Case Law[2024] ZASCA 155South Africa
Nkomazi Local Municipality v Valuation Appeal Board For The District of Ehlanzeni and Others (615/2023) [2024] ZASCA 155 (13 November 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative Law – review of Valuation Appeal Board’s decision dismissing the appeal on the valuation of the property – failure to give reasons for the decision irrational.
Judgment
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## Nkomazi Local Municipality v Valuation Appeal Board For The District of Ehlanzeni and Others (615/2023) [2024] ZASCA 155 (13 November 2024)
Nkomazi Local Municipality v Valuation Appeal Board For The District of Ehlanzeni and Others (615/2023) [2024] ZASCA 155 (13 November 2024)
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sino date 13 November 2024
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 615/2023
In
the matter between:
NKOMAZI
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
APPELLANT
and
THE
VALUATION APPEAL BOARD
FOR
THE DISTRICT OF EHLANZENI
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
MUNICIPAL VALUER
FOR
THE NKOMAZI LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
LEOPARD
CREEK
SHARE
BLOCK LIMITED
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Nkomazi Local
Municipality v The Valuation Appeal Board
For
The District of Ehlanzeni & Others
(615/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 155
(13 November 2024)
Coram:
MOKGOHLOA, NICHOLLS and WEINER JJA and COPPIN and
MJALI AJJA
Heard
:
27 August 2024
Delivered
:
13 November 2024.
Summary:
Administrative
Law – review of Valuation Appeal Board’s decision
dismissing the appeal on the valuation of the property
–
failure to give reasons for the decision irrational.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Mpumalanga Division of
the High Court, Mbombela (Mashile J sitting as court of first
instance).
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Mokgohloa JA (Nicholls
and Weiner JJA and Coppin and Mjali AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The appellant, the Nkomazi Local Municipality (the Municipality),
appeals a decision of the Mpumalanga
Division of the High Court,
Mbombela (the high court), which reviewed and set aside a
decision by the Valuation Appeal Board
for the District of Ehlanzeni
(the VAB) relating to the market value of the property belonging to
the third respondent, Leopard
Creek Share Block Limited (Leopard
Creek). The appeal is with leave of the high court.
The facts
[2]
The Municipality is a local municipality in
Mpumalanga. It is empowered by s 2 of the Local Government:
Municipal Property
Rates Act 6 of 2004 (the MPRA) to levy rates
on the properties located in its area of jurisdiction.
The
VAB is appointed as such in terms of Mpumalanga Provincial Notice 148
of 2018 in accordance with s 56(1) read
with s 60 of the
MPRA. The second respondent is the Municipal Valuer for Nkomazi Local
Municipality (the Valuer). Both the
VAB and the Valuer did not
participate in these proceedings.
[3]
Leopard Creek is a share block company, established in terms of the
provisions of the Share Blocks
Control Act 59 of 1980, authorised to
issue 112 505 shares apportioned between 262 residential share
blocks and a country
club share block. It is a single farm with 111
houses. Portion 20 of the Farm Riverside 173, JU, and in extent
335 724 hectares
(the subject property) is registered in the
name of Leopard Creek as an undivided piece of land.
[4]
This subject property comprises 335 745 hectares of undivided
land; 251 residential sites
divided between 80 residential riverfront
sites bordering the Crocodile River, overlooking the Kruger National
Park and 171 bush
or golf course sites. Of the 251 residential sites,
113 have been fully developed with 112 houses and 97 remain as unsold
share
blocks, retained by the developer. There is a hotel site that
formerly housed the Malelane Hotel which was destroyed by fire; an
18-hole Gary Player design golf course; a clubhouse complex measuring
approximately 3600 metres; a recreational centre measuring
approximately 785 metres developed on the banks of the Crocodile
River overlooking the Kruger National Park. All these are of high
standard, complementing the quality of the development. The
facilities include tennis and squash courts, a swimming pool and a
gym.
[5]
The property also has two maintenance workshops measuring in excess
of 2000 metres for support
services; an internal tarred road
system with good stormwater management design forming part thereof; a
bulk Eskom electricity
supply facility to which an internal
electricity network is connected; water services that include a water
extraction plant, purification
works, internal water distribution
networks and sewer treatment plant and waste disposal facilities.
Also on the property are two
houses for management accommodation; 27
units for staff accommodation; and six four-bedroom units providing
casual overnight accommodation
for guests.
[6]
On 1 July 2008 the property was valued in the general valuation roll
for the period 1 July 2009
to 30 June 2013 at R33 236 726.
The general valuation was replaced in the supplementary valuation
roll for the period
1 July 2011 to 30 June 2012 and reflected the
value of property to be R1 424 100 000. Following an objection
to this value,
the supplementary valuation roll was amended, and the
value was changed to R1 064 880 000. Another objection was
lodged to
this valuation and the Municipality reduced it to R904 700
000. This resulted in an appeal being lodged by Leopard Creek on
2
July 2013 (the first appeal). A new 2014 to 2018 valuation roll was
advertised on 31 January 2014, with the value of the property
reflected as R906 000 000. This was signed by the Valuer.
[7]
During the appeal, a dispute arose concerning the correct valuation.
The Municipality’s
submissions were that:
(a)
only restrictions affecting the land such as servitudes, planning
restrictions or rights of lease must be taken into account
as it will
affect the value of the land in the hands of any owner;
(b)
the contractual restriction imposed by the share block constitutes
personal rights that do not run with the land and as such
do not
apply to any owner;
(c)
the valuer must deal only with the subject property and disregard the
personal circumstances of the existing owner or someone
else in
relation to the property; and
(d)
it is irrelevant for the purposes of determining the value that the
existing owner is a share block company or that certain
shares
conferring certain occupational rights between the share block
company and its shareholders exist.
[8]
The Municipality stated that its case was that it
was the land, the improvements and the potential use that had to be
valued and
not the value of unsold shares in residential share
blocks, which were further reduced by improvement liens. According to
the Municipality,
these four submissions, detailed in the previous
paragraph, represent well-established valuation principles. The
dispute, according
to the Municipality, related not to the valuation
method to be used, but about what had to be valued.
[9]
During the hearing of the appeal, the parties concluded a settlement
in terms of which the market
value of the property would be
R550 000 000 for the period 1 March 2012 to 30 June 2014,
and R750 000 000 for
the period 1 July 2014 to 30 June
2018. The then VAB accepted this settlement.
[10]
During February 2018, the general valuation roll reflected that the
property was valued at R1 300 000 000.
Leopard Creek
objected to this value but was unsuccessful. On 24 July 2018, the
second appeal was lodged against the decision to
dismiss the
objection.
[11]
The appeal commenced before the VAB on 9 July 2019. Leopard Creek led
evidence of three expert witnesses
Mr David Nagle (Mr Nagle), Mr Sam
Hackner (Mr Hackner) and Mr Norman Roger Griffiths (Mr Norman
Griffiths). Mr Nagle is a
property developer who has extensive
experience in property development and golf course developments. He
is known as a potential
purchaser of golf course developments. He
testified about factors that he, as a purchaser of golf course
developments in a market,
would consider when taking a decision on
purchasing a golf course development. Mr Nagle testified further on
the price he would
pay that would make the development financially
viable.
[12]
Mr Hackner, is a qualified chartered accountant who has worked in the
property business since 1981. He has
personal knowledge of the sport
of golf, and particularly the decline in number of golf course
developments worldwide. He
testified what could be done
to make Leopard Creek viable.
[13]
Mr Norman Griffiths has been a property valuer for 51 years. He has
been active as a valuer throughout Southern
Africa and is an
independent property valuer and consultant. He has extensive
experience in the valuation of property of all types,
including land
developed as golf estates. He testified as to the various methods and
techniques that may be employed to determine
the market value of the
property.
[1]
[14]
The Municipality’s only witness was Mr Derrick Griffiths, a
registered professional valuer with more
than 30 years’
valuation experience. He prepared a valuation on behalf of the
Municipality and testified regarding the purpose
of the valuation of
the property. According to Mr Derrick Griffiths, it is the duty of
the valuer when determining the market value
of the property, to
place himself in the shoes of the willing buyer and willing seller
and consider all factors that would influence
their minds in
determining the purchase price. He described the valuation method
that he had adopted as a combination of the sales
comparison and the
cost methods.
[15]
On 15 July 2020 the VAB accepted the valuation method proposed to by
Mr Derrick Griffiths and dismissed
the appeal. It did so without
assessing and evaluating the evidence of the witnesses, particularly
the evidence of Leopard Creek’s
witnesses. The VAB also did not
give reasons for preferring the evidence of Mr Derrick Griffiths to
that of Mr Norman Griffiths.
In
the high court
[16] In
November 2020 Leopard Creek brought an application in the high court
in which it claimed the following
relief:
‘
1.
that the [VAB’s] decision of 15 July 2020 (“the impugned
decision”)
is reviewed and set aside;
2.
substituting the following for the impugned decision:
2.1
the appeal is upheld;
2.2
the valuation method applied by Mr Norman Griffiths is accepted; and
2.3
the market value of the property Portion 20 of the Farm Riverside No
173, Registration Division
JJ, 335, 7245 hectares in extent and held
by Deed of Transfer T67964/1988 as at 1 July 2017 is determined to be
R330 000 000.00.
. . . .’
[17]
Leopard Creek’s grounds for the review were as follows. The
VAB’s conclusion was biased, as it
rejected Leopard Creek’s
valuation method and accepted the Municipality’s method without
any basis and without furnishing
any valid reasons. It failed to
comply with the mandatory procedure prescribed by ss 45
(1) and 46 of the MPRA, in that
it failed to determine the market
value of the property by determining what the property would have
realised if sold in the open
market by a willing seller to a willing
buyer. The decision was influenced by errors of law including the
failure to apply the
correct test and the failure to adhere to the
prescripts contained in the MPRA. The VAB failed to consider relevant
evidence and
took into consideration irrelevant evidence. The
decision was taken arbitrarily and capriciously. The decision was not
rationally
connected to either the purpose for which it was taken, or
the reasons given. The decision was therefore irrational.
[18]
The high court granted the order reviewing and setting aside the
VAB’s decision and remitted the matter
to a differently
constituted VAB for a decision. Its
main finding in granting
the application was that the VAB failed to comply with the mandatory
and material procedures prescribed
by the empowering provisions of
the MPRA. The high court held that:
‘
[112]
. . . the assessment of the expert evidence remains critical so that
the reasoning of the Court making the decision
of selecting the
evidence of the one expert against that of another is not left in
doubt. A perusal of the judgment of the [VAB]
reveals that the
evidence of Messrs Nagle, Hackner, and Peak was summarised but there
is no appraisal of why such evidence, on
which Mr Norman Griffiths
based his valuation, had to succumb to that of Mr [Derrick]
Griffiths nor are there reasons for
the unconditional acceptance of
the latter’s evidence.
[113]
The [VAB] cannot evade the obligation of furnishing reasons for its
decision on the basis of the case of Dormehl
supra
where it
was held that it does not have to accept the evidence of any witness,
even of the only witness. Where a body such as the
[VAB] does so,
however, it must do it with justification. This is what I am unable
to find in the judgment of the [VAB].
.
. . .
[117]
How the [VAB] reconciled that approach and finally accepted [Mr
Derrick Griffiths] testimony leaves me baffled.
More extraordinary is
[theVAB]’s claim that Mr Derrick Griffiths had used the
comparable sale and cost methods to arrive
at his valuation. Mr
Derrick Griffiths himself stated in his evidence that the comparable
sale method could not find favour with
him because there has not been
a similar transaction to which the subject property could be
compared. To simply state that the
evidence of the witnesses of
[Leopard Creek] is not acceptable smacks of bias in the sense
envisaged in Section 6(2)
(a)(
iii) of PAJA and therefore
vulnerable to a review.’(Citation omitted.)
[19]
Finally, the high court found that the VAB’s rejection of the
evidence of Leopard Creek’s witnesses
on the basis that ‘it
is trite that where one is confronted with two versions that are
radically different, one of them ought
to prevail over the other’,
was unreasonable without a comprehensive assessment of the versions
and without furnishing reasons
why the one is preferred to the other.
In
this Court
[20]
The issues to be determined in this appeal are the following:
(a)
Did the VAB assess and evaluate the evidence of the expert witnesses.
(b)
Did the VAB give reasons for the rejection of the evidence of Leopard
Creek’s expert witnesses.
(c)
Did the VAB give reasons for preferring the evidence of Mr Derrick
Griffiths to that of Mr Norman Griffiths.
(d)
If not, can this Court substitute the VAB and assess and evaluate the
evidence and give reasons to its decision.
[21]
Counsel for the Municipality submits that the high court erred in
concluding that the VAB’s failure
to comprehensively assess the
evidence of Leopard Creek’s expert witnesses, before rejecting
it, amounted to bias and rendered
its decision unreasonable. Counsel
submits that courts, in carrying out their task of ensuring that
administrative decisions fall
within the bounds of reasonableness,
must guard against usurping the function of administrative agencies.
[22]
Counsel referred to the test, stated in
Carephone
(Pty) Ltd v Marcus NO and Others
,
[2]
namely whether there is ‘a rational objective basis
justifying the connection made by the administrative decision-maker
between the material properly available to him and the conclusion he
or she eventually arrived at?’ He submits that the issues
before the VAB have been exhaustively dealt with in two hearings,
before two differently constituted VABs. The same expert witnesses
ie
Mr Norman Griffiths and Mr Derrick Griffiths, gave evidence in
both hearings and the parties were represented by the same
legal
representatives. The evidence and the details of the information put
before the VAB on both occasions, the submission continues,
are known
to both the Municipality and Leopard Creek. Therefore, according to
the Municipality, it cannot be said that the reasons
of the VAB are
not clear or adequate, and that either party did not have a clear
understanding why their cases were successful
or unsuccessful.
[23]
The above submissions are ill-conceived for the following reasons.
First, the VAB is an administrative decision-making
body, tasked with
an administrative duty to decide appeals brought before it. In doing
so, it must assess and evaluate the evidence
before it and give
reasons for its decision. This is the core function of the
decision-making body. It cannot be said that, because
the facts of
the appeal are known to the parties, the VAB can abdicate its duties
and responsibilities including giving reasons
for its decision.
[24]
Second, the issue between the parties was that the Municipality was
to determine the market value of the
subject property, and to levy a
rate on that property. To do so, the Municipality had to comply with
the provisions of s 30(1)
of the MPRA that requires it to carry
out a general valuation of the subject property. This can only be
done with the assistance
of expert valuers. Therefore, the evidence
of both Mr Norman Griffiths and Mr Derrick Griffiths was of
considerable importance
in deciding on the correct approach to the
valuation, or the methods to be used, in determining the market value
of the property.
Their evidence was to be assessed, evaluated and
analysed to determine its quality and cogency. This would have
assisted
the VAB to find and give reasons why the method testified to
by one is preferred to that of another. This, the VAB failed to do.
[25]
Leopard Creek contends that the VAB’s failure to give reasons
for its decision deprived it of its constitutional
right to a fair
administrative process. To this, the Municipality responds that the
VABs are specialist tribunals, and their members
have a unique
understanding of the specialist valuation concept. They deal with
appeals from several municipalities in the country.
To expect the
VABs to formulate reasons in the same manner as a court of law would
cripple the very important administrative function
of such boards.
The Municipality submits further that it was not necessary for the
VAB to give reasons for its decision because
the parties who
participated in the appeal were well informed of the context and knew
exactly what was sought to be conveyed in
the findings of the VAB’s
decision.
[26]
This submission is without merit. It does not matter how many cases
the VAB deals with. It must assess every
piece of evidence, analyse
it and provide reasons for its decision. Its failure to do so
rendered its decision irrational and unlawful.
I find that the high
court was correct to set the decision of the VAB aside.
Substitution
[27]
Appeals and reviews are ways in which the appeal court may reconsider
a decision of the court of first instance.
An appeal is appropriate
where it is claimed that the decision-maker came to a wrong
conclusion on the facts or the law. The appeal
court would then have
to declare the first decision correct or incorrect on the merits or
the law. Review on the other hand, is
concerned with whether the
decision was arrived at in an acceptable manner and whether the
correct procedure was followed in arriving
at that decision. The
focus is on the process and on the way in which the decision-maker
came to the challenged conclusion. This
distinction has been found to
be largely artificial.
[28]
In
Rustenburg
Platinum-Mines (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and Others
,
[3]
this Court explained why it is difficult to draw a line between a
review and an appeal. It stated:
‘
.
. . This is partly because process-related scrutiny can never blind
itself to the substantive merits of the outcome. Indeed, under
PAJA
the merits to some extent always intrude, since the court must
examine the connection between the decision and the reasons
the
decision-maker gives for it, and determine whether the connection is
rational. The task can never be performed without taking
some account
of the substantive merits of the decision.’
[4]
[29]
Again in
Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and Others
,
[5]
this Court remarked that ‘whilst at times it may be difficult
to draw the line [between appeal and review], the distinction
must
not be blurred.’
[6]
Difficult as it may be, the distinction must not be obliterated as
this will violate the doctrine of separation of powers. This
doctrine
holds that it would be unacceptable for judges to pronounce on the
merits of an administrative decision, for they would
be usurping the
functions entrusted by the Constitution to the executive branch or a
body, created by legislation or the Constitution,
such as a VAB.
[30]
Against this backdrop, I am of the view that this Court cannot
substitute the decision of the VAB and analyse
and evaluate the
evidence of the witnesses and give reasons. To do so, would be
usurping the functions entrusted by the Constitution
to the VAB.
[31]
In dealing with the review application, the high court considered the
merits and made findings. In my view,
the high court was entitled to
consider the merits as it did, as this was done in the process of
examining the connection between
the decision and the reasons the VAB
gave for it. The problem arose when the high court made findings on
the merits, that the method
testified to by Mr Norman Griffiths was
the correct one to determine the valuation value of the property.
This was the duty of
the VAB and not the high court. It is for this
reason that I would consider the findings by the high court not to be
binding on
the differently constituted VAB to which the matter has
been referred.
[32]
For these reasons, I make the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
F E MOKGOHLOA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
S
J Grobler SC with A Liversage SC
Instructed
by:
AM
Vilakazi Tau Inc Attorneys, Pretoria
Lovius Block Inc,
Bloemfontein
For
the third respondent:
F H
Terblanche SC with H C Bothma SC and K S
Moloisane
Instructed
by:
Webber
Wentzel, Johannesburg
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
These techniques are -
(a)
comparable sales of Leopard Creek to other
Golf Estate as to location,size, town planning rights,physical
features etc.
(b)
investment approach – whether the sale of the property would
generate further income such as rentals or future sale.
(c)
replacement cost approach – where a seller or a buyer may have
regerd to costs of replacing certain improvements.
[2]
Carephone
(Pty) Ltd v Marcus NO and Others
[1998] ZALAC 11
;
1999 (3) SA 304
(LAC) para 37.
[3]
Rustenburg
Platinum Mines Ltd (Rustenburg Section) v Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration
and Others
[2006] ZASCA 175
;
[2007] 1 All SA 164
(SCA);
2007 (1) SA
576
(SCA);
[2006] 11 BLLR 1021
(SCA); (2006) 27 ILJ 2076. Though the
judgment was reversed by the Constitutional Court on appeal in
Sidumo
and Another v Rusternburg Platinum Mines
infra, the Constitutional Court did not cast doubt on the remarks
concerning the nature of the appeal and review.
[4]
Ibid
para 31.
[5]
Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and Others
2009
(3) SA 493
(SCA) (
Shoprite
Checkers
).
See also
Sidumo
and Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others
[2007]
ZACC 22
;
[2007] 12 BLLR 1097
(CC);
2008 (2) SA 24
(CC); (2007) 28
ILJ 2405 (CC)
[2007] ZACC 22
; ;
2008 (2) BCLR 158
(CC) paras 109 and 244.
[6]
Shoprite
Checkers
para
28.
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