Case Law[2024] ZASCA 79South Africa
Snowy Owl Properties 284 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mziki Share Block (Pty) Ltd (642/2022) [2024] ZASCA 79 (27 May 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
27 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Interdict – infringement of rights conferred by servitude - appeal against a final order – defences raised against grant of the interdict determined in separate proceedings concerning enforceability of arbitration award – finalisation of appeal process in those proceedings dispositive of defences to interdict – persistence in meritless appeal warranting punitive costs order.
Judgment
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## Snowy Owl Properties 284 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mziki Share Block (Pty) Ltd (642/2022) [2024] ZASCA 79 (27 May 2024)
Snowy Owl Properties 284 (Pty) Ltd and Others v Mziki Share Block (Pty) Ltd (642/2022) [2024] ZASCA 79 (27 May 2024)
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sino date 27 May 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
reportable
Case
No: 642/2022
In
the matter between:
SNOWY
OWL PROPERTIES 284 (PTY) LTD FIRST
APPELLANT
ANTON
LOUW
SECOND
APPELLANT
MICHAEL
KIRKINNIS
THIRD APPELLANT
DEREK
WOODHOUSE
FOURTH APPELLANT
TARA
GETTY
FIFTH APPELLANT
ZUKA
PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
SIXTH APPELLANT
MUN-YA
WANA CONSERVANCY
SEVENTH APPELLANT
SIMON
NAYLOR
EIGHTH APPELLANT
and
MZIKI
SHARE BLOCK LIMITED
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Snowy Owl Properties 284 (Pty) Ltd and Others
v Mziki Share Block Limited
(642/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 79
(27 May
2024)
Coram:
PONNAN, MOTHLE, WEINER AND GOOSEN JJA AND COPPIN AJA
Heard:
2 May 2024
Delivered:
27 May 2024
Summary:
Interdict – infringement of rights conferred by servitude -
appeal against a final order – defences raised against
grant of
the interdict determined in separate proceedings concerning
enforceability of arbitration award – finalisation of
appeal
process in those proceedings dispositive of defences to interdict –
persistence in meritless appeal warranting punitive
costs order.
ORDER
On appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg (Chili
J, sitting as court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs on the scale as between attorney and
client.
JUDGMENT
Goosen
JA (Ponnan and Mothle and Weiner JJA and Coppin AJA concurring):
[1]
Snowy Owl Properties 284 (Pty) Ltd (Snowy
Owl) is the owner of two large farms situated in northern
KwaZulu-Natal (the Snowy Owl
properties). Mziki Share Block Limited
(Mziki) is a share block company which owns land (the Mziki
properties) adjacent to the
Snowy Owl properties. Snowy Owl and Mziki
entered into an agreement to establish a functionally integrated
private game reserve
on their properties. The operation of the
private game reserve was approved, subject to the registration of a
servitude over the
Snowy Owl properties in favour of the Mziki
properties. During 1990, a notarial agreement of servitude was
registered over the
properties, permitting the parties access to a
network of roads on the properties, for the purpose of game viewing.
Background
[2]
The
relationship between Snowy Owl and Mziki has, despite their common
interest in the operation of a private game reserve, been
bedevilled
by conflict. The terms of the agreement of servitude have been the
subject of disputes which have been referred to arbitration.
[1]
2016 and 2019
arbitration awards
[3]
Trouble
first arose when Snowy Owl proposed the development of tourist guest
lodges on its property. Mziki objected on the basis
that the
development of the lodges would interfere with its servitudinal
rights of traverse. An arbitrator found that the property
could only
be used for game viewing, but that Snowy Owl was entitled to develop
game lodges on its property. An arbitration appeal
panel overturned
the award in respect of the development of game lodges on the
property.
[2]
A further
dispute concerning the conduct of Mziki guests and their use of game
hides on the Snowy Owl properties was also
referred to private
arbitration. It was resolved in July 2019.
The 2020 arbitration
award
[4]
In
July 2017, Snowy Owl commenced digging up roads in the plains area of
its
properties
using
a bulldozer. Branches and piles of gravel were dumped on the road
surfaces to prevent vehicle access. Notices were issued
to Mziki and
other parties who exercise rights of traverse, advising that certain
roads would be closed for maintenance purposes
and others permanently
closed for ecological reasons. The dispute went to arbitration. Mziki
filed its statement of claim in February
2018.
It
claimed that the destruction and closure of the roads infringed its
servitudinal rights and called for the rehabilitation and
re-opening
of roads that had been closed. Snowy Owl pleaded that it was obliged
to close certain roads to prevent ecological damage,
and to give
effect to an environmental management plan prepared to secure
declaration of the reserve as a protected area.
[3]
In respect of other roads, it stated that temporary closure was
necessary for maintenance work. The arbitration commenced before
Advocate Dodson SC in October 2019 and was concluded in March 2020.
[5]
On 2 April 2020, Dodson SC issued an
award (the 2020 award). He found that the closure of the roads was in
breach of Mziki’s
servitudinal rights and directed that Snowy
Owl rehabilitate the roads, including what were described as ‘the
River roads',
and restore access to Mziki within specified time
periods. These were subject to termination of the ‘national
lockdown’,
proclaimed
under
the National
Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002
to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, which
imposed restrictions on specified activities,
including game farming activities.
The award application
[6]
Snowy Owl did not re-open the roads as
required by the 2020 award. On 15 July 2020, Mziki launched an
application before the KwaZulu-Natal
Division of the High Court (the
high court), in terms of
s 31(1)
of the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
,
to make the 2020 award an order of court (the award application).
Snowy Owl opposed the application on the basis that the 2020
award
was vague, could not be made an order of court, and that it required
Snowy Owl to undertake actions which are unlawful in
terms of
prevailing environmental legislation. The application was enrolled
for hearing on 4 December 2020.
[7]
On 18 February 2021, Radebe J granted the
application, making the 2020 award an order of court. Snowy Owl was
granted leave to appeal
to this Court by Radebe J on 27 July 2021.
[8]
On
19 January 2023, this Court dismissed the appeal against Radebe J’s
order.
[4]
On 23 February 2023,
Snowy Owl applied to the Constitutional Court for leave to appeal
against the order of this Court. The Constitutional
Court refused the
application for leave to appeal on 28 September 2023, thereby
bringing to finality the challenge to the enforceability
of the 2020
award.
The interdict
application
[9]
During
October 2020, after Mziki had commenced the award application, Snowy
Owl started digging up sections of River Road and placed
rubble and
other material across the road surface to block access to the roads.
On 15 October 2020, Mziki launched an application
to interdict Snowy
Owl from destroying the roads and to compel the restoration of access
(the interdict application). It based
its application on the binding
effect of the 2020 award and its praedial servitudinal rights. Snowy
Owl was cited as the first
respondent. The second to fourth
respondents were directors of Snowy Owl who, together with the fifth
respondent, a businessman
with a financial interest in Snowy Owl,
were alleged to have been responsible for directing the activities of
Snowy Owl. They opposed
the interdict application. I shall refer to
them collectively as Snowy Owl. The other parties were cited because
of a possible
interest in the matter.
[5]
[10]
Seegobin
J heard the application for interim relief on 20 October 2020. The
parties agreed to an order in the form of a rule
nisi
operating as an interim interdict pending the return date of the
interdict application. The return date was set for 4 December
2020,
which was the date that the award application was to be heard. Both
applications came before Radebe J. Counsel, who then
appeared for
Snowy Owl, informed Radebe J that the award application should be
adjudicated first since the outcome might have a
bearing on the
outcome of the interdict application.
[6]
The interdict application was therefore held in abeyance and the
return date of the rule
nisi
was extended.
[11]
Chili
J heard the interdict application on 26 February 2021. He was
provided with a copy of the judgment of Radebe J, which had
been
delivered on 18 February 2021. On 19 October 2021, Chili J confirmed
the rule
nisi
issued by Seegobin J. He refused leave to appeal against his
judgment. This Court granted leave to appeal to it on 27 June 2022.
The appeal against Radebe J’s order had not yet been heard.
[7]
The confirmation of
the rule nisi
[12]
Snowy
Owl admitted that it had destroyed sections of River Road and that it
had blocked access to other roads in conflict with the
terms of the
2020 award. It did not deny that its conduct was in breach of the
agreement of servitude. Its defence was that it
was not obliged to
comply with the 2020 award because it required performance of acts
which were contrary to environmental legislation.
It also relied on
an environmental management plan which had been approved for the
Mun-Ya-Wana Conservancy, which incorporated
the Snowy Owl properties
(the MMP)
[8]
. The MMP allowed
the Conservancy Warden (the eighth appellant) in conjunction with the
owner of the land (Snowy Owl) to close roads
for ecological reasons.
Snowy Owl therefore opposed the interdict application on the same
basis advanced in the arbitration proceedings
and before Radebe J.
[13]
Before Chili J, counsel for Snowy Owl
submitted that the interdict application should be adjourned pending
an appeal against the
order of Radebe J. Chili J rejected the
submission. He held as follows:
‘
In
its defence, the first respondent sought to suggest that there was no
obligation on it to comply with the terms of the arbitration
award
given the fact that doing so would amount to performing acts
sanctioned by law. … That is not what I am seized with
in the
present application. As already pointed out, the question whether an
award should be made an order of court has already
been decided and
is the subject of an appeal. [Counsel] submitted that the appropriate
order would be to adjourn the matter, reserve
costs and extend the
rule pending the decision on appeal. I do not agree. The issue before
me is very simple. All that the first
respondent (in conjunction with
the second to fifth respondents) is required to do, is to undo the
damage done to the roads after
the grant of the award.
It was sufficiently
established that the applicant has a clear right,
ex facie
the
award and the servitude itself, for the reinstatement and re-opening
of the roads which are the subject of the servitude.’
[14]
Regarding
Snowy Owl’s reliance upon the approved MMP, Chili J found that
it had already been approved when the arbitration
occurred. He found
that Snowy Owl could not rely on the alleged approval of the MMP to
justify the closure of the roads because
a mandatory requirement of
consultation with all interested parties, provided in
s 39(3)
of
NEMPAA, had not been met. Mziki had not been consulted on the MMP.
Chili J concluded that no justification existed for the infringement
of Mziki’s servitudinal rights and that it was therefore
entitled to confirmation of the rule
nisi
.
[9]
The appeal
[15]
Prior to the hearing in this Court, a
directive was issued requiring Snowy Owl to indicate whether it was
persisting in this appeal,
considering the final determination of the
challenge to the enforceability of the arbitration award.
Supplementary heads of argument
were filed in which Snowy Owl
confirmed its persistence with the appeal.
[16]
It is apposite to highlight the findings of
this Court when it dismissed the appeal against Radebe J’s
order. In dealing with
the argument that the award required the
performance of illegal or unlawful acts, this Court said:
‘
Firstly,
to debate what an [Environmental Assessment Practitioner] may or may
not recommend
if
the appellant applies for authorisation is both irrelevant and
unhelpful. But more importantly, the appellant’s contentions
must be rejected for the simple reason that the justification for the
closure of the roads concerned was raised before the arbitrator
and
he rejected it after considering the factual and expert evidence
presented to him. The arbitrator found that there were no
legislative
reasons for the closure nor was there provision in the servitude
agreement that mandated the closure of any of the
existing roads. The
evidence in the affidavit of the [Environmental Assessment
Practitioner] seems to be another version of the
evidence already
presented by the witnesses for the appellant, including, an
environmental expert, Mr Neary, before the arbitrator.
This is not an
appeal against the factual finding of the arbitrator. It is therefore
not permissible, nor appropriate for the appellant
to engage in a
factual debate on matters already considered in the arbitration
proceedings and decided by the arbitrator.’
[10]
[17]
Turning to Snowy Owl’s reliance upon
the MMP to justify the closure of the River roads, this Court held:
This
argument is once more raised before us but in a reformulated manner.
As an example, and to lay this argument to rest, the Mun-Ya-Wana
Conservancy was declared a Protected Area on 5 September 2019 in
terms of
s 23
of NEMPAA. The arbitration hearing took place on 15
March 2020 and the MMP was approved on 5 March 2020. The latter date
pre-dates
the hearing of the arbitration and the resultant award
which was made on 2 April 2020. Therefore, the conclusion I reached
regarding
the MMP in the previous paragraphs equally applies here.
Much reliance was also placed on the Mun-Ya-Wana Conservancy or its
Warden,
but we are also not told what its/his attitude is to the
debates raised by the appellant including the authorisations bemoaned
about. Another important consideration to make in this regard is that
the respondent is not a member of the Mun-Ya-Wana Conservancy.
The
respondent was never consulted before the MMP, heavily relied upon by
the appellant, was prepared and allegedly approved as
required by
s
39(1)
of NEMPAA. This section is peremptory and provides that when a
management plan for a protected area is being prepared, all the
affected parties who have an interest must be consulted.’
[11]
[18]
This finding accords with that of Chili J
on the same issue. The only legal justification which would permit
Snowy Owl to close
roads in breach of the servitude rights, has
therefore been decisively dismissed by this Court.
[19]
Snowy Owl persisted with the appeal as it
took the view that a live controversy remained. Counsel submitted
that:
(a)
Since Chili J had impermissibly decided an
issue which had already been decided (by Radebe J) contrary to the
doctrine of
res judicata,
his order could not stand.
(b)
Chili J granted final relief whereas only
interim relief was warranted, given the appeal against Radebe J’s
order.
(c)
There is no need for the order granted by
Chili J seeing that Radebe J’s order, which is now final,
provides adequate protection
for the rights of Mziki.
(d)
Radebe J’s order can be enforced by
contempt of court proceedings in the event of a breach.
[20]
No sensible basis for persistence with this
appeal is discernible from the argument. Reliance upon the doctrine
of
res judicata
is entirely misplaced. Mziki based its claim for an interdict on the
further breach of the servitude and the binding effect of
the
arbitration award. The breach was admitted. Mziki wanted to restrain
further breaches and to secure re-opening of the closed
roads. Its
cause of action was not the same as the cause of action advanced to
have the arbitration award made an order of court.
There, Mziki
relied on the
Arbitration Act. Snowy
Owl, however, defended the
interdict application on the same basis it resisted the application
before Radebe J. That defence did
not meet the assertion of Mziki’s
servitude rights.
[21]
Mziki did not ask Chili J to decide issues
that had already been decided. It required Chili J to determine
whether there was a fresh
or ongoing breach of its servitude rights
by the closure of roads which occurred after the 2020 award was
delivered. The
argument that Chili J ought not to have granted
final relief because of the pending appeal in which Snowy Owl’s
defences
remained live, loses sight of the basis of the claim for an
interdict. Snowy Owl’s defences did not engage that claim.
There
was therefore no reason not to confirm the rule
nisi
and grant final relief.
[22]
Snowy Owl did not challenge the terms of
the order granted by Seegobin J. This is hardly surprising since it
was an agreed order.
Yet, as the argument progressed, counsel
suggested that Seegobin J’s order was overbroad because of its
prohibition against
closure of ‘any roads’. It was
submitted that Mziki had not made out a case for such relief. The
argument was without
substance. The agreement of servitude confers
upon Mziki a right of traverse using all existing roads on the Snowy
Owl properties.
Snowy Owl consented to the interim order. It admitted
that its conduct breached the servitude. Counsel nevertheless argued
that
this Court should set aside Chili J’s order and replace it
with an order dismissing the application. When asked to point out
a
legal or factual basis upon which this Court could do so, none was
suggested. The only basis suggested was that the order was
now no
longer required because Radebe J’s order secured adequate
protection for Mziki. Yet, on this argument, since Mziki
would be
entitled to obtain the relief provided by Chili J’s order,
there is no basis to set it aside.
[23]
The suggestion that Mziki ought rather to
have enforced its rights through contempt proceedings is also
entirely misplaced. The
fact that a party may pursue contempt
proceedings to enforce an order against a recalcitrant party, does
not preclude an interdict
to restrain an ongoing infringement of a
right. Counsel could not point to authority to the contrary, and I
know of none. In any
event, when the interim interdict was granted by
Seegobin J on 20 October 2020, there was no court order which could
be enforced
by contempt proceedings. The award application was argued
on 4 December 2020 and the order was issued on 18 February 2021.
Thereafter,
Radebe J’s order was the subject of an appeal. It
was not enforceable until the matter was put to rest by the
Constitutional
Court.
[24]
A final aspect concerns the alleged
misjoinder of the directors or employees of Snowy Owl (i.e. the
second to fifth appellants).
Misjoinder was not raised as a plea on
the papers and did not feature as an issue before Chili J. It was
raised for the first time
on appeal. It was submitted that since it
was a purely legal question, it was permissible to do so.
[25]
Joinder
as a matter of necessity and as a matter of convenience are
distinct.
[12]
In the
case of the former, a failure to join precludes determination of the
suit until joinder has occurred. A court may
act
mero
motu
to protect the interests of a necessary party.
[13]
In the case of the latter, the party joined is not a necessary party
but may be joined on the basis that the relief may prejudicially
affect its rights. A party may also be joined based on convenience,
as in this instance, as a co-respondent against whom relief
is
sought. This does not give rise to misjoinder.
[14]
The second to fifth appellants were joined on the basis that they, as
the controlling minds of Snowy Owl or as its agents,
were responsible
for the infringing conduct. Relief was sought against them upon that
basis. An appeal is ordinarily not the time
to raise an argument of
misjoinder for the first time.
[15]
The second to fifth appellants did not object to their joinder. They
consented to the order granted by Seegobin J, and they opposed
the
confirmation of the rule
nisi
before
Chili J.
[26]
It follows that the appeal must be
dismissed. What remains is the costs. The ordinary rule is that the
costs follow the result.
The question, however, is whether a punitive
costs order is warranted. In my view it is, for the following
reasons.
[27]
Chili J’s judgment makes it plain
that he was dealing with an admitted breach of the terms of the 2020
award and the servitude,
for which no justification was offered other
than a legal contention which had already been decided. He decided
the matter upon
the basis that Mziki was entitled to protection of
its rights of servitude which had been further breached and that it
required
the re-opening of roads which had been closed after the 2020
award was delivered.
[28]
Persistence in a meritless appeal despite
being alerted to the insurmountable difficulties it faced, was
plainly ill-advised. Courts
do not decide academic issues nor resolve
questions which can have no practical legal effect. This Court’s
personnel and
resources are limited. Enrolment of an appeal
necessarily precludes the hearing of another appeal by the allocated
judges on the
same day. Other litigants must therefore wait until
their appeal can be heard. Thus, the enrolment of an appeal in which
the substantive
legal issues have already been resolved between the
parties, causes prejudice not just to the other party in the appeal
but also
to the efficient administration of justice. In the
circumstances and particularly in view of the query by this court, a
punitive
costs order is justified and indeed warranted.
[29]
Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed with
costs on the scale as between attorney and client.
_________________
G GOOSEN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the appellants: R
S Shepstone
Instructed
by: Errol Goss Attorneys
,
Johannesburg
Eugene
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: G Cooper
Instructed
by: Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Incorporated, Cape Town
Claude
Reid Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
A
history of the disputes is set out in the arbitration award of
Advocate Dodson SC, handed down on 2 April 2020. See also the
judgment of this Court in
Snowy
Owl Properties 284 (Pty) Ltd v Mziki Share Block Limited
[2023]
ZASCA 2
paras 1 and 4.
[2]
The
appeal panel delivered its award in August 2016.
[3]
The
Snowy Owl properties form part of a larger conservancy, the
Mun-Ya-Wana Conservancy. Snowy Owl and the Conservancy were seeking
to have the area declared as a ‘protected area’ in terms
of the National Environmental Management: Protected Areas
Act 57 of
2003 (NEMPAA) It was declared a protected area in September 2019.
[4]
Snowy
Owl Properties 284 (Pty) Ltd v Mziki Share Block Limited
[2023]
ZASCA 2
(
Snowy
Owl)
.
[5]
The
sixth respondent was Zuka Properties (Pty) Ltd, an owner of adjacent
property. The seventh respondent was the Mun-Ya-Wana
Conservancy, an
entity established as a nature reserve in terms NEMPAA. The eighth
respondent was a person employed as the Conservancy
Warden by the
Mun-Ya-Wana Conservancy. No relief was sought against these
respondents.
[6]
Before
this Court counsel for Snowy Owl took issue with the
characterisation of the former counsel’s submissions as
constituting
a concession that the outcome of the award application
was dispositive of the defence in the interdict application.
[7]
The
appeal against Radebe J’s order was heard on 22 September
2022.
[8]
The
environmental management plan was styled the Mun-Ya-Wana Management
Plan, hence MMP.
[9]
The
rule nisi granted by Seegobin J called upon the first to fifth
appellants (then cited as respondents) to show cause why the
following order should not be granted:
‘
1.1
The first to fifth respondents are interdicted from doing anything
or instructing anyone to prevent the applicant and its
members from
gaining access to any of the roads, including the roads known as
River Road, River Loop and River Link, situated
on the properties ….
[to] exercise their rights in terms of the servitude over the said
properties.
1.2 The first to fifth
respondents are interdicted from closing or instructing anyone to
close, any of the roads referred to in
paragraph 1.1 above, in
addition to said River Road and River Link.
1.3 The first to fifth
respondents are interdicted from damaging or instructing anyone to
damage, the surfaces of any of the roads
referred to in paragraph
1.1 above.
1.4 The first to fifth
respondents are interdicted from taking any further steps or
instructing anyone to take any further steps
to make the said River
Road and River Link less passable for vehicles.’
Paragraph 1.5 required
Snowy Owl and the cited respondents to restore and repair River Road
and River Link and to remove any obstacles
placed on the said roads.
Paragraph 1.1 to 1.4 operated as an interim interdict pending
finalisation of the application.
[10]
Snowy
Owl
fn
4 above, para 19.
[11]
Ibid
para 29.
[12]
Judicial
Services Commission and Another v Cape Bar Council and Another
[2012]
ZASCA 115
;
2013 (1) SA 170
(SCA) para 12.
[13]
Mtjhabeng
Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings Ltd
[2017] ZACC 35
;
2018 (1) SA 9
(CC) para 91.
[14]
Rosebank
Mall (Pty) Ltd and Another v Cradock Heights (Pty) Ltd
2004 (2) SA 353
(W) para 11.
[15]
City
of Johannesburg v Changing Tides (Pty) Ltd and 97 Others
(
The
Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa intervening as
amicus curiae
)
[2012] ZASCA 116
;
2012 (6) SA 294
(SCA) para 36.
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