Case Law[2023] ZASCA 158South Africa
Polokwane Municipality v Double Four Properties and Another ; Broadlands Home Owners Association NPC v Double Four Properties and Another (879/2022; 913/2022) [2023] ZASCA 158 (23 November 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
23 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Special leave to appeal – appealability of interim order – interim and interlocutory orders and special leave to appeal.
Judgment
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## Polokwane Municipality v Double Four Properties and Another ; Broadlands Home Owners Association NPC v Double Four Properties and Another (879/2022; 913/2022) [2023] ZASCA 158 (23 November 2023)
Polokwane Municipality v Double Four Properties and Another ; Broadlands Home Owners Association NPC v Double Four Properties and Another (879/2022; 913/2022) [2023] ZASCA 158 (23 November 2023)
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sino date 23 November 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 879/2022
In
the matter between:
POLOKWANE
MUNICIPALITY APPELLANT
and
DOUBLE
FOUR PROPERTIES FIRST
RESPONDENT
BROADLANDS
HOME OWNERS ASSOCIATION
NPC SECOND
RESPONDENT
AND
Case
no: 913/2022
In
the matter between:
BROADLANDS
HOME OWNERS ASSOCIATION
NPC APPELLANT
and
DOUBLE
FOUR PROPERTIES FIRST
RESPONDENT
POLOKWANE
MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Polokwane Municipality v
Double Four Properties and Another
(879/2022)
and
Broadlands Home Owners Association
NPC v Double Four Properties and Another
(913/2022)
[2023] 158 (23 NOVEMBER 2023)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, NICHOLLS and GOOSEN JJA and KOEN
and UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard:
16 November
2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the
parties’ representatives via email, publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date
and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 at 23 November 2023.
Summary:
Special leave to appeal – appealability of interim order –
interim and interlocutory orders and special leave to appeal.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Limpopo Division of the High Court, Polokwane (G C
Muller J and E M Makgoba JP and M G Phatudi J concurring sitting as
court of
appeal):
The
applications for special leave to appeal in case no 879/2022 and case
no 913/2022 are dismissed with costs, such costs to include
the costs
of two counsel, where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Unterhalter AJA
(Mocumie, Nicholls and Goosen JJA and Koen AJA concurring):
[1]
On 16 November 2023, we had two applications for special leave to
appeal before us. The applicants,
the Polokwane Municipality (the
municipality) and Broadlands Home Owners Association NPC
(Broadlands), seek special leave to appeal
against the order of the
full bench of the high court (Limpopo Division
per
Muller J,
Makgoba JP, and Phatudi J).
[2]
The above mentioned applications came before this Court in the
following way. Double Four Properties
(Pty) Ltd (Double Four) is the
owner of a property in Polokwane. An office park has been built on
this property. On an adjacent
property, there is a residential
estate, the Broadlands Estate, which Broadlands maintains. In
September 2018, Double Four was
informed by its tenant in the office
park that the drainage pipe was blocked. Upon investigation, Double
Four learnt that the drainage
system of the office park was connected
to the system of Broadlands which was used for the disposal of
sewage. Negotiations ensued
between Broadlands and Double Four, but
to no avail. Broadlands was only willing to receive the waste of the
office park for a
fee, but the fee could not be agreed. Ultimately,
Broadlands informed Double Four that it was making unlawful use of
the Broadlands
sewer system. And further, that Double Four was
unlawfully encroaching on the property of Broadlands by making use of
an extended
road to secure access. Broadlands declined to reconnect
the pipe that conveyed waste from the office park into the Broadlands
sewer
system.
[3]
Double Four also investigated how it had come about that the office
park’s sewer system had been
connected to that of Broadland’s,
rather than by way of a direct connection from the office park to the
sewerage system of
the municipality. Although the approved building
plans had allowed a direct connection, there were certain technical
difficulties
in effecting that connection. As a result, the
connection was made through the Broadland’s system, and the
prior owners of
the office park, a Trust, had concluded an agreement
with Broadlands for this connection, at an agreed fee. The
municipality recognised
the right of Double Four to be provided with
a sewer connection, but required Double Four to apply under the
By-laws for this connection.
Double Four declined to do so because it
contended that the prior owners, the Trust, must have applied to the
municipality, and
a new owner cannot be required to apply anew.
[4]
Double Four applied to the high court for interim relief. It sought
to compel the municipality to provide
a sewer connection; and that,
pending the provision of a permanent connection point, Broadlands
reconnect its sewer system to the
office park and that Broadlands be
interdicted from effecting a disconnection of this drainage
installation. Broadlands brought
a counter-application against Double
Four, seeking an order that Double Four remove its encroachments upon
its property. The application
came before Semenya J in the high
court. She dismissed Double Four’s application and granted
Broadlands’ counter-application.
With leave, the matter
proceeded to the full bench of the high court. The full court (
per
Muller J) upheld the appeal of Double Four, and made the
following order:
‘
2.1
That the first respondent is ordered to provide a sewer connection to
which the drainage installation
of the property known as portion 348
(a portion of portion 220) of the farm Tweefontein 915 situated at
the corner of Range Entrance
Street and Munnik Avenue, Broadlands
Estate, Polokwane (“the Baobab Office Park”) can be
connected.
2.2
That pending the provision of such permanent connection point, the
second respondent is
ordered to reconnect the sewer system of the
Baobab Office Park with that of the Broadlands Estate, alternatively
that the first
respondent is ordered to compel the second respondent
to do so.
2.3
That the second respondent be interdicted and restrained from
constructing, reconstructing,
altering, adding to or making any
permanent disconnection in or of any drainage installation which may
or will have an effect on
the proper functioning of the Applicants
drainage installation without first having obtained the lawful
permission of the first
respondent.
2.4
That the orders in prayers 2.1 to 2.3 above shall operate as an
interim interdict with immediate
effect pending the outcome of an
action instituted by the Applicant.
2.5
The costs of the application are reserved for the trial court to
consider.
3
The appeal against the counter-application is upheld.
4
The order is set aside and replaced with the following order:
“
4.1
The application is referred to evidence in respect of the
determination of the amount of compensation.
4.2
The costs of the counter application is reserved.”
5
No order is made in respect of the costs of the appeal of the
counter-application.’
[5]
Broadlands and the municipality applied to this Court for special
leave to appeal. This Court ordered
that both applications were
referred for oral argument in terms of
s 17(2)(d)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
. These applications served before us under
separate case numbers: the application of the municipality (case no
879/2022) and the
application of Broadlands (case no 913/2022).
[6]
At the commencement of oral argument before us, we requested counsel
to address us on two threshold
issues: first, whether the
municipality and Broadlands had satisfied the standard for the grant
of special leave, and second, the
connected issue as to whether the
orders of the high court were appealable. Having heard counsels’
submissions, we made the
following order: ‘The applications for
special leave to appeal in case no 879/2022 and case no 913/2022 are
dismissed with
costs, such costs to include the costs of two counsel,
where so employed’. We indicated that the reasons for this
order would
follow. These are the reasons.
[7]
The grant of an application for special leave to appeal requires the
existence of a reasonable prospect
of success in the appeal and a
showing of special circumstances. These special circumstances may
consist of a substantial point
of law, a manifest denial of justice,
or that the matter is one of great importance to the parties or the
public. This is not a
closed list.
[1]
[8]
We invited counsel to accept that in light of the Constitutional
Court’s decision in
Lebashe
,
[2]
we are bound to follow its holding that, in this Court, the
appealability of an interim interdict is decided by recourse to the
considerations stated in
Zweni
and the interests of justice. Counsel did not demur. The order of the
high court falls into two parts. First, it upholds Double
Four’s
appeal in respect of the dismissal of its application and grants
Double Four interim relief, pending the outcome of
an action to be
instituted by Double Four. Second, it upholds Double Four’s
appeal in respect of Broadlands’ counter-application,
and
refers the application to evidence to determine the amount of the
compensation.
[9]
I consider first the order of the high court that granted Double Four
interim relief. The municipality
contended that we should grant
special leave because the order required it to act in a manner that
was contrary to its By-laws
and that would offend against the rule of
law. The high court’s order put in place an arrangement that
would allow Double
Four’s office park to enjoy sewerage removal
facilities until such time as a court could make a final
determination as to
how, by whom, and under what requirement of
law such facilities were to provided. Counsel for the municipality
placed emphasis
upon the requirement in
s 4
of the municipality’s
standard water and sanitation By-laws (the By-law) that a consumer
who wishes to utilise the sewage
disposal system must apply on the
prescribed form for such services, and the Council must approve the
application. Double Four
has not made such an application and so the
high court could not order the municipality to do something that was
not in compliance
with its By-laws. Hence special leave is warranted.
[10]
That contention cannot be accepted. The order of the high court, as
against the municipality, was to provide a
sewer connection. The
municipality recognised its duty to do so, but only once
s 4
of the
By-law was complied with. The order of the high court does not
absolve Double Four from any obligation it may have to make
an
application under
s 4.
The order simply requires the municipality to
provide a sewer connection. That is a matter of providing the
required infrastructure.
Section 4
provides the procedure by which a
person may conclude an agreement with the municipality to provide for
sewage disposal. That is
a service that utilises the infrastructure
that the order requires. But the order does not compel the
municipality to enter into
an agreement with Double Four on any basis
other than what
s 4
of the By-law requires. Accordingly, the order
does not compel the municipality to do anything that is unlawful.
[11]
Broadlands pressed for special leave on the basis that the order of
the high court requiring it to reconnect the
sewer system was a final
order; it imposed upon a neighbour a duty without legal foundation;
and required Broadlands to provide
a service without compensation.
The order made by the high court is not final, either in form or
substance. It simply restores
the basis upon which sewage was
disposed of via the connection to Broadlands’ drainage pipe for
many years. It does so as
an interim measure to resolve a problem of
public health. The trial action will make a final determination as to
whether Broadlands
has a duty to make its property available for the
disposal of its neighbour’s sewerage.
[12]
Broadland’s complains that the high court’s order
requires it gratuitously to make use of its waste
disposal system for
the benefit of the office park. Although Broadlands and Double Four
had sought to negotiate a fee, they could
not reach agreement.
However, this affords Broadlands no basis to secure special leave. It
did not oppose the relief sought by
Broadlands because it was not
paid a fee. It simply contended it was within its rights to bring to
an end the use by the office
park of its waste disposal system.
Broadlands would be at liberty to approach the high court to revise
the interim regime so as
to claim some compensation for the access it
is compelled to provide. It has not thus far moved the high court to
do, and cannot
use this as a basis to be granted special leave.
[13]
There was some debate before us as to whether Broadlands had a legal
basis to cut access and whether this was a
point of law that
warranted special leave.
Section 96
of the By-law precludes any
person from making any permanent disconnection of any drainage
installation. Whether the conduct of
Broadlands falls within this
prohibition (or indeed amounts to a spoliation) are questions of law
that do not need to be determined
in an appeal before this court, and
hence do not found a basis for special leave. What is apparent from
the papers is that Broadlands
was not opposed to providing access to
its waste disposal system, the issue for it was simply the fee to be
charged. Broadlands,
as I have observed, could have raised this issue
and sought a reasonable fee, but it did not do so. The high court
decided upon
a status quo regime to meet the problem of sewage
disposal on an interim basis. The high court formed the view that
Double Four
enjoyed a prima facie right. There is no reason for this
court to revisit that judgment. In the action Double Four was
required
to institute, the rights and duties of the parties will no
doubt be decided. In the interim, there is no basis for this court to
do so.
[14]
As to the order of the high court concerning encroachment, the high
court simply ordered that the application was
referred to evidence to
determine the amount of compensation due by Double Four to
Broadlands. It was common ground that there
was an encroachment. The
high court set out the basis upon which it determined that there was
a just and equitable basis for Double
Four to compensate Broadlands
for its past and future encroachment. And those reasons rejected
Broadlands’ application for
the removal of the encroachment.
But this reasoning did not issue in any order, declaratory or
otherwise, to this effect.
The high court simply referred the
issue of compensation to evidence.
[15]
The high court thus made no final order at all. The referral it made
was to have a court bring the proceedings
to finality. Once this is
so, there is no final order to appeal. Broadlands is not seeking to
appeal the referral to evidence.
It takes issue with the reasons of
the high court that led it to make such an order. An appeal lies
against an order, not the reasons
for the order. Consequently, there
is no basis for an appeal to this court, much less one predicated
upon special leave. Furthermore,
this court will ordinarily not
entertain an appeal by way of piecemeal proceedings. And there is no
reason in this case to deviate
from that position.
[16]
It follows that the municipality has failed to make out a basis for
special leave to appeal. The order of the high
court is an interim
order as to the access issue. The order is simply interlocutory as to
the encroachment issue. In neither case
is the test for appealability
made out. The
Zweni
test is not satisfied, and no
consideration relevant to the interests of justice tilts the balance
in favour of the applicants.
On the contrary, this is a standard case
where the high court has imposed an interim regime as an equitable
holding measure that
is not appealable to this court. Much less is
this so in circumstances where the municipality and Broadlands have
enjoyed the benefit
of a detailed consideration of the merits of the
matter by a full bench. Consequently, the applicants have failed to
show that
special leave is warranted.
[17]
In the result, the order that was given at the conclusion of the oral
hearing is here repeated: The applications
for special leave to
appeal in case no 879/2022 and case no 913/2022 are dismissed with
costs, such costs to include the costs
of two counsel, where so
employed.
_________________________
D
N UNTERHALTER
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
Appellant
(879/2022):
J A L Pretorius
Instructed
by:
Mohale Inc., Polokwane
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
Appellant
(913/2022):
G J DIAMOND
Instructed
by:
Bosman Attorneys, Polokwane
Stander & Partners
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
First Respondent
(879/2022
& 913/2022):
L M Malan SC (with him W A De Beer)
Instructed
by:
Schoeman Oosthuizen Inc., Polokwane
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Cook v
Morrison and Another
2019 (5) SA 51
(SCA) para 8.
[2]
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
2023
(1) SA 535
(CC) paras 45 and 46.
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