Case Law[2023] ZASCA 165South Africa
Ubuhlebezwe Municipality v Ramsunder (873/2022) [2023] ZASCA 165; 2024 (5) SA 189 (SCA) (1 December 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Interdict – Final – Whether clear right established.
Judgment
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## Ubuhlebezwe Municipality v Ramsunder (873/2022) [2023] ZASCA 165; 2024 (5) SA 189 (SCA) (1 December 2023)
Ubuhlebezwe Municipality v Ramsunder (873/2022) [2023] ZASCA 165; 2024 (5) SA 189 (SCA) (1 December 2023)
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sino date 1 December 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 873/2022
In the matter between:
UBUHLEBEZWE
MUNICIPALITY
APPELLANT
and
HIRALALL
RAMSUNDER
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Ubuhlebezwe
Municipality v Ramsunder
(Case no
873/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 165
(1 December 2023)
Coram:
GORVEN, MEYER and WEINER JJA and CHETTY and
UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard:
10 November 2023
Delivered:
1 December
2023
Summary:
Interdict – Final – Whether clear
right established.
Interpretation
– National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103
of 1977 – s 4(1) read with the definitions
of ‘erection’
and ‘erect’ in s 1.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Kwa-Zulu Natal Division of
the High Court, Pietermaritzburg (Phoswa AJ, sitting as court of
first instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
JUDGMENT
Meyer JA (Gorven and
Weiner JJA and Chetty and Unterhalter AJJA concurring):
[1]
The appellant, Ubuhlebezwe Municipality (the municipality), initiated
motion proceedings
in the Kwa-Zulu Natal Division of the High Court,
Pietermaritzburg (the high court) against the respondent, Mr Harilall
Ramsunder
(Mr Ramsunder), for an order interdicting him ‘from
carrying out any building operations and/or renovations and/or
improvements
and/or restoration to the immovable property’
described as Erf 1, Stuarts town, situated at the corner of Main Road
and Railway
Street, Ixopo, Kwa-Zulu Natal (the property). On 2
February 2022, the high court (
per
Phoswa AJ) dismissed the
application for a final interdict, with costs, including those of two
counsel. The appeal is with leave
of the high court.
[2]
First, the background facts.
[1]
Mr Ramsunder had, at the time the proceedings were initiated, been in
occupation of the property for approximately twenty-five
years, since
1996. The property was initially owned by Transnet Ltd (Transnet). Mr
Ramsunder’s occupation of the property
during 1996 arose from a
lease agreement concluded between him and Transnet. The lease was to
endure for an initial period of three
years up to 1999, and
thereafter upon renewal, for a further period of three years from
1999 to 2002.
[3]
With Transnet’s approval, Mr Ramsunder effected improvements to
the property
to house a supermarket, liquor store and a fruit and
vegetable business. He caused the old buildings on the property to be
demolished
and new buildings were erected to house his businesses.
The municipality approved the plans and specifications.
[4]
Although Mr Ramsunder had been involved in negotiations to acquire
ownership of the
property, Transnet, unbeknown to him, sold the
property to the predecessor of the appellant, the Ixopo Transitional
Local Council.
Ownership passed to the municipality on 25 May 2000. A
new lease agreement was concluded between the municipality and Mr
Ramsunder,
in terms of which he continued to occupy the property.
[5]
Negotiations ensued between Mr Ramsunder and the municipality with
the aim that he
acquire ownership of the property. Pursuant to an
agreement in principle that he would purchase the property from the
municipality
for an amount of R450 000, the municipality granted
him written authority to further improve the property. After the
architectural
plans, required by law, had been drawn and approved by
the municipality, Mr Ramsunder caused a new supermarket, a warehouse,
shops
under the supermarket and steel structures over an existing
store, a yard and taxi area to be constructed, comprising a total
area
of approximately 3 530m².
[6]
Finally, on 12 February 2004, a written sale agreement was concluded
between the municipality
and Mr Ramsunder for a total purchase
consideration of R450 000. Prior to the passing of ownership to
Mr Ramsunder, at a full
council meeting of the municipality held on 4
February 2005, it was resolved:
‘
1)
That the sale of Spoornet Property, Portion A of Erf 1 and B of Erf 2
situated in Stuartson,
Ixopo to Mr. H. Ramsunder was improper and
illegal since it was in contrast with the objects of acquiring the
property.
2)
That the sale should be stopped and cancelled immediately.
3)
That the Municipal Manager does the necessary to cancel the sale and
advise Mr.
H. Ramsunder of the council decision.’
Mr Ramsunder disputed the
validity of the municipality’s unilateral attempt to cancel the
sale.
[7]
The relationship between Mr Ramsunder and the municipality has become
acrimonious
since then. Matters could not be resolved, and on 20
September 2005, he commenced action proceedings in the high court, in
which
he claimed:
‘
An
order compelling the Defendant to take all steps necessary to
transfer the properties referred to in Clause 1 of the Memorandum
of
Sale, dated 12 February 2004, between the Plaintiff and the
Defendant, to the Plaintiff and to sign all documents and to take
all
steps necessary to give effect to this order within 30 days from the
date of this order, failing which the Sheriff be and is
hereby
authorised and directed, to take all such steps and to sign all such
documents on behalf of the Defendant to give effect
to this order.’
[8]
The municipality filed a plea in which it alleged that the sale is
‘voidable
and unenforceable’ on grounds that are not
presently relevant. It also instituted a conditional counter-claim in
which it,
inter alia
, claimed Mr Ramsunder’s ejectment
from the property. It denied the existence of a lease between itself
and Mr Ramsunder,
as alleged by him. Mr Ramsunder’s particulars
of claim were then amended, to claim a lien based on the improvements
which
he had effected to the property. For reasons that are not
presently relevant, Mr Ramsunder – according to him,
erroneously
– agreed to an order that the sale be declared
invalid and of no force and effect. His enrichment claim and the
municipality’s
claim for his eviction were postponed
sine
die
, and are presently pending.
[9]
During July 2021, widespread civil unrest started in Kwa-Zulu Natal
and spread to
Gauteng. It was accompanied by egregious loss of life,
public violence, burglary and malicious damage to property. Mr
Ramsunder
was one of the unfortunate victims of the widespread
unrest. The buildings on the property from which he was conducting
his businesses
were damaged and he could no longer conduct any
business from these premises. It was imperative for him to undertake
remedial construction
to restore the buildings and recommence
operating the businesses he had conducted. He had suffered great
financial loss. His businesses
employed approximately 90 persons and
they have been left unemployed.
[10]
This gave the municipality another arrow in its bow to resist Mr
Ramsunder’s enrichment
claim. It maintained that the buildings
on the property had been destroyed and burnt to the ground. Mr
Ramsunder, on the other
hand, presented evidence that although the
property could not be occupied, some of the buildings were not
damaged or the damage
was minimal, and others were partially
damaged.
[11]
In order to curtail further losses, Mr Ramsunder engaged the services
of a construction company,
RockSteel, to undertake the required
remedial construction to restore the buildings on the property to
their original state, in
accordance with the previously approved
plans and specifications. Mr Ramsunder’s evidence was as
follows: that the municipality
was aware of the damage to the
property from at least 13 July 2021, when its officials conducted
inspections of the extensive damage
to the town; the municipality was
aware since 3 September 2021 that remedial construction works were
being undertaken at the property;
no municipal inspectors attended
the property and inspected the building construction from time to
time; the remedial construction
works were effected strictly in
accordance with the approved plans and specifications; and that
structural works were undertaken
under the supervision of engineers
employed by RockSteel. This evidence stands uncontroverted. No
evidence was presented,
inter alia
, to the effect that there
were any specifications originally approved for the construction of
the buildings on the property that
are outdated or no longer conform
to best engineering and construction practice or principles.
[12]
Surprisingly, the municipality commenced the application proceedings,
being the subject of this
appeal, by way of urgency in the high
court. Its application was issued by the registrar of the high court
on 28 September 2021,
and the matter was set down for hearing on 1
October 2021, affording Mr Ramsunder insufficient opportunity to
oppose the application
for interim relief. He thus only opposed the
grant of final relief. One would have expected ‘a good
constitutional citizen’
[2]
rather to have sent its municipal inspectors to attend the property
and inspect the building construction from time to time. If
there
were compelling reasons to require amendments to the originally
approved plans and specifications, to tell Mr Ramsunder so
and offer
to re-approve the originally approved plans and specifications.
[13]
Why then did the municipality instead rush to court to obtain an
interdict? Mr Ramsunder’s
answer to this question:
‘
More
disconcerting is the fact that the Applicant has tried to create the
impression that I am a recalcitrant occupant who has no
regard for
the law. This is simply not true. To the contrary, it is the
Applicant who is being opportunistic in attempting to constructively
evict me due to the unforeseen unlawful riots that occurred. It does
so in circumstances where it previously took no action to
resolve the
dispute between us, presumably because it was aware that it is liable
to compensate me for the building I constructed
before it is entitled
to an order that I relinquish my possession of the leased premises.
. . .
The
irresistible impression is that the Applicant intends on obtaining an
indefinite interdict to obstruct my right to remain on
and use the
property solely to bolster its position in the pending litigation in
which the parties’ rights will be determined.’
[14]
There are three requisites for the grant of a final interdict, all of
which must be present.
They are: (a) a clear right enjoyed by the
applicant; (b) an injury actually committed or reasonably
apprehended; and (c) the absence
of any other satisfactory remedy
available to the applicant.
These principles are trite and
require no citation of authority.
[15]
The clear right upon which the municipality sought to rely, emanates
from s 4(1) read with the
definitions of the words ‘erection’
and ‘erect’ in s 1 of the National Building Regulations
and Building
Standards Act 103 of 1977 (the Act).
Section 4(1)
stipulates:
‘
No
person shall without the prior approval in writing of the local
authority in question, erect any building in respect of which
plans
and specifications are to be drawn and submitted in terms of this
Act.’
The
words ‘erection’ and ‘erect’ are defined,
thus:
‘“
erection”
in relation to a building, includes the alteration, conversion,
extension, rebuilding, re-erection, subdivision
of or addition to, or
repair of any part of the structural system of, any building; and
“erect” shall have a corresponding
meaning.’
[16]
The municipality contended that Mr Ramsunder was required to have new
plans and specifications
drawn and approved by the municipality,
prior to the commencement of the remedial construction works on the
property. Mr Ramsunder,
on the other hand, contended that the 2004
approved plans and specifications met the requirement of s 4(1). The
remedial construction
works were effected strictly in accordance with
those approved plans and specifications. The high court agreed with
Mr Ramsunder
and concluded that the municipality has not established
a clear right that required protection by way of a final interdict.
[17]
An interpretative analysis of s 4(1), read with the pertinent
definitions in s 1 of the Act,
must follow the now well-established
triad
of text, context and purpose.
[3]
‘It
is an objective unitary process where consideration must be given to
the language used in the light of the ordinary rules
of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material
known to those
responsible for its production. The approach is as applicable to
taxing statutes as to any other statute. The inevitable
point of
departure is the language used in the provision under
consideration.’
[4]
‘Most
words can bear several different meanings or shades of meaning and to
try to ascertain their meaning in the abstract,
divorced from the
broad context of their use, is an unhelpful exercise’.
[5]
‘One should not stare blindly at the black-on-white words, but
try to establish the meaning and implication of what is being
said.
It is precisely in this process that the context and surrounding
circumstances are relevant.’
[6]
‘
Where
more than one meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in
the light of all these factors. The process is objective,
not
subjective. A sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that leads
to insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines the
purpose of
the document’.
[7]
[18]
The manifest purpose of s 4(1) becomes clear when the provision is
placed in proper perspective,
and the context in which it was made is
considered. The purpose of the Act is ‘[t]o provide for the
promotion of uniformity
in the law relating to the areas of
jurisdiction of local authorities; for the prescribing of building
standards; and for matters
connected therewith’. The Act
provides,
inter
alia
,
for applications to local authorities in respect of erections of
buildings;
[8]
appointment of
building control officers by local authorities,
[9]
who, in turn,
inter
alia,
shall (a) make recommendations to a local authority, regarding any
plans, specifications, documents and information submitted
to the
local authority in an application in respect of the erection of a
building, (b) ensure that any instruction given in terms
of the Act
by a local authority be carried out, (c) inspect the erection of a
building, and any activities or matters connected
therewith, in
respect of which approval was granted by a local authority, and (d)
report to the local authority regarding non-compliance
with any
condition on which approval was granted.
[10]
[19]
The Act continues to provide for the approval by local authorities of
applications in respect
of the erection of buildings once the local
authority has considered the recommendations of the building control
officer and is
satisfied that the application complies with the
requirements of the Act and any other applicable law;
[11]
refusal by local authorities to grant approval of applications in
respect of the erection of buildings if it is not satisfied that
the
application complies with the requirements of the Act and any other
applicable law,
[12]
or if it
is satisfied that the building to which the application in question
relates is to be erected in such manner or will be
of such nature of
appearance that (a) the area in which it is to be erected will
probably or in fact be disfigured thereby, (b)
it will probably or in
fact be unsightly or objectionable, (c) it will probably or in fact
derogate from the value of adjoining
or neighbouring properties, or
(d) it will probably or in fact be dangerous to life or property.
[13]
[20]
Building control officers or any other person authorized thereto by
the local authority are obliged
and empowered to enter any building
or land at any reasonable time to inspect the approved construction
works to determine whether
there is compliance with the statutory
prescripts and conditions of approval.
[14]
A person appointed to design and to inspect the erection or
installation of the structural, fire protection, or fire installation
system of a building is, upon completion of the erection and
installation of such system, obliged to submit a certificate to the
local authority, indicating that the system has been designed and
erected or installed in accordance with the approved application
to
erect the building.
[15]
Unless
the local authority issues a temporary certificate of occupancy, a
newly constructed building may not be occupied unless
the local
authority issues a certificate of occupancy. It will issue such
certificate if it is of the opinion that the building
has been
erected in accordance with the provisions of the Act and the
conditions on which approval was granted.
[16]
The Act vests local authorities with various other powers –
such as the imposition of various conditions and prohibiting
the
erection or ordering the demolition of buildings in certain
circumstances
[17]
–
which require no further elaboration here.
[21]
Section 4(1) thus forms part of a suite of legislative stipulations
providing for municipal approval,
oversight, and sign off on
buildings that are safe, sound and aesthetically acceptable. Indeed,
the legislature has cast the net
for municipal authorisation wide in
defining ‘erect’ in relation to a building, as it has
done in defining a ‘building’.
The evident intention with
that is to ensure that the erection of all buildings (within the wide
meaning ascribed to that noun)
has been done in accordance with
approved plans and specifications, even if, for example, the intended
construction constitutes
a mere re-erection of a pre-existing
building that had originally been erected without the legally
required municipal authorisation.
Conversely, it could never have
been the intention, as the municipality would have it, that new plans
and specifications need to
be submitted to and approved by a local
authority prior to the commencement of remedial construction works
being undertaken, in
circumstances where the municipality had
previously approved the identical plans and specifications, in
accordance with which the
remedial construction works are to be
carried out, and in the absence of any suggestion that the local
authority would have imposed
amended or additional conditions.
[22]
Indeed, the facts herein demonstrate the absurdity that would result
from a contrary interpretation
of s 4(1). It would amount to a mere
brutum fulmen
– an exercise in futility – to
require the same application in respect of the same building to be
submitted to the local
authority each time an event, such as the 2021
riots, results in damage to the building, merely for an identical
authorisation
then to be issued to undertake the remedial
construction works in accordance with the originally approved plans
and specifications.
Would the approach of the municipality apply to
less serious damage, such as borer damage to a roof structure? Such
insensible
and unbusinesslike results are not to be preferred.
[23]
The municipality has thus failed to show that the clear right
requisite for the grant of a final
interdict is present. In addition,
its application appears to have an ulterior motive.
[24]
In the result:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs.
________________________
P MEYER
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For appellant: M
Pillemer SC with M Mbonane
Instructed by:
Tembe Kweswa Nxumalo Inc., Durban
Maduba
Attorneys Inc., Bloemfontein
For respondent:
No appearance
Instructed by:
Udesh Ramesar Attorneys, Pietermaritzburg
Symington
De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Insofar
as there are material disputes of fact on the papers, I must accept
the facts alleged by Mr Ramsunder ‘unless they
constituted
bold or uncreditworthy denials or were palpably implausible,
far-fetched or so clearly untenable that they could
safely be
rejected on the papers. . . A finding to that effect occurs
infrequently because courts are always alive to the potential
for
evidence and cross-examination to alter its view of the facts and
the plausibility of the evidence’.
Media
24 Books (Pty) Ltd v Oxford University Press Southern Africa (Pty)
Ltd
[2016] ZASCA 119
;
[2016] 4 All SA 311
(SCA);
2017 (2) SA 1
(SCA) at
18A-B. That stringent test has not been satisfied
in
casu
.
[2]
To
borrow the phrase used by Cameron J in
Merafong
City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Limited
[2016] ZACC 35
;
2017 (2) BCLR 182
(CC);
2017 (2) SA 211
(CC) para
60.
[3]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 99; [2021] 3 All SA 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA).
[4]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v United Manganese of Kalahari
(Pty) Ltd
ZASCA
16;
2020 (4) SA 428
(SCA), para 8.
[5]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012]
ZASCA 13
;
[2012]
2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) para 25 (
Endumeni
).
[6]
In
Elan
Boulevard (Pty) Ltd v Fnyn Investments (Pty) Ltd
and
Others
[2018]
ZASCA 165
;
2019
(3) SA 441
(SCA) para 16 footnote 6, Ponnan JA provided the
above-quoted loose translation of the
dictum
- ‘.
. . dat mens jou nie moet blind staar teen die swart-op-wit woorde
nie, maar probeer vasstel wat die bedoeling
en implikasies is van
dit wat gesê is. Dit is juis in hierdie proses waartydens die
samehang en omringende omstandighede
relevant is . . .’ - by
Olivier JA in
Plaaslike
Oorgangsraad van Bronkhortspruit v Senekal
2001
(3) SA 9
(SCA) para 11.
[7]
Endumeni
para
18.
[8]
Section
4.
[9]
Section
5.
[10]
Section
6(1).
[11]
Section
7(1).
[12]
Section
7(1)
(b)
(i).
[13]
Section
7(1)
(b)
.
[14]
Sections
6(1)
(c)
and 15
.
[15]
Section
14 (2A).
[16]
Section
14(1)
(a)
.
[17]
See,
for example, sections 10-12.
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