Case Law[2023] ZASCA 25South Africa
The Thaba Chweu Rural Forum & Others v The Thaba Chweu Local Municipality and others (737/2021) [2023] ZASCA 25 (14 March 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
14 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Constitutional Law – local government – Municipal Property Rates Act 6 of 2004 – whether the impugned rates notices ought to be declared invalid – what appropriate order should be made in terms of s 172(1)(b) of the Constitution – whether the appellants were entitled to the interdictory relief claimed.
Judgment
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## The Thaba Chweu Rural Forum & Others v The Thaba Chweu Local Municipality and others (737/2021) [2023] ZASCA 25 (14 March 2023)
The Thaba Chweu Rural Forum & Others v The Thaba Chweu Local Municipality and others (737/2021) [2023] ZASCA 25 (14 March 2023)
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sino date 14 March 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 737/2021
In the matter between:
THE THABA CHWEU RURAL
FORUM
First Appellant
APPELLANTS LISTED IN
ANNEXURE “A”
TO THE NOTICE OF
APPEAL
Second and Further Appellants
and
THE THABA CHWEU LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY First
Respondent
THE SPEAKER OF THE
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL
OF THE THABA CHWEU
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY Second
Respondent
THE MUNICIPAL MANAGER
OF
THE THABA CHWEU LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY Third
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
The
Thaba Chweu Rural Forum & Others v The Thaba Chweu Local
Municipality and others
(737/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 25
(14 March 2023)
Coram:
MOLEMELA, NICHOLLS and MOTHLE JJA and MALI and
SIWENDU AJJA
Heard:
15
November 2022
Delivered:
14
March 2023
Summary:
Constitutional Law – local
government – Municipal Property Rates Act 6 of 2004 –
whether the impugned rates notices
ought to be declared invalid –
what appropriate order should be made in terms of s 172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution – whether the appellants were entitled to
the interdictory relief claimed.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Mpumalanga Division of the
High Court, Mbombela (Legodi JP with Sigogo and Greyling-Coetzer AJJ
concurring, sitting as a court
of appeal):
1.
The appeal succeeds.
2.
The order of the Full Court of the
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court is set aside and
substituted by the following order:
‘
2.1
The rate notices published by the respondents in terms of
s 14(2)
of the
Local Government: Municipal Property Rates Act 6 of 2004
in
the Mpumalanga Provincial Gazette of 10 July 2009, 9 July 2010;
27 May 2011, 29 August 2012; 19 August 2013, 22 July 2015;
22 July
2016; 25 August 2017 and 6 October 2018, as well as the further
rates notice published by the respondents dated
July 2014 in respect
of the 2014/2015 financial year, including the resolutions of the
municipal council on which all such rates
notices were based, where
applicable, are hereby declared unlawful and invalid to the extent
that they relate to agricultural properties
used or permitted to be
used for crop and/or animal farming (agricultural property);
2.2
The respondents may recover from the members of the appellants,
only the amounts of the agricultural
property rates calculated based
on the
Local Government: Municipal Property Rates Act 6 of 2004
and
the Regulations promulgated in terms thereof, less any amount in
excess of the legally permissible limit, in respect of each
financial
year from 2009 to 2018;
2.3
The respondents are further liable to credit the accounts of the
appellants’ members
who were levied and paid municipal rates,
only to the extent of the amounts in excess of the legally
permissible limit of the rates
chargeable to the agricultural
properties in its municipal jurisdiction in respect of each financial
year from 2009 to 2018; and
2.4
On recovery of arrear municipal rates due, the respondents may charge
the rate of interest
as published in terms of
section 96
read with
section 97(1)
(e)
of the
Local Government: Municipal Systems
Act 32 of 2000
in respect of each financial year from 2009 to 2018.
3.
The respondents are ordered in future not
to levy property rates on any agricultural property in its municipal
jurisdiction at a
rate that exceeds that legally prescribed and, such
rate must be determined in terms of the procedures prescribed by law.
4.
The first respondent
is ordered to pay the appellants the costs of the appeal, including
costs of two counsel, but excluding the
costs of delivering the heads
of argument after the hearing of the appeal. The costs against the
first respondent shall include
the costs in the high court and
those on appeal in the full court of the Mpumalanga Division of the
High Court.
JUDGMENT
Mothle
JA (Molemela and Nicholls JJA and Mali and Siwendu AJJA concurring)
[1]
At
the heart of the dispute that triggered the litigation which resulted
in this appeal, is a challenge by the first, second and
further
appellants to the lawfulness and validity of the municipal rates
imposed on their properties, through resolutions and notices
published by the Thaba Chweu Local Municipality, cited as the first
respondent, (the municipality). The municipality was established
for
the area of Lydenburg/Mashishing in Mpumalanga. The municipal rates
at issue in this appeal were levied on farm properties,
(as opposed
to urban or residential properties) during the period 1 July 2009 to
1 June 2017.
[2]
The
factual background is briefly that prior to the advent of
Constitutional democracy in South Africa in 1994, farms in general
were excluded from the rateable properties within the jurisdiction of
municipalities. Consequently, the farm owners were not levied
municipal rates for their properties. In establishing the local
sphere of government, the Constitution
[1]
put
paid to that arrangement. Section 151(1) of the Constitution provides
that ‘The local sphere of government consists of
municipalities
which must be established for the whole of the territory of the
Republic.’ As a result, every patch of land
in the Republic,
including farms, fell under one or other municipality. For the first
time, the farm owners became liable for payment
of municipal rates
levied on their properties, as a source of revenue for the
municipality.
[3]
This
development, compounded by the fact that the levying of the municipal
rates was unlawfully implemented by the municipality,
caused
discontent on the part of the farmers whose properties fell under its
jurisdiction. In 2008, and in anticipation of the
municipal rates
being levied, the farm owners resolved to establish a voluntary
association named the Thaba Chweu Rural Forum (the
appellants). The
appellants’ purpose was, amongst others, to represent the
farmers in their engagement with the municipality,
mainly on the
issue of levying of municipal rates. Some of the farmers have been
refusing to pay the rates levied since inception
in July 2009.
[4]
The legal framework for the levying of
municipal rates has its genesis in s 229 of the Constitution, which
empowers a municipality
to impose rates on property and surcharges on
fees for services provided by or on behalf of the municipality and,
if authorised
by national legislation, other taxes, levies and duties
appropriate to local government. The national legislation is the
Local
Government: Municipal Property Rates Act 6 of 2004 (the Rates
Act). Section 3 of the Rates Act provides that a municipality must
exercise its powers to levy rates, subject to the other sections of
the same statute, including the Regulations promulgated by
the
Minister for Provincial and Local Government (Minister) in terms of s
19 of the Rates Act, as well as the policy resolutions
adopted by the
municipal council in terms of s 14 of the Rates Act.
[5]
Section 8 of the Rates Act authorises the
municipality to levy different rates for different categories of
properties. The categories
of properties for levying rates are
determined according to the actual or permitted use of that property
and its location within
the municipality. The Regulations as
published by the Minister in terms of s 19 of the Rates Act,
determined that the effective
rate to be levied on agricultural
properties conducting crop and/or animal farming, may not exceed 25%
of the effective rate levied
on residential properties. The rates are
generally determined as the amount in a Rand, calculated on the
market value of the property,
which market value is in turn
determined by a valuer appointed by a municipality. The valuation of
the properties are published
in the valuation roll in terms of
sections 30; 33(1) and 49(1) of the Rates Act.
[6]
The
appellants allege that between 2009 and 2017, the respondents failed
to meaningfully comply with the provisions of the Rates
Act, the
Regulations and the municipal councils’ policy concerning the
levying of property rates and granting of rebates.
The appellants
further contended that in determining the rates payable, the
respondents failed to consult with the population in
the area, as
prescribed by law. Each financial year, they levied excessive rates
above the 25% prescribed ratio for agricultural
properties and failed
to
comply with the process
allowing objections to the valuations in terms of s 49 of the Rates
Act, specifically in respect of the
compilation of the 2014/2015
second valuation roll. As a result, there are recorded examples of
farm properties that experienced
sudden massive increases in market
value, such as a company known as Moon Cloud 25 (Pty) Ltd, whose
property’s market value
appreciated from R1 170 000 since the
2009 initial valuation, to R12 180 000 in the 2014/2015 second
valuation roll. That
increase in market value of the property
translated in the levied rates of that property escalating from
R1 432.08 levied
in the 2013/2014 financial year to R149 448.60
levied from the 2014/2015 and subsequent financial years.
[7]
For
each of the years between 2009 and 2017, the appellants attempted,
without success, to persuade the respondents to enable public
participation in the process. In 2017, the appellants turned to the
Gauteng Division of the High Court Pretoria, functioning as
the
Mpumalanga Circuit Court in Mbombela, Mpumalanga (the high court),
for appropriate relief.
[8]
The
following is a brief trajectory of the litigation that ensued,
resulting in the appeal before this Court. On 7 June 2017, the
appellants launched an application in the high court which had two
parts: A and B. In part A, they essentially sought relief against
the
municipality, the Speaker of the Municipal Council (the second
respondent) and the Municipal Manager of the municipality (the
third
respondent), (in this judgment collectively referred to as ‘the
respondents’). The respondents include the previous
officials
of the municipality as the predecessors who were in office at the
time the impugned rates were levied. The relief sought
against the
respondents was that they be ordered to deliver to the appellants,
their members’ property rates accounts for
the period 1 July
2009 to 1 June 2017, including the notices published and resolutions
adopted by the municipal council concerning
the determination of the
rates, as well as copies of minutes of meetings held concerning the
rates, and ancillary relief.
[9]
The
relief sought in part A was granted by Basson J on 20 August 2018.
After receiving some of the documents from the respondents,
it became
evident that not all the appellants’ members were conducting
agricultural farming in crops and/or animals as defined,
and
therefore some of them did not qualify for the rates determined for
that category of properties. Some of these excluded members’
farms fell under categories of properties conducting business in
game-farming, hospitality and residence. These categories were
not
levied the rates which are the subject of the review in this case.
[10]
Part
B of the application, which became opposed by the respondents as
successors in title of the erstwhile municipal office bearers,
was
placed under case management. On 2 October 2018, the Judge President
of the high court, following a case management meeting,
decided on a
truncated period of exchanging affidavits and documents between the
parties, and scheduled the date of hearing as
10 June 2019. In part B
the appellants sought relief, in essence that the rates published
annually in the Mpumalanga Provincial
Gazette in terms of s 14(2) and
(3) the Rates Act, as well as publication of further rates notices in
newspapers and the resolutions
of the municipality’s council,
authorising the publication of such rates notices, be declared
unlawful and be set aside.
Further, that the municipality be directed
not to levy property rates on any farm or agricultural property in
its municipal area
at a rate exceeding the prescribed ratio of 1:025,
i.e. 25% of the effective rate applicable to the residential
property, as contemplated
in s 8 of the Act, unless the Regulations
providing for the effective rates are repealed or amended by the
Minister in terms of
s 83 read with s 19(1)
(b)
of the Rates Act.
[11]
The
respondents in their answering affidavit conceded that at all
relevant times mentioned in the founding affidavit, the levying
of
property rates on agricultural farms, the adoption of resolutions by
the municipal council concerning the rates as well as the
published
notices concerning the impugned rates, were inconsistent with the
Rates Act, and therefore unlawful and invalid. The
records of the
municipal council including notices and minutes of meetings
evidencing the determination of the second valuation
roll for the
2014/2015 and subsequent years, went missing. The significance of
these missing documents means that there is no evidence
in support of
the determination of the municipality’s second valuation roll.
It is this second evaluation roll adopted in
the 2014/2015 financial
year, which caused massive increases in property values, resulting in
the determination and levying of
inflated municipal rates.
[12]
All
these factual allegations were not disputed. In fact, the respondents
concede that much. However, though the respondents do
not dispute
that their predecessors acted unlawfully, they remain opposed to the
order sought by the appellants to have the impugned
property rates
set aside. The basis of opposing the relief is that the appellants
delayed instituting the litigation. The respondents
further contend
that consequent to such delay, a retrospective invalidation of the
rates levied will impact on the budgets approved
in the previous
years, resulting in prejudice to the municipality. The prejudice lies
in the fact that the subsequent budgets,
of which the municipal rates
were an integral part, were determined and are reliant on the basis
of the budgets of the preceding
financial years. As such, it will not
be feasible to turn the clock back, as it were.
[13]
The
judgment of the high court on part B was delivered by Jansen van
Rensburg AJ on 4 July 2020. The high court declined to grant
an order
declaring the conduct of the respondents unlawful and therefore
invalid, and also declined to set aside the impugned rates,
as a
consequence of the invalidity. The court essentially ordered the
respondents that in future, they must comply with the statutory
prescripts applicable to Local Government in regard to tabling,
amending and publication of future budgets, and awarded costs against
the respondents.
[14]
The
appellants, aggrieved by the failure of the high court to order a
declaration of constitutional invalidity and setting aside
of the
impugned rates, turned to the Full Court of the Mpumalanga Division
of the High Court (the full court). The respondents
lodged a
cross-appeal, also contending that the high court erred in
failing to issue a declaration of invalidity, but requested
the full
court, for reasons stated in para 11 of this judgment, not to grant
an order setting aside the unlawful and invalid conduct
of the
respondents. The respondent also challenged the order of the high
court awarding costs to the appellants.
[15]
The full court’s judgment was
delivered by Legodi JP on 26 March 2020. Although the full
court judgment accepted
that the high court had erred in not
declaring the unlawful actions of the municipality invalid, the full
court refrained from
granting any order setting aside the invalid
conduct of the respondents, mainly because the appellants had delayed
in approaching
the high court. The full court, as had the high court,
included an order to the respondents, in a form of what was no more
than
an admonition to the effect that in future, the respondents
should comply with the legal prescripts.
[16]
The appellants, still aggrieved that the
full court did not set aside the unlawful conduct of the respondents,
successfully approached
this Court on petition. Initially in their
papers, the appellants sought relief in this Court that the unlawful
and invalid municipal
rates be set aside. At the commencement of the
hearing of the appeal, the appellants’ counsel indicated that
the appellants
who are yet to pay the municipal rates, are willing to
pay the amount owing minus the portion which exceeded the
prescribed
ratio of 1:025 of the effective rate applicable to the residential
property, as contemplated in s 8(2)
(b)
of the Rates Act.
The
appellants no longer pressed for the relief from the Court setting
aside the impugned conduct.
The
respondents declined that offer and insisted on their demand to
recover the full amount of the impugned rates levied, including
the
rates unlawfully imposed in excess of the legally prescribed limit
for agricultural properties.
[17] The
appellants’ contention is based on s 172(1) of the Constitution
which provides:
‘
When
deciding a constitutional matter within its power, a court—
(a)
must
declare that any law or conduct that is inconsistent with the
Constitution is invalid to the extent of its inconsistency; and
(b)
may
make any order that is just and equitable, including-
(i)
an order
limiting the retrospective effect of the declaration of invalidity;
and
(ii)
an order
suspending the declaration of invalidity for any period and on any
conditions, to allow the competent authority to correct
the defect.’
[18]
The
respondents having conceded the appellants’ request for the
declaration of invalidity in terms of s 172(1)
(a)
of
the Constitution, the crisp issue in this appeal is therefore,
whether this Court should grant an order that is just and equitable
in terms of s 172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution.
This
form of relief is discretionary. The Court may, for reasons of equity
and in the interest of justice, invoke such relief where
circumstances of the case cry out for justice to be served.
[19]
The
judgment of the full court relied on this Court’s majority
decision in
South
African Property Owners Association v Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality and others
[2]
(
SAPOA
).
In
SAPOA
,
the members of the property-owners association, who were business
property owners in Johannesburg, applied to have the court review
and
set aside, alternatively to declare null and void, the 2009/2010
budget determined on the property rate of 1,54 cents in the
Rand,
levied by the Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality in contravention
of s 19 of the Rates Act. The high court had found
that the levying
of property rates is not an integral part of the budget process.
Consequently, the high court concluded thus:
‘. . . the grant
of the relief sought by
SAPOA
was not in the public interest because it would probably bankrupt the
City and, as a result, the City would not be able to perform
its
constitutional duties.
’
As
a result, SAPOA’s contention that the City of Johannesburg
failed to comply with the prescribed statutory requirements
and
procedures in imposing the impugned rates, was dismissed. SAPOA
turned to this Court on appeal.
[20]
The
majority
[3]
in
this Court upheld the appeal. In doing so, the Court, contrary to the
high court, declared that the City of Johannesburg in fact
and in
law, failed to comply with the prescribed statutory requirements and
procedures in imposing the impugned rates. The impugned
rates were,
however, not set aside. Instead, this Court further declared that in
future, the first respondent was obliged to comply
with the
provisions of the Rates Act and other listed legal prescripts.
Further and contrary to the finding by the high court,
the majority
in this Court also concluded that the municipal rates are an integral
part of the budget process. The majority reasoned
in para 71 and 72
as follows:
’
Although
counsel on behalf of SAPOA persisted in having the rate improperly
imposed set aside, he advisedly recognised the difficulties
of a
court even attempting to set aside the 2009/2010 budget, two
budgetary periods thereafter. Successive budgets are based on
surpluses or deficits from prior periods. One is built on the outcome
of the other. This, in modern language, is called a knock-on
effect.
The legality of the budgets for the successive periods has not been
challenged. Considering the knock-on effect it must
be so that any
subsequent increase in rates would have owed its genesis to and been
premised on the rate presently sought to be
impugned.
Another factor militating
against the setting aside of the 2009/2010 budget is that, given the
historical over-recovery from the
commercial sector, the lapse of
time – three years hence – will have a harsh impact
on struggling individual
home-owners who would not in the
intervening years have made provision for dealing with the effects of
the setting-aside of the
budget.’
[21]
The full court in the present appeal
declined to set aside the unlawful rates levied by the respondents or
grant some form of just
and equitable relief to the appellants.
Likewise, it grounded its reasoning on the delay by the appellants in
launching the litigation
against the respondents. It is common cause
that the appellants made their objections and disapproval on the
unlawfulness of the
imposition of the rates known to the respondents’
predecessors since 2009, with the view to achieve meaningful
participation
and consultation as prescribed by law. I will return to
this aspect later in this judgment. For the record, the impugned
rates
were levied from the 2009/2010 financial year. I turn to deal
with the full court’s finding that the appellants delayed
instituting
the litigation against the respondents.
[22]
In
the case of a review which is based on the grounds stated in s 6 of
the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA),
s 7(1)
thereof, prescribes the period within which such review has to be
instituted, which is 180 days.
[4]
The
subject of delay when instituting a review becomes more complex where
the grounds of review are based on the principle of legality
or
rationality, as in such instance, there is no statutorily prescribed
period within which a party may institute a review challenge.
[23]
The appellants’ application was
launched in 2017, attacking the rates imposed from 2009/2010
financial year. The respondents
in this Court, as before in the full
court, argued on authority of
SAPOA
,
that the delay by appellants instituting litigation would have ‘a
knock-on effect’ and result in the retrospective
invalidation
of the municipality’s previous annual budgets. Such
invalidation was expressed metaphorically as an exercise
similar to
‘unscrambling an egg’. The subject of delay in
instituting proceedings has been considered by our courts
over the
years. The approach in dealing with the delay in review applications
has somewhat crystallised.
[24]
In
Khumalo
and Another v MEC for Education, KwaZulu-Natal
[5]
(Khumalo),
the
Constitutional Court considering the significance of delay in
instituting proceedings, wrote:
‘
(A)
court should be slow to allow procedural obstacles to prevent it from
looking into a challenge to the lawfulness of an exercise
of public
power. But that does not mean that the Constitution has dispensed
with the basic procedural requirement that review proceedings
are to
be brought without undue delay or with a court’s discretion to
overlook a delay.’
[25]
In
2017, the same Court in
Merafong
City v AngloGold Ashanti Ltd
[6]
(
Merafong
),
addressing the question of delay when instituting review proceedings,
stated thus:
‘
The
rule against delay in instituting review exists for a good reason: to
curb the potential prejudice that would ensue if the lawfulness
of
the decision remains uncertain. Protracted delays could give rise to
calamitous effects. Not just for those who rely upon the
decision but
also for the efficient functioning of the decision-making body
itself.’
[7]
[26]
In
State
Information Technology Agency Soc Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
[8]
(
Gijima
),
the Constitutional Court wrote:
‘
The
reason for requiring reviews to be instituted without undue delay is
thus to ensure certainty and promote legality: time is
of outmost
importance.’ and
‘…
Here
it must count for quite a lot that SITA has delayed for just under 22
months before seeking to have the decision reviewed.
Also, from the
outset, Gijima was concerned whether the award of the contract
complied with legal prescripts. As a result, it raised
the issue with
Sita repeatedly. Sita assured it that a proper procurement process
had been followed.’
[27]
Gijima
was
followed by
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla
Construction
(Pty) Ltd
[9]
(
Buffalo
City
)
,
where
the Constitutional Court, formulating an approach on the question of
delay in bringing a legality review, was, firstly, to
examine whether
the delay was reasonable. This was to be answered by considering the
explanation proffered. If, indeed, the delay
was reasonable, the
matter could be heard. But, if the delay was unreasonable, the second
enquiry was whether the interests of
justice required it to be
overlooked, and the matter be heard. That would be decided by
considering four factors: (a) the consequences
of setting the
decision side; (b) the decision and the challenge to it (the asserted
illegality); (c) the applicant’s conduct;
and (d) the court’s
duty to declare the unlawful decision invalid. The Court found that
the explanation for the delay was
insufficient to declare it
reasonable but supported overlooking the delay due to the clear
illegality of the decision.
[28]
In
May 2018, this Court in the
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Lombardy Development (Pty) Ltd
& others
[10]
(
Lombardy
),
was seized with the issue of a municipality which failed to comply
with s 49 of the Rates Act, in compiling a supplementary valuation
roll. Lombardy instituted litigation some 22 months late. The Court
accepted the delay as reasonable due to the extent of illegality
in
the manner the supplementary valuation roll was determined by the
City of Tshwane. The Court upheld the high court’s
order
invalidating and setting aside
the supplementary roll of 2012, the effect of the order being that
until the causes of invalidity are addressed by the City, the
subsequent valuation rolls are consequentially invalid. Thus, the
impediment to granting a just and equitable relief resulting
in a
possible ‘
knock-on
effect on the budget’
as stated in
SAPOA
,
was not followed in
Lombardy
.
In any event, nothing in
SAPOA
suggests that in all such matters, any just and equitable relief
would be untenable.
SAPOA’s
order was considered and fashioned on the relief in the form of an
attack on the budget. The relief sought in this appeal is to
have the
rates set aside. (Own emphasis)
[29]
The period of delay in instituting
litigation in
SAPOA
was three years, while in
Lombardy
the delay was about 22 months, as in
Gijima.
In this appeal, the appellants delayed for a period of about 7
(seven) years. Applying the approach in
Buffalo
City
, the first inquiry is to determine
whether the delay was reasonable or unreasonable. If it was
reasonable, this Court will consider
the merits forthwith. If the
delay was unreasonable, the second inquiry to be conducted will be
whether the interest of justice
requires the delay to be overlooked.
This latter phase of the inquiry has to consider the four factors
referred to in
Buffalo City
.
[30]
The conspectus of the evidence in this
appeal, succinctly stated, reveals the following objective facts:
(a)
The respondents, being a local sphere of
government, blatantly and repeatedly flouted the applicable legal
provisions, specifically
by non-compliance with the provisions of the
Rates Act in regard to public participation. In levying some rates
and determining
the second valuation roll there is no evidence of
public participation on record. This conduct deprived aggrieved
ratepayers the
right to raise objections, should they elect to do so
as provided in s 49 of the Rates Act. Further, the respondents
disregarded
the Regulations when determining the rates of various
categories of properties, in particular, that of the agricultural
farming;
(b)
As distinct from other cases, here the
respondents contravened the law not as a once off event such as
unlawful awarding of a tender,
but were engaged in unlawful conduct
repeatedly in every financial year from 2009 to 2017, for the
duration of the delay. The unlawful
conduct continued, even when the
appellants, as in
Gijima,
were vociferous in consistently questioning the illegality of the
respondents’ conduct. The warnings were ignored;
(c)
The language of the applicable legislative
instruments was unambiguous. There was thus no question of legal
uncertainties which
required to be cleared through litigation. The
respondents simply refused to implement the clear letter of the law.
There is no
explanation for this conduct. As in
Lombardy,
the respondents offered no alternative relief to correct the
excessive municipal rates they imposed on the appellants.
(d)
Some members of the appellants have,
since 2009, misguidedly refused to pay any rebates, including what
they, on their own, determined
to be the correct applicable rate. At
the time of the hearing of this appeal, some were still withholding
payment, regardless of
the decision of the full court;
(e)
Apart from the fact that the appellants had
continuously made representations to the respondents in an attempt to
resolve the excessive
levying of rates, there was no explanation on
the papers as to the cause of the delay in instituting this
litigation; and
(f)
Should this Court grant any order
setting the impugned rates aside, the consequence of such relief
would be a retrospective
invalidation of the budgets of the previous
financial years, on which the current budgets are reliant. It is not
disputed that
the rates levied in a particular financial year are an
integral part of the budget of that financial year.
[31]
There are two reasons which stand out from
the objective facts above, which militate against a finding that the
delay was reasonable.
First, the appellants have not provided cogent
reasons or some explanation for the delay in instituting this
litigation. Second,
the seven-year delay was inordinate and, as a
result, the retrospective setting aside of the impugned rates will
render void the
approved and finalised budgets for the previous
financial years. For these two reasons, I conclude that the delay by
appellants
in commencing with this litigation was unreasonable.
However, that is not the end of the matter. The second inquiry as
formulated
in
Buffalo City
has
to be conducted. That is, whether the interest of justice dictate
that the delay be overlooked.
[32]
Before considering the second phase of the
inquiry, it is apposite to address the argument that by refusing to
pay, the appellants
initially set out to defy the authority of the
municipality to levy rates on their properties. This argument is, in
my view, irrelevant
to the determination of the issues in this
appeal. For starters, and assuming that the appellants had such
motive initially, which
must be said, seriously borders on sedition,
the futility of such a misguided stance became evident and was wisely
abandoned in
this Court. Not only have some of the appellants’
members since decided to pay the rates as levied, those still holding
out
have also, through their counsel in this Court, indicated their
intention to pay. It needs to be said, however, that whatever motive
that caused the appellants’ initial resolve not to pay, such
motive does not justify or confer any authority on the respondents
to
levy municipal rates in excess of the legally prescribed limit, as
some form of retribution. This contention by the respondents
concerning the appellants’ initial intent not to pay municipal
rates, is not relevant to the determination of the issues
in this
appeal.
[33]
Returning to the issue of the unreasonable
delay in instituting this litigation, this appeal is in two instances
distinguishable
from other cases where the conduct of the
municipality is under review. First, that the conduct of the
respondents in over-charging
the municipal rates was not a once off
contravention of the law, but was repeated over successive financial
years for the duration
of the delay, in spite of objections from
appellants. Second, the respondents are yet to recover from some of
the appellants’
members, the municipality’s unpaid rates
for the duration of the delay. These unpaid rates for agricultural
properties from
the previous financial years, would be reflected in
the current municipality budget as book debts.
[34]
The appellants’ members have
indicated their preparedness to pay the rates due. That would remedy
the default of having created
a shortfall on the budgets of the
municipality. However, the municipality cannot seriously argue that
it is entitled to claim the
spoils of unlawfully overcharging the
ratepayers. A balance must be struck between the two. The recovery of
such municipal rates
due for the past financial years, has to be
limited to the rate chargeable in terms of the law that was
applicable during that
financial year. Conversely, those members of
the appellants who have paid rates levied by the municipality in
excess of the limit
imposed by law, should be credited the amount
that was in excess of the rate permissible by law, in each financial
year. The scales
of justice and equity
must
be balanced, and the principle of legality must be vindicated.
It
is thus in the interest of justice that the unreasonableness of the
delay, under these circumstances, must be overlooked.
[35]
The practical difficulties attendant upon
retrospectively setting aside of the municipal rates and by
implication, the annual budgets,
was considered and acknowledged by
this Court in
SAPOA
.
However, in this appeal, such difficulties do not impede the
consideration of any order that would be just and equitable for the
appellants. This would be so because the favourable municipal rate
determined for the category of agricultural properties, serves
the
public interest, in that it is intended to ensure the continuous
supply of food, a factor vital for the nation’s food
security.
Therefore the delay in instituting litigation in this case cannot
impede the consideration of just and equitable relief
for the
appellants, which subject I turn to deal with.
[36]
In
Gijima the Constitutional Court held
[11]
:
‘
However,
under s 172(1)
(b)
of
the Constitution, a court deciding a constitutional matter has a wide
remedial power. It is empowered to make “any order
that is just
and equitable”. So wide is that power that it is bounded only
by considerations of justice and equity.’…
In
fashioning appropriate just and equitable relief, the approach in
Lombardy
finds
application whereby this Court has to weigh the consequences of
retrospectively invalidating the impugned municipality rates
against
the imperative to vindicate the principle of legality. Should matters
be left as they are, the respondents stand to unjustifiably
claim the
unlawfully imposed excessive portion of the municipal rates, levied
on the agricultural properties of the ratepayers.
The scale of
justice will be tilted.
[37]
It
is important to bear in mind that in the fabric of our Constitution,
the first respondent is a sphere of government and the second
and
third respondents are organs of state. Our constitutional democracy
is based on the rule of law. As stated by this Court in
Kalil
N.O. and Others v Mangaung Metropolitan Municipality and Others
:
[12]
'
. . . the function of public servants . . . is to serve the public,
and the community at large has the right to insist upon them
to act
lawfully and within the bounds of their authority . . .'.
[13]
The
municipalities are thus expected not only to be conversant with the
law applicable to their sphere of government, but also to
conduct
their affairs within the confines of the law. Should they fail to do
so, the courts should not be impeded from considering
and granting an
appropriate order that would have the effect of vindicating the
principle of legality. A trend should not develop,
or precedent
established, where there would be no consequences when municipalities
function outside the parameters of the law.
In
Lombardy
,
this Court cautioned against the implications of such practice when
it commented as follows:
‘
It
cannot plausibly be so that the City proceeded to arrange its affairs
in the confident expectation that ratepayers would not
challenge its
conduct. Indeed, the City does not even attempt to suggest what other
remedy might be preferable from the standpoint
of Justice and equity
other than that the Court should decline to set aside the 2012
valuation roll.’
[38]
In
order to mitigate the impact of the recovery of unpaid rates on the
appellants and also the respondents crediting the accounts
of the
appellants who paid in excess of the legal limit, the parties may
agree to reciprocally arrange the payments to be effected
over a
reasonable period, concurrent with the payment of the current rates,
or make other suitable arrangements. Just as the process
of
agricultural food production by the taxpayers has to be protected,
the inflow of revenue for the municipality must also not
be
disrupted.
[39]
After
hearing argument from counsel in Court, a request was directed to the
parties to deliver supplementary heads of argument specifically
on
Lombardy
and
its implication to the question of the relief in terms of s 172 of
the Constitution in this appeal. The counsel for both parties
delivered the supplementary heads of argument. Regrettably, the
submissions as regards
Lombardy
were scant and unhelpful. The parties took the opportunity to instead
rehash the arguments as presented in Court. I am of the view
that the
supplementary heads of argument should be excluded from any costs to
be awarded. The costs shall follow the result.
[40]
I accordingly make the following order:
1.
The Appeal succeeds.
2.
The order of the Full Court of the
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court is set aside and substituted by
the following order:
2.1
‘The rate notices published by the respondents in terms of
s 14(2)
of the
Local Government: Municipal Property Rates Act 6
of 2004
in the Mpumalanga Provincial Gazette of 10 July 2009, 9 July
2010; 27 May 2011, 29 August 2012; 19 August 2013, 22 July 2015; 22
July 2016; 25 August 2017 and 6 October 2018, as well as the
further rates notice published by the respondents dated July
2014 in
respect of the 2014/2015 financial year, including resolutions of the
municipal council on which all such rates notices
were based, where
applicable, are hereby declared unlawful and invalid to the extent
that they relate to agricultural properties
used or permitted to be
used for crop and/or animal farming (agricultural property);
2.2
The respondents may recover from the members of the appellants,
only the amounts of the agricultural
property rates calculated based
on the
Local Government: Municipal Property Rates Act 6 of 2004
and
the Regulations promulgated in terms thereof, less any amount in
excess of the legally permissible limit, in respect of each
financial
year from 2009 to 2018;
2.3
The respondents are further liable to credit the accounts of the
appellants’ members
who were levied and paid municipal rates,
only to the extent of the amounts in excess of the legally
permissible limit of the rates
chargeable to the agricultural
properties in respect of each financial year from 2009 to 2018; and
2.4
On recovery of arrear municipal rates due, the respondents may charge
the rate of interest
as published in terms of
section 96
read with
section 97(1)
(e)
of the
Local Government: Municipal Systems
Act 32 of 2000
in respect of each financial year from 2009 to 2018.
- The
respondents are ordered in future not to levy property rates on any
agricultural property in its municipal jurisdiction at
a rate that
exceeds that legally prescribed and, such rate must be determined in
terms of the procedures prescribed by law.’
The
respondents are ordered in future not to levy property rates on any
agricultural property in its municipal jurisdiction at
a rate that
exceeds that legally prescribed and, such rate must be determined in
terms of the procedures prescribed by law.’
- The
first respondent is ordered to pay to the appellants the costs of
the appeal, including costs of two counsel, but excluding
the costs
of delivering the heads of argument after the hearing of the appeal.
The costs against the first respondent shall include
the costs in
the high court and those on appeal in the full court of the
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court.
The
first respondent is ordered to pay to the appellants the costs of
the appeal, including costs of two counsel, but excluding
the costs
of delivering the heads of argument after the hearing of the appeal.
The costs against the first respondent shall include
the costs in
the high court and those on appeal in the full court of the
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court.
__________________________
SP MOTHLE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellants:
J
A van der Westhuizen
(with
G J Bensch)
Instructed
by:
Du-Toit
Smuts & Partners, Nelspruit
Phatshoane
Henney, Bloemfontein
For
respondents:
E
van As (with V Mabuza)
Instructed
by:
Len
Dekker Attorneys Inc, Pretoria
Rosendorff
Reitz Barry, Bloemfontein
[1]
The
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.
[2]
South
African Property Owners Association v Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality and others
[2012]
ZASCA 157; 2013 (1) SA 420 (SCA).
[3]
The
honourable Mr. Justice Southwood AJA, dissented as to the order
only.
[4]
Aurecon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town City
[2015] ZASCA 209; 2016 (2) SA 199 (SCA).
[5]
Khumalo
and another v MEC for Education, KwaZulu-Natal
2014 (5) SA 579
(CC)
(2014) (3) BCLR 333
;
[2013] ZACC 49
para 45.
[6]
Merafong
City v AngloGold Ashanti Ltd
[2016]
ZACC 35; 2017 (2) SA 211 (CC).
[7]
Ibid para 73.
[8]
State
Information Technology Agency Soc Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
[2017]
ZACC 40
(CC);
2018 (2) SA 23
(CC) (
Gijima
)
paras 44 and 53
[9]
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd
[2019]
ZACC 15
;
2019 (6) BCLR 661
(CC)
(
Buffalo
City
)
paras 43 to 66.
[10]
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Lombardy Development (Pty)
Ltd & Others
[2018]
ZASCA 77
;
[2018] 3 All SA 605
(SCA) (
Lombardy
).
[11]
Ibid
para 53
[12]
Kalil
N.O. and Others v Mangaung Metropolitan Municipality and others
[2014]
ZASCA 90; 2014 (5) SA 123 (SCA).
[13]
Ibid para 30.
sino noindex
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