Case Law[2024] ZASCA 81South Africa
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Tshepo Gugu Trading CC and Another (1054/2022) [2024] ZASCA 81 (28 May 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
13 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Property law – spoliation (mandament van spolie) requirements – municipality dismantling and removing respondent’s billboard on municipal land – erected contrary to by-law – application to regularise billboard – settlement agreement – operative for two years – agreement lapsing – whether status quo ante should be restored.
Judgment
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## City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Tshepo Gugu Trading CC and Another (1054/2022) [2024] ZASCA 81 (28 May 2024)
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Tshepo Gugu Trading CC and Another (1054/2022) [2024] ZASCA 81 (28 May 2024)
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sino date 28 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Spoliation –
Billboard
–
Municipality
dismantling billboard on municipal land – Erected contrary
to by-law and was illegal structure –
Municipality not
authorised to consider regularisation application without
prescribed fees being paid – No court permitted
to
countenance glaring illegality – By-laws designed to
maintain order, ensure public safety and create harmonious
living
environments – Have vital role in promoting sound business
interests and competition as well as regulating community
life –
Municipality justified in taking steps to dismantle billboard.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 1054/2022
In
the matter between:
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
APPELLANT
and
TSHEPO
GUGU TRADING CC
FIRST RESPONDENT
SOWETO
STEEL STRUCTURAL
ENGINEERING
(PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
City of Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Tshepo Gugu Trading CC and Another
(1054/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 81
(28 May
2024)
Coram:
MOLEMELA P, SCHIPPERS AND HUGHES JJA AND
SEEGOBIN AND MBHELE AJJA
Heard:
20 February
2024
Delivered:
This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties’
representatives by email, publication on the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and release to SAFLII. The date
and time for hand-down of the
judgment is deemed to be 11h00 on 28 May 2024.
Summary:
Property law –
spoliation (
mandament van spolie
) requirements –
municipality dismantling and removing respondent’s billboard on
municipal land – erected contrary
to by-law – application
to regularise billboard – settlement agreement –
operative for two years – agreement
lapsing – whether
status quo ante
should be restored.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Johannesburg (Molahlehi, Adams and Mahalelo JJ, sitting as a court of
first instance):
1
The application for special leave to appeal succeeds.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs, such costs to include the costs of
the employment of
two counsel.
3
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The appeal is
dismissed with costs.’
JUDGMENT
Seegobin and Mbhele
AJJA (Molemela P, Schippers and Hughes JJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for special leave to appeal by the City of
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
(the municipality) in terms of s
16(1)
(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Act), against the judgment and
order of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Molahlehi, Adams and Mahalelo JJ) (the full court) delivered on 13
September 2022. On 2 March 2023 this Court referred the application
for oral argument in terms of s 17(2)
(d)
[1]
of the Act.
Relevant
background
[2]
The municipality is the owner of the immovable property situated at
Portion 988, Elandsfontein 90-IR
described as ‘Gillooly’s
Farm’ (the site). The respondent, Tshepo Gugu Trading CC (the
respondent), owns a large
billboard. In March 2016, the respondent
installed the billboard on the site.
[3]
On 5 August 2016 the municipality launched an application in the
Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Johannesburg (the high court) for
an order directing the respondent to remove the billboard and to
restore the site to its original
state. The basis for that
application was that the respondent had erected the billboard in
contravention of the municipality’s
Billboards and Display of
Advertisements By-laws of 13 March 2017 (the By-laws) and the Local
Government Municipal Systems Act
32 of 2000 (the Systems Act).
[4]
The relief sought by the municipality was the following:
‘
1.
The respondent is ordered to remove the billboard, and to restore
Portion 988 of Elandsfontein
90-IR to its state prior to the
respondent’s construction of the billboard;
2.
Should the respondent fail to remove the billboard or part thereof
within 60
days of the Court’s order, the applicant is
authorised to take all necessary steps to remove the billboard
including the
authorisation of the sheriff or a suitable alternative
contractor to remove the billboard, in which event those costs are to
be
paid by the respondent.
3.
It is declared that the applicant’s decision of 23 June 2015 to
approve
the respondent’s application to construct the billboard
(“the decision”) has lapsed.
4.
In the alternative to prayer 3:
4.1
The time period of 180 days in terms of section 7 of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice
Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”) in which to
bring a review of the decision is extended in terms of section 9 of
PAJA to the
date on which this application was served on the
respondent.
4.2
The decision is reviewed and set aside.
5.
The respondent shall pay the costs of this application in the event
of its opposition.’
[5]
The respondent opposed the application and filed a
counter-application. Those applications were settled
in terms of a
written settlement agreement between the parties that was made an
order of court by Victor J (the Victor J order).
The relevant parts
of the order read as follows:
‘
3.
THE REGULARISATION APPLICATION
3.1
The respondent will submit an application to the applicant for
approval of the Billboard
at its current size and/or an application
for the approval of an electrical billboard at the same location as
the current Billboard
(“the regularisation application”).
3.2
The respondent will submit the regularisation application within 30
calendar days of this
agreement.
3.3
The regularisation application must be submitted by the respondent
and will be decided by
the [applicant] in accordance with the
[applicant’s] Billboards and the Display of Advertisements
By-laws dated 30 March
2017 and the Municipality Systems Act 32 of
2000.
3.4
The regularisation application must be decided within 30 days of its
receipt by the [municipality].
3.5
Nothing in this agreement fetters the discretion of the applicant
and/or its delegated officials
and/or committees in respect of the
determination of the regularisation application.
3.6
In the event that the regularisation application is unsuccessful, the
applicant will:
3.6.1
Either remove the Billboard within 60 calendar days or such further
period as agreed to between the parties,
the costs of which removal
are to be paid for by the respondent;
3.6.2
Or reduce the Billboard’s size to 81m² within 60 calendar
days or such further period as agreed
to between the parties, in
which event the Billboard may remain erected until the fifth
anniversary of the decision pursuant to
which it is erect;
3.7
In the event that the applicant fails to remove the Billboard or
reduce its size to 81m²
within 60 calendar days or such further
period as agreed to between the parties, the [municipality] will be
entitled to remove
the Billboard or cause the Billboard to be removed
by a contractor, the reasonable costs of which will be carried paid
by the respondent.
3.8
The respondent will have the right to seek to review and/or appeal
any decision made in
respect of the regularisation application.
4.
In the event that the respondent exercises its right to review and/or
appeal
any decision made in respect of the regularisation application
its obligation to remove or reduce the size of the Billboard in terms
of paragraph 3.6 remains binding unless:
4.1
The applicant agrees to suspend the operation of paragraph 3.6; or
4.2
A court grants an interdict suspending the operation of paragraph
3.6.
5.
RENTAL IN RESPECT OF THE BILLBOARD
5.1
The parties will endeavour to conclude a lease agreement in respect
of the Billboard and/or
its successor in accordance with the
applicant’s ordinary terms for leases of such a nature and in
compliance with the applicant’s
tariffs schedule, a copy of
which is attached hereto as annexure A.
5.2
Pending the conclusion of a lease agreement, the following
arrangement will apply:
5.2.1
The respondent will pay rental in respect of the Billboard from 11
September 2018 to the date that the Billboard
is removed.
5.2.2
The rental payable will be fixed in accordance with the applicant’s
Real Estate Tariffs, being 20%
of the gross income received by the
media owner (namely the respondent) from the advertiser.
5.2.3
On the first day of each month commencing 1 October 2018, the
respondent will provide to the applicant a
statement and debatement
of 20% of the gross income earned by the respondent from advertisers
in the preceding month.
6.
ARREAR RENTAL IN RESPECT OF THE BILLBOARD
6.1
The respondent will pay arrear rental in respect of the Billboard
from the date that the
Billboard was erected and/or began displaying
advertisements 11 September 2018.
6.2
The arrear rental is fixed in accordance with the applicant’s
Real Estate Tariffs,
being 20% of the gross income received by the
media owner (namely the respondent) from the advertiser.
6.3
By 9 October 2018, the respondent is to provide to the applicant a
statement and debatement
of 20% of the gross income received from
advertisers in respect of the Billboard from the Billboard’s
erection up to and
including 11 September 2018.
7.
THE DURATION OF THIS AGREEMENT
7.1
Unless novated by a further agreement (including any further
agreement concluded following
an approval of the regularisation
application), this agreement will operate for a period of two years,
namely until 11 September
2020.’
[6]
In essence, the Victor J order granted the respondent an opportunity
to regularise its non-compliance
with the By-laws that governed the
construction of billboards on the municipality’s land. The
respondent agreed to bring
an application to regularise the erection
of the billboard by 11 September 2020. The order further made
provision for payment of
rental to the municipality with effect from
11 September 2018, and the respondent undertook to provide the
municipality with a
statement and debatement of 20% of the gross
income which it earned from its advertisers. The statement was to be
provided on the
first day of each month commencing 1 October 2018.
Furthermore, paragraph 6 of the order required the respondent to pay
arrear
rental in respect of the billboard from the date the billboard
was installed and/or when it began displaying advertisements, such
date being 11 September 2018.
[7]
Pursuant to the Victor J order, the respondent submitted its
regularisation application on 9 October
2018. It failed, however, to
make payment of the prescribed fees in terms of sections 54 and 64 of
the By-laws to enable the municipality
to consider the
application.
[2]
In a flurry of
correspondence that passed between the parties, the respondent
admitted firstly, that it had failed to pay the prescribed
fees but
explained that it was waiting to meet with the municipal manager to
obtain the municipality’s banking details and
hand over two
cheques. Secondly, that the billboard was not in compliance with the
municipality’s By-laws. The municipality’s
attorneys
acknowledged receipt of the regularisation application on 9
November 2018. They indicated that the municipality
was willing to
consider such application subject to the prescribed fees being paid.
[8]
The respondent in the meantime failed to pay any rental due in
accordance with the Victor J order. It
further failed to provide the
municipality with a statement of income earned from its advertisers.
On 26 November 2019 the municipality
launched an application in the
high court for an order compelling the respondent to disclose certain
financial information regarding
the amount of revenue it earned from
the billboard (the debatement application). The debatement
application as well as a counter-application
filed by the respondent
are still pending before the high court.
[9]
On 23 January 2020 the municipality addressed a letter to the
respondent in terms of which the respondent
was given a deadline to
pay the prescribed fees by the end of February 2020, failing which
the municipality would have no option
but to exercise its right to
remove the billboard at the respondent’s expense. Once again,
however, the respondent failed
to pay the prescribed fees as required
by the By-laws. On 23 June 2020 the respondent was advised that the
placement of any advertisement
on the billboard would be unlawful and
that it should desist from doing so. The municipality further advised
that it was currently
sourcing contractors to remove the billboard
from its site. The response from the respondent, through its
attorneys on 30 June
2020 was that any removal of the billboard
without the respondent’s consent and without a court order
would amount to a spoliation,
entitling it to an appropriate remedy.
[10]
The municipality, purportedly acting in terms of paragraphs 3 and 4
of the Victor J order, secured the assistance
of Soweto Steel
Structural Engineering (Pty) Ltd, the second respondent, to dismantle
and remove the billboard on 20 August 2020.
The respondent in turn
brought an urgent application for a
mandament van spolie
which
served before Wepener J on the same day. The application was opposed
by the municipality. By agreement between the parties,
Wepener J
granted an order in the following terms:
‘
.
. .
2.
Pending the final hearing of the matter the First and Second
Respondents and
anyone under the First Respondent’s mandate are
interdicted, ordered and directed to forthwith:
2.1
cease and desist from taking any further steps, or continuing to take
steps to dismantle
and remove the billboard (“the property”)
situate at Portion 988 of Elandsfontein 90-IR described as Gillooly’s
Farm (“the Site”), or take any other steps to damage the
Property or render same non-functional.’
[11]
In its answering papers the municipality averred that the respondent
had simply failed to comply with the provisions
of paragraphs 3.1,
3.2 and 3.3 of the
Victor J order in that it had failed to
submit a competent and complete regularisation application within 30
days of that
order. The municipality took the point that this failure
absolved it from making any decision in the matter. It averred that
despite
repeated requests to the respondent, as evidenced by the
correspondence referred to in its affidavit, the latter had simply
failed
to comply with the terms of the settlement agreement and the
court order. According to the municipality, this non-compliance
entitled
it to invoke the provisions of paragraphs 3.6 and 3.7 of the
order. The respondent was therefore obliged to either remove the
billboard
or reduce its size to 81m² within a period of 60 days
or such further period as may be agreed to between the parties.
[12]
The spoliation application was eventually determined by Senyatsi J
(the court of first instance). Although the
court of first instance
found that the respondent was in peaceful possession of the
billboard, it nonetheless refused to grant
it any relief on the basis
that: (a) the municipality had dismantled the billboard and reduced
it to a pile of steel structures;
(b) it was not possible to restore
the
status quo ante
as the billboard had been dismantled; and
(c) the remedy of spoliation had become moot because the order made
on 11 September 2018
by Victor J had expired in September 2020. The
respondent was granted leave to appeal to the full court.
[13]
The full court accepted that the respondent was in peaceful
possession of the billboard when it was dispossessed
of it by the
municipality. On this basis the full court identified the following
two issues for determination. The first was whether
the impossibility
of restoring the billboard was raised in the founding papers to
warrant the court of first instance’s consideration
in that
regard. The second was whether the facts of the case supported the
conclusion by the court of first instance that there
was an
impossibility of restoring possession of the billboard. The full
court disagreed with the findings of the court of first
instance. It
found that the court had made erroneous factual findings contained in
the municipality’s answering affidavit
resulting in unfairness
to the respondent.
[14]
With regard to the first issue, the full court found that this was
not an issue that had been raised by the municipality
in its
answering papers. The issue was raised for the first time in the
municipality’s heads of argument. It held that the
court of
first instance, in concluding that the remedy of
mandament van
spolie
did not find application in the matter before it, did so
on the basis of facts that were not properly pleaded. As to the
second
issue, the full court reasoned that the court of first
instance had not found that the billboard no longer existed but
rather that
the municipality and Soweto Steel had merely dismantled
the billboard. The full court concluded that the integrity or
functioning
of the billboard was not destroyed and that it had simply
been dismantled. On this basis there was no reason why, so the full
court
held, that possession could not be restored to the respondent.
Test
for special leave
[15]
For the municipality to succeed in its application for special leave,
it is required to show something more than
the existence of
reasonable prospects of success on appeal.
[3]
In
Cook
v Morrison and Another
,
[4]
this Court held:
‘
The
existence of reasonable prospects of success is a necessary but
insufficient precondition for the granting of special leave.
Something more, by way of special circumstances, is needed. These may
include that the appeal raises a substantial point of law;
or that
the prospects of success are so strong that a refusal of leave would
result in a manifest denial of justice; or that the
matter is of very
great importance to the parties or to the public. This is not a
closed list . . .’
[16]
The test of what constitutes a reasonable prospect of success is well
established. The municipality is required
to convince this Court that
there is a ‘realistic chance on appeal’. In other words,
it is required to demonstrate
that ‘there is a sound rational
basis to conclude that there is a reasonable prospect of success on
appeal’.
[5]
It is further
required to show that ‘something more by way of special
circumstances, is needed’.
[6]
[17]
Before this Court, the primary contention advanced by the
municipality was that it had acted lawfully in terms
of a valid court
order when it removed the illegally constructed billboard from its
site. Its case was that it did not take the
law into its own hands as
the order of Victor J entitled it to remove the billboard in
circumstances where the respondent had failed
to comply fully with
the terms of that order. It was submitted that the respondent had
been placed on notice on several occasions
to comply with the order
and to submit a fully compliant regularisation application in terms
of the By-laws but it failed to do
so. It was contended that ordering
restoration of the billboard to the respondent in these circumstances
would amount to sanctioning
an illegality.
[18]
There was no dispute that at the time the municipality took steps to
remove the billboard from its site, the respondent
was in peaceful
and undisturbed possession of it. The central issue, however, was
whether the full court was correct in ordering
the restoration of the
status quo ante
.
[19]
The underlying principles governing the common law remedy of a
mandament
van spolie
are
well-established. As far back as in 1906, Innes CJ in
Nino
Bonino v De Lange
,
[7]
enunciated the principle underlying the
mandament
van spolie
as
follows:
‘
It
is a fundamental principle that no man is allowed to take the law
into his own hands; no one is permitted to dispossess another
forcibly or wrongfully and against his consent of the possession of
property, whether movable or immovable. If he does so, the
court will
summarily restore the
status
quo ante
,
and will do that as a preliminary to any inquiry or investigation
into the merits of the dispute.’
[20]
In
Tswelopele
Non-Profit Organisation and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality and Others
,
[8]
this Court explained the remedy as follows:
‘
Under
[the
mandament
van spolie
],
anyone illicitly deprived of property is entitled to be restored to
possession before anything else is debated or decided (
spoliatus
ante omnia restituendus est
).
Even an unlawful possessor – a fraud, a thief or a robber –
is entitled to the
mandament
’s
protection. The principle is that illicit deprivation must be
remedied before the courts will decide competing claims to
the object
or property.’
[21]
In
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security and Others
,
[9]
the Constitutional Court described the remedy as follows:
‘
The
essence of the
mandament
van spolie
is the restoration before all else of unlawfully deprived possession
to the possessor. It finds expression in the
maxim
spoliatus ante omnia restituendus est
(the
despoiled person must be restored to possession before all else). The
spoliation order is meant to prevent the taking of possession
otherwise than in accordance with the law. Its underlying philosophy
is that no one should resort to self-help to obtain or regain
possession. The main purpose of the
mandament
van spolie
is to preserve public order by restraining persons from taking the
law into their own hands and by inducing them to follow due
process.’
[22]
It is trite that in order to obtain a
mandament van spolie
an
applicant has to show that (a) she or he was in peaceful and
undisturbed possession of the thing, and (b) she or he was unlawfully
deprived of such possession. In view of the strict requirements of
the remedy, there are a limited number of defences which a respondent
can raise in spoliation proceedings. As the authors of LAWSA point
out:
‘
No
spoliation is committed where a person is lawfully deprived of his or
her possession. The respondent can justify his or her dispossession
of the applicant by showing that the applicant has genuinely and
freely consented to give up his or her possession or that he or
she
was authorised by a court order or by statute to dispossess the
applicant….’
[10]
[23]
Whilst the first requirement poses no difficulty in the present
matter, the second requirement has to be considered.
The question
that arises is whether the municipality had ‘unlawfully’
deprived the respondent of possession of the
billboard when it took
steps to dismantle it on 20 August 2020. To answer this question, it
is necessary to have regard to the
underlying reasons for the
conclusion of the settlement agreement and the Victor J order. The
conclusion of the settlement agreement
must be seen in context and
against the background facts set out above. The fact that the
respondent was required to submit a regularisation
application in
compliance with the By-law and within the time frames stipulated in
the agreement, points to an acknowledgement
on its part that its
conduct in installing the billboard on the municipality’s site
was unlawful and had to be rectified.
The consequences of not
complying with the By-laws were fully spelt out in paragraph 3.7 of
the Victor J order. The terms of the
court order made it plain that
in the event of any non-compliance by the respondent, the
municipality would be entitled to remove
the offending billboard.
[24]
The court order empowered the municipality to remove and dismantle
the structure in the event that the regularisation
application was
unsuccessful. The regularisation process had to, in terms of the
court order, be done in conformity with the applicable
By-laws. The
order explicitly stated that mere submission of the regularisation
application was not a
fait accompli
. The application had to
comply with all the prescripts of the relevant By-laws. Clause 3.5
clearly spelt out that the municipality’s
discretion was not
fettered by the agreement between the parties.
Relevant
By-laws
[25]
It is common cause that the billboard was
illegally constructed in that its size and proximity to the
intersection contravened the
municipality By-laws governing outdoor
advertising. It remained an illegal structure until it was
dismantled. The relevant By-laws
in this respect are the following.
Section 3(1) of the By-laws provides:
‘
These
By-laws apply to all outdoor advertising in the area of jurisdiction
of the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and are binding
on all
persons, including the State, state organs, state agencies and all
state institutions, seeking to display or erect advertising
signs or
advertisements.’
Section
52(5) provides:
‘
Every
application must be accompanied by the prescribed application fee
and, where applicable, a deposit as determined by the Municipality
from time to time.’
Section
52(14) provides that:
‘
An application
which has shown no substantive progress due to any act or omission on
the part of the applicant shall be deemed to
have lapsed one year
after date of submission to the Municipality, unless motivation to
the contrary is supplied to the satisfaction
of the Municipality or
delegated department.’
Section
64(3) provides as follows:
‘
Every
person who applies to the Municipality for permission of an
advertising sign or advertisement to be displayed, must on making
the
application, pay to the Municipality the tariff determined,
therefore, and no application will be considered until such tariff
has been paid.’
[11]
[26]
One of the requirements that had to be met for a successful
application was payment of the prescribed fees at the
time the
application was lodged. Despite numerous requests from the
municipality for the respondent to comply with this requirement,
it
failed to do so. The respondent instead came up with new proposals
which contradicted the terms of the court order. Amongst
the
proposals made was that the billboard be left intact in exchange for
the respondent performing certain functions in favour
of the
municipality.
[12]
[27]
The municipality was not authorised to consider the regularisation
application without the prescribed fees being
paid. Doing so would be
to violate its own By-laws. The failure to pay the prescribed fees
meant that the respondent had submitted
a non-compliant
regularisation application. Absent a compliant regularisation
application there was no obligation on the municipality
to consider
the application.
[28]
Section 52(14) of the By-laws provides that every application which
has not shown substantive progress lapses after
12 months from the
date of submission. The respondent's application lapsed on 7 October
2019. Despite this, it only attempted to
make payment sometime in
November 2019, long after the 12 months had lapsed. It is clear from
the wording of s 52(14) that the
section affords an applicant time to
remedy whatever defect might exist in the application within 12
months from date of submission,
thereafter such application lapses.
[29]
Notwithstanding the fact that the application had not shown progress
for a period of 12 months, due to non-payment
of the prescribed fee,
the municipality wrote to the respondent on 23 January 2020, more
than 15 months from the date of submission,
requesting it to pay the
prescribed fee before 28 February 2020, failing which the
municipality would be left with no option but
to remove the
billboard. This letter served to clear up any misunderstanding and/or
confusion that might have existed on the part
of the respondent, for
whatever reason. The municipality also clarified to whom and how such
payment had to be made.
[13]
Despite all of this the respondent failed to comply, leaving the
municipality with no option but to enforce the terms of the court
order.
[30]
Consequently, we find that the municipality was justified in taking
steps to dismantle the billboard as it did
on 20 August 2020: in the
particular circumstances, the respondent was not in lawful possession
of the billboard. Allowing this
structure to remain on the
municipality’s land, would be to sanction an illegality. From
the outset, the respondent was fully
aware that the erection of the
billboard was in violation of the By-laws.
Mootness
[31]
A further point raised by the municipality was that, at the time the
respondent had approached the full court the
appeal was moot. The
Victor J order had a two-year lifespan. The settlement
agreement provided that ‘unless novated
by a further agreement
(including any further agreement concluded following an approval of
the regularisation application), this
agreement will operate for a
period of two years, namely until 11 September 2020’.
[32]
The jurisprudence on mootness is trite. Courts generally shy away
from entertaining issues that are no longer relevant
and have no
practical effect. The limited resources of courts should be directed
at dealing with live disputes. In
Police
and Prisons Civil Rights Union v South African Correctional Service
Workers’ Union and Others (Police and Prisons Civil
Rights
Union)
,
[14]
the Constitutional Court, however, reiterated that mootness should
not be an absolute bar to the justiciability of an issue. The
court
may entertain an appeal, even if moot, where the interests of justice
so dictates.
[15]
The
determination whether the interests of justice so dictate involves an
exercise of a discretion by the court after considering
various
factors, including whether the order will have some practical effect
as well as the extent of its importance to the parties
or to
others.
[16]
[33]
The full court found that the municipality had wrongfully interfered
with the respondent’s peaceful possession,
since the power or
authority of the municipality to remove the billboard depended on the
rejection of the regularisation application,
which did not
materialise. By focussing solely on the issue of restoring possession
to the respondent, the full court ignored the
terms of the court
order and the failure on the part of the respondent to regularise its
otherwise illegal installation. In so
doing, the full court had
erred.
[34]
As mentioned already, the regularisation application lapsed on 7
October 2019 as a result of non-compliance by
the respondent with s
64(3) of the By-laws. The municipality, however, afforded the
respondent a further extension until 28 February
2020 to comply. The
municipality commenced with the dismantling of the Billboard only on
20 August 2020, almost seven months after
its letter of 23 January
2020. The municipality was therefore within its rights to invoke
sub-paragraphs 3.6 and 3.7 of the Victor
J order.
[35]
The above conclusion renders it unnecessary to deal with whether the
restoration of the
status quo ante
was competent in the
circumstances where the billboard was partially dismantled. From the
photos on record, it is clear that the
display screen, media player
and control system had been removed and all that was remaining is the
steel frame. Although the court
would ordinarily order the
restoration of the
status quo ante
, the difficulty facing the
respondent is that the structure that is sought to be restored in any
event violates the By-laws in
terms of both its size and location.
[36]
This Court in
Eskom
Holdings SOC Limited v Masinda
[17]
found that ‘although
it is correct that spoliation requires restoration of possession as a
precursor to determining the existence
of the parties’ rights .
. . , there may well be circumstances in which a court will decline
to issue spoliation . . .’.
One such circumstance, is where the
status
quo ante
is
to be restored through unlawful means and through placing the members
of the public in danger. It is for this reason that the
size and
location of billboards is prescribed in the By-laws.
[37]
In conclusion, we deem it necessary to compare the situation that
faced the municipality herein with that faced
by the respondent in
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security (Ngqukumba)
.
[18]
This was a case involving
the spoliation of a motor vehicle, the engine and chassis numbers of
which had been altered. In upholding
the appeal, the Constitutional
Court reasoned thus:
‘
It
seems to me that on this subject the Supreme Court of Appeal proceeds
from the premise that a tampered vehicle is no different
from an
article the possession of which would be unlawful under all
circumstances. That is an erroneous premise because possession
of a
tampered vehicle will be unlawful only if it is ‘without lawful
cause’. That leads me to a crucial point of departure.
It is
that in this case we are not concerned with objects the possession of
which by ordinary individuals would be unlawful under
all
circumstances. Had we been concerned with objects of that nature,
then the
mandament
van spolie
might well not be available, but that issue is not before us and need
not be decided. The fact that we are here concerned with
an article
that may be possessed quite lawfully makes all the difference. On the
assumption that an individual can never possess
heroin lawfully, the
Supreme Court of Appeal’s heroin example is not apt. At the
risk of repetition, the simple point of
distinction is that an
individual can possess a tampered vehicle if there is lawful cause
for its possession.’
[38]
We consider that unlike in
Ngqukumba
, where the unlawful
possession of a tampered vehicle had not yet been determined, in the
current matter it is not in dispute that
from the time of its
erection, the billboard did not comply with the law – it is an
illegal structure. The respondent was
aware of this fact throughout.
In our view, no court is permitted to countenance a glaring
illegality. Nor should a court turn
a blind eye on the prescripts of
the law and the importance of observing them. After all,
the By-laws are designed to maintain order, ensure public safety, and
create harmonious living environments.
They also play a
vital role in promoting sound business interests and competition as
well as regulating community life.
[39]
Having found that the municipality had acted within the confines of
the court order, both the application for special
leave and the
appeal ought to succeed. There is no reason why costs should not
follow the result.
Order
[40]
We accordingly make the following order:
1
The application for special leave to appeal succeeds.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs, such costs to include the costs of
the employment of
two counsel.
3
The order of the full court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The appeal is
dismissed with costs.’
__________________________
R
SEEGOBIN
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
__________________________
N
M MBHELE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the applicant:
P Strathern SC
(with him E Sithole)
Instructed
by:
AF van Wyk Attorneys, Johannesburg
Webbers Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
W Krog
Instructed
by:
Le Mottée Rossle Attorneys, Johannesburg
Badenhorst Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Section 17(2)
(d)
reads:
‘
The
judges considering an application referred to in paragraph (b) may
dispose of the application without the hearing of oral
argument, but
may, if they are of the opinion that the circumstances so require,
order that it be argued before them at a time
and place appointed,
and may, whether or not they have so ordered, grant or refuse the
application or refer it to the court for
consideration.’
[2]
Sections 54 and 64 of the By-laws provide as follows:
‘
54.
Damage to Municipality property –
(1)
No person shall intentionally or negligently, in the course of
erecting or removing any advertising sign, advertising structure,
poster or banner cause damage to any tree, electric service or other
Municipality installation or property.
(2)
Any costs incurred by Municipality for repair to damaged trees,
environment, electric standard, service or any Municipality
property, will be for the account of the responsible persons.
64.
Tariffs –
(1)
The Municipality shall determine tariffs or fees from time to time
in accordance with Section 4(c) of the Local Government
Systems Act,
Act 32 of 2000 and also in accordance with the provision of the
Municipal Finance Management Act, 2003 (Act No.
56 of 2003).
(2)
All refundable deposits will be forfeited to the Municipality in the
event of non-compliance of any of the foregoing By-laws
or its
approved procedural guidelines.
(3)
Every person who applies to the Municipality for permission of an
advertising sign or advertisement to be displayed, must
on making
the application, pay to the Municipality the tariff determined
therefore, and no application will be considered until
such tariff
has been paid.
(4)
The set of rates as drawn up by Municipality and revised from time
to time, as appropriate, shall apply.
(5)
The payment of any tariff in terms of this By-law shall not absolve
any person from criminal liability arising from his failure
to pay
nor shall the fact that a person has been convicted of an offence
under this By-law relieve him from the liability to
pay the
appropriate tariffs in terms of these By-laws.’
(6)
Any amount due by a person in terms of the provisions of this
by-law, will be a debt due and payable to the Municipality and
shall
be recovered by the Municipality in any competent Court of Law.
(7)
All tariffs and monies must be paid at the Municipality or at such
other places as shall be determined by the Municipality,
from time
to time.’
[3]
P A F v
S C F
[2022]
ZASCA 101
;
2022 (6) SA 162
(SCA) para 24.
[4]
Cook v
Morrison and Another
[2019]
ZASCA 8
;
[2019] 3 All SA 673
(SCA);
2019 (5) SA 51
(SCA) para 8.
[5]
MEC for
Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha and Another
(1221/2015)
[2016] ZASCA
176
(25 November 2016) paras 16-17.
[6]
Cook v
Morrison and Another
para
8.
[7]
Nino
Bonino v De Lange
1906
TS 120
at 122.
[8]
Tswelopele
Non-Profit Organisation and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality
[2007]
ZASCA 70
; [2007] SCA 70 (RSA);
2007 (6) SA 511
(SCA) para 21.
[9]
Ngqukumba
v Minister of Safety and Security
and
Others
[2014]
ZACC 14
;
2014 (7) BCLR 788
(CC);
2014 (5) SA 112
(CC);
2014 (2) SACR
325
(CC)
para
10.
[10]
27 LAWSA 2 ed para 108.
[11]
Ekurhuleni
Billboards
and Display of Advertisements By-Laws of 30 March 2017.
[12]
Tshepo Gugu proposed to:
‘
b)
Take up responsibility to maintain Gillooly’s farm and keep it
in excellent landscaping condition;
c) Employ 10 Ekurhuleni
Youth and empower them with landscaping skills;
d) Taking occupation of
dilapidated buildings at Gillooly’s farm and establish a
thriving Nursery & Landscaping College;
e) Establish a township
greening and tree planting project from the Nursery and empower,
beautify and greenize the Townships of
Ekurhuleni on an ongoing and
full time basis.’
[13]
‘
City
planning deals with all applications for Outdoor Advertising. All
applications for outdoor advertising should be submitted
together
with an agreement as well as the fee for the administration of the
lease. All monies must be paid to Ekurhuleni finance
building and a
copy of the proof of such payment handed to the relevant person
accepting applications, must be submitted to the
municipality.’
[14]
Police
and Prisons Civil Rights Union v South African Correctional Services
Workers' Union and Others
[2018]
ZACC 24
;
[2018] 11 BLLR 1035
(CC);
2018 (11) BCLR 1411
(CC); (2018)
39 ILJ 2646 (CC);
2019 (1) SA 73
(CC) paras 43-44;
Solidariteit
Helpende Hand NPC and Others v Minister of Cooperate Governance and
Traditional Affairs
[2023]
ZASCA 35
paras 12-14.
[15]
Independent
Electoral Commission v Langeberg Municipality
[2001] ZACC 23
;
2001 (3)
SA 925
(CC);
2001 (9) BCLR 883
(CC) para 9. See also:
Minister
of Mineral Resources v Sishen Iron Ore Company (Pty) Ltd
[2013]
ZACC 45
;
2014 (2) SA 603
(CC);
2014 (2) BCLR 212
(CC) para 104.
[16]
Ibid
fn 14 para 44.
[17]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Limited v Masinda
[2019]
ZASCA 98
;
2019 (5) SA 386
(SCA) para 12.
[18]
Ibid
fn 9 para 15.
sino noindex
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