of s
38 of the Constitution. In line with the doctrine of ripeness, the
court may enquire as to whether alternative remedies have
been
exhausted. In addition, a court will not grant a declaratory order on
moot or academic issues, as this would conflict with
the doctrine of
effectiveness.
[32]
Since it has been found that the respondents are directly affected by
the Controller’s
decision and all the relevant factors having
been considered above, I find that the appellants have succeeded on
appeal to have
it declared that the provisions of the Act do not oust
the common law principles that an administrative appeal lodged
against the
Controller’s decision suspends the decision.
Interim
interdict
[33]
The appellants launched
the application on 13 October 2021, two and a half years ago. The
high court did not consider the merits
of the interdict, considering
the conclusion to which it arrived in respect of the question of the
appellants’ standing.
The question that arises is what should
be done in relation to that issue. One of the four requirements
[20]
that the appellants must satisfy to be entitled to the protection of
an interim interdict is that the balance of convenience favours
the
granting of such an interdict. It would be inappropriate for this
court to weigh the harm that the appellants are likely to
suffer if
the interim interdict is not granted against the harm that the
respondents are likely to suffer if it is granted, when
it is unaware
of the present factual situation in respect of the respondents’
outlet.
[21]
Accordingly, it
would be just and appropriate for this Court to refer the application
back to the high court to consider the merits
of the interim
interdict. The parties might want to place further facts before the
high court to give a correct picture of the
present situation. The
parties ought to be given an opportunity to do so. In the
determination of the interim interdict, the high
court should
consider the declarator made as far as it is relevant to the merits
of the interim interdict.
[34]
In the circumstances, the appeal must be upheld. Since the appellants
were
substantially successful, they are entitled to the costs of the
appeal.
[35]
In the result, the following order is made:
1. The
appeal is upheld, with costs, such costs to include the costs of the
application for leave to appeal.
2.
The order of the court a quo is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
1.
It is declared that the provisions of the Petroleum Products Act 120
of 1977 (the Act) do not oust the
common law principle that there is
a presumption that an administrative decision is suspended by an
appeal against that decision.
2.
It is declared that the applicants’ appeal, in terms of section
12A of the Act, against
the decisions of the Controller of Petroleum
Products to approve the third and fourth respondents’
applications for site
and retail licences and subsequently to issue
those licences to them suspends the Controller’s decisions
pending the finalisation
of such appeal.
3. The
costs are to be paid by the third and fourth respondents, jointly and
severally, the one
paying the other to be absolved.
4.
The third and fourth respondents’ counterapplication is
dismissed with costs.’
3.
The application is remitted to the High Court for it to deal with the
application for an interim
interdict.
___________________________
GH
BLOEM
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants: M J Engelbrecht SC.
Instructed
by: Redfern & Findlay attorneys, Pietermaritzburg.
Symington
de Kok attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For
the third and fourth respondents: A Stokes
SC.
Instructed
by: Cox Yeats, Umhlanga Ridge.
McIntyre
van der Post Inc, Bloemfontein.
[1]
In
terms of s 1 of the
Act,
‘site’ means premises on land zoned and approved by a
competent authority for the retailing of prescribed petroleum
products; ‘retail licence’ means a licence to conduct
the business of a retailer; ‘retail’ means the
sale of
petroleum products to an end-consumer at a site and ‘retailer’
shall be interpreted accordingly; and ‘outlet’,
in
relation to a petroleum product, means any place where any petroleum
product is offered for sale to consumers’.
[2]
Published under GN R286 in GG 28665 of 27 March 2012, as amended by
GN R1061 in GG 35984 of 19 December 2012.
[3]
The appellants attached two unsigned and undated letters from the
Controller to the main replying affidavit. The deponent of
the
replying affidavit stated that those letters were received four days
before the main answering affidavit was deposed to.
In those letters
the third and fourth respondents were informed that their
applications for site and retail licences had not
been granted.
Since the letters were referred to in the replying affidavit and
since there was no response thereto, it would
be inappropriate to
make a finding in respect thereof.
[4]
The second prayer is not for a declarator. It is an order that gives
effect to the first declarator, if granted.
[5]
Regulations 4(2) and 16(2).
[6]
Section 2D of the Act provides for transitional licensing
provisions, which provisions are not applicable to the facts of this
case.
[7]
ABM
Motors v Minister of Minerals and Energy and Others
2018 (5) SA 540
(KZP)
para 4.
[8]
Cianam
Trading 104 CC v Peters MP and Others
[2014]
ZAGPPHC 974.
[9]
Pine
Glow Investments (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Energy and Others
[2021] ZAMPMBHC 49.
[10]
Ibid para 16.
[11]
I am sure that the learned Judge meant to refer to 350 000
litres of petroleum products per month.
[12]
Giant
Concerts CC v Ronaldo Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012]
ZACC 28
;
2013 (3) BCLR 251
(CC) para 41.
[13]
Ibid
para 51.
[14]
The sale of land by the eThekwini Municipality to Rinaldo
Investments (Pty) Ltd.
[15]
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
1977
(3) SA 534
(A) at 544H-545A and
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v NCR Corporation of South Africa (Pty) Ltd
1988
(2) SA 765
(A). Those authorities obviously deal with decisions
granted by courts and not administrative bodies.
[16]
Cotty
and Others v Registrar, Council for Medical Schemes and Others
[2021]
ZAGPPHC 68;
2021 (4) SA 466
(GP) paras 42-64 and the authorities
referred to therein.
[17]
Max
v Independent Democrats and Others Max v Independent Democrats and
Others
2006
(3) SA 112
(CPD) 118F-120H.
[18]
See
section 21(1)
(c)
of the
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
.
Section 21
deals with the persons over whom and the
matters in relation to which Divisions of the High Court have
jurisdiction. One such
matter is a declaration of rights.
Section 21
reads as follows:
‘
(1)
A Division has jurisdiction over all persons residing or being in,
and in relation to all causes arising and all offences
triable
within, its area of jurisdiction and all other matters of which it
may according to law take cognisance, and has the
power—
(a)
to hear and determine appeals from all Magistrates’ Courts
within its area of jurisdiction;
(b)
to review the proceedings of all such courts;
(c)
in its discretion, and at the instance of any interested person, to
enquire into and determine any existing,
future or contingent right
or obligation, notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any
relief consequential upon the determination.
(2)
A Division also has jurisdiction over any person residing or being
outside its area of jurisdiction who is joined as a party
to any
cause in relation to which such court has jurisdiction or who in
terms of a third party notice becomes a party to such
a cause, if
the said person resides or is within the area of jurisdiction of any
other Division.
(3)
Subject to
section 28
and the powers granted under section 4 of the
Admiralty Jurisdiction Regulation Act, 1983 (Act 105 of 1983), any
Division may
issue an order for attachment of property to confirm
jurisdiction.’
[19]
Cordiant
Trading CC v Daimler Chrysler Financial Services (Pty) Ltd
2005 (6) SA 205
(SCA) at
para 17.
[20]
The
requirements of an interim interdict are that the applicant must
show (i) that he or she has a
prima
facie
right,
albeit open to some doubt; (ii) that he or she will suffer
irreparable harm if the interdict were not to be granted; (iii)
that
the balance of convenience favours the granting the interdict; and
(iv) that the applicant has no satisfactory alternative
remedy.
[21]
City of
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v AfriForum and Another
[2016] ZACC 19
;
2016 (6)
SA 279
(CC) para 62.
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