Case Law[2022] ZASCA 157South Africa
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Limited and Another v The Regional Manager, Limpopo Region, Department of Mineral Resources and Others (1109/2020) [2022] ZASCA 157 (18 November 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
18 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative Law – review of decisions of Regional Manager and Deputy Director General of the Department of Mineral resources and Energy.
Judgment
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## Rustenburg Platinum Mines Limited and Another v The Regional Manager, Limpopo Region, Department of Mineral Resources and Others (1109/2020) [2022] ZASCA 157 (18 November 2022)
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Limited and Another v The Regional Manager, Limpopo Region, Department of Mineral Resources and Others (1109/2020) [2022] ZASCA 157 (18 November 2022)
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sino date 18 November 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case No: 1109/2020
In the matter between:
RUSTENBURG
PLATINUM MINES LIMITED
FIRST
APPELLANT
ARM MINING CONSORTIUM
LIMITED
SECOND APPELLANT
and
THE
REGIONAL MANAGER, LIMPOPO
REGION,
DEPARTMENT OF
MINERAL
RESOURCES (DMR)
FIRST
RESPONDENT
DEPUTY
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
MINERAL REGULATION,
DMR
SECOND RESPONDENT
MINISTER OF MINERAL
RESOURCES
AND
ENERGY
THIRD RESPONDENT
GENORAH RESOURCES
(PTY) LIMITED
FOURTH RESPONDENT
DIRECTOR-GENERAL,
DMR
FIFTH RESPONDENT
NKWE PLATINUM (SOUTH
AFRICA)
(PTY)
LIMITED
SIXTH RESPONDENT
INTERNATIONAL
GOLDFIELDS
LIMITED
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
MORUTHANE BEN
SEKHUKHUNE N O
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
BAUBA A HLABIRWA
MINING
INVESTMENTS (PTY)
LIMITED
NINTH RESPONDENT
NKWE PLATINUM LIMITED
TENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Limited
and Another v The Regional Manager, Limpopo Region, Department of
Mineral Resources and Others
(1109/2020)
[2022] ZASCA
157
(18 November 2022)
Coram:
DAMBUZA ADP and VAN DER MERWE, NICHOLLS
and MBATHA JJA, and MEYER AJA
Heard:
1 March 2022
Delivered:
18 November 2022
Summary:
Administrative Law – review of decisions of Regional
Manager and Deputy Director General of the Department of Mineral
resources
and Energy.
Interpretation
of provisions of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act
28 of 2002 (MPRDA) – refusal of application
for prospecting
right under s 17(2) of the MPRDA considered – a prospecting
right is not a pre-requisite for a mining right
under s 22 of the
MPRDA.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Kollapen J, sitting as court of first
instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs including the costs of two counsel,
which costs shall be paid by the second appellant.
JUDGMENT
Dambuza ADP (Van der
Merwe, Nicholls and Mbatha JJA and Meyer AJA concurring)
Introduction
[1]
In this appeal the second appellant seeks an order reviewing and
setting aside seven
decisions made by functionaries of the Department
of Minerals and Energy (DMRE).
[1]
The decisions were challenged in an application for review brought by
the first appellant, Rustenburg Platinum Mines Limited (RPM),
a
wholly owned subsidiary of Anglo Platinum Limited (Anglo Platinum),
together with
the
second appellant, ARM Mining Consortium Limited (
ARM).
That application was dismissed by the Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Pretoria, Kollapen J (high court).
[2]
This appeal, against the dismissal of the review application, is with
the leave of the high court.
[2]
The first contested decision was the acceptance, by the first
respondent, DMRE’s
Regional Manager in the Limpopo Region
(Regional Manager), of a prospecting application lodged by King
Sekhukhune III and later
ceded to the ninth respondent, Bauba A
Hlabirwa Mining Investments (Pty) Limited (Bauba). The second was the
acceptance, by the
Regional Manager, of an application for a
prospecting right by the fourth respondent, Genorah Resources (Pty)
Ltd (Genorah), a
Black Empowerment entity. The third decision was a
refusal, by DMRE’s Deputy Director-General, of RPM’s
application
for a prospecting right. The fourth and fifth decisions
were the granting of prospecting rights to King Sekhukhune and
Genorah.
The sixth decision was the renewal of the Bauba prospecting
right. And the seventh was the granting of a mining right to Genorah.
Background
[3]
The contested prospecting and mining rights related to eight farms
cumulatively known
as the Modikwa Deeps Properties which are located
in the Magisterial District of Sekhukhune (Eastern Bushveld complex).
The land
is adjacent to the Modikwa Platinum Mine which was operated
by RPM and ARM at the time of the events under consideration. It
comprises
rural farms known as De Kom 252 KT (De Kom), the remaining
extent of the farms Garatouw 282 KT (Garatouw), Hoepakrantz 291 KT
(Hoepakrantz),
Portion 1 and the remaining extent of the farm Eerste
Geluk 322 KT (Eerste Geluk), Zwemkloof 283 KT (Zwemkloof),
Grootvygenboom
283 KT (Grootvygenboom), Genokakop 285 KT (Genokakop),
Houtbosch 323 KT (Houtbosch), and Portions 1 and 2 of the farm
Nooitverwacht
324 (Nooitverwacht).
[4]
During the 1980’s the Anglo American Platinum Corporation Group
(Corporation
Limited) concluded a number of agreements with the
self-governing territory of Lebowa through the Lebowa Minerals Trust
(LMT) as
the holder of various mineral rights over land in the
Limpopo Province. Flowing from these agreements, Anglo Platinum and
its subsidiaries
conducted joint venture prospecting activities for
platinum and related minerals over the land.
[5]
In December 2000 three joint venture agreements were cancelled
following negotiations
with the third respondent, the Minister of
Mineral Resources and Energy (Minister), who perceived them to result
in a concentration
of mineral rights in the hands of the ARM Group.
At that time prospecting had already occurred on the properties to
varying degrees,
and mines had been established. The agreement with
the Minister was that on cancellation of the joint venture agreements
in respect
of some of the Modikwa Deeps Properties, twelve mineral
leases and two prospecting agreements would be concluded between the
joint
venture entities and the Minister. In respect of twelve
properties, the rights of these entities would be limited to
purchasing
the platinum group and all associated metals and minerals
mined on the properties for a certain period.
[6]
With regard to the prospecting agreements, RPM and ARM would form a
joint venture
to prospect and operate platinum mining activities on a
defined joint venture area. RPM was to contribute the old order
rights
which it held over the Modikwa Deeps Properties while ARM
would contribute stipulated finance to the joint venture.
[7]
In line with that agreement, on 16 March 2004 RPM applied for a
prospecting permit
for platinum metals and other minerals under s 6
of the Minerals Act 50 of 1991 (the Minerals Act). On 1 May 2004,
before the Department
had made a decision on RPM’s prospecting
permit application, the Minerals Act was repealed and replaced with
the Mineral
and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28 of 2002
(MPRDA), which is still the applicable legislation in respect of
mining activities.
In a letter dated 21 June 2004, the Department
advised RPM that because its application could not be finalized
before the MPRDA
became effective, its application would be processed
as a pending application in terms of Item 3(1) of Schedule II to the
MPRDA.
In terms of Item 3(1), applications for mineral rights made
under ss 6, 8 and 9 of the Minerals Act that had not been
finalised
when the MPRDA came into effect, had to
be regarded as having been lodged in terms of ss 13, 22, 27, 79 or 83
of the MPRDA. Subsequent
to the MPRDA coming into effect, RPM
submitted additional information as required thereunder.
[8]
Bauba denies that when RPM lodged its application for a prospecting
right on 16 March
2004 it was a holder of a permit to prospect and to
mine for platinum group metals over the Modikwa Deeps Properties
(which permit
is referred to in the MPRDA as an unused old order
right).
[3]
However, the
Department does not deny that RPM was a holder of such a right
flowing from the agreements reached with the Minister.
In fact, the
Department dealt with RPM as a holder of an unused old order right.
As will be discussed more fully in the paragraphs
that follow, as a
holder of an unused old order right at the commencement of the MPRDA,
RPM became entitled to a one-year period
of exclusivity in relation
to its application for a prospecting right.
[4]
This meant that during that one-year period no other application for
a prospecting right over the relevant Modikwa Deeps Properties
could
be accepted and considered by the Department. That period of
exclusivity expired on 30 April 2005.
[9]
On 29 April 2005, before a decision on RPM’s application was
made by DMRE, King
Sekhukhune Thulare, as the Kgosi of the Bapedi
Community (King Sekhukhune III), lodged an application for a
prospecting right over
some of the Modikwa Deeps Properties.
[5]
On 30 April 2005, a day after the lodgment of King Sekhukhune’s
application, the one year exclusivity period after the lodgment
of
RPM’s application expired. On 12 May 2005, RPM addressed a
letter to the Regional Manager inquiring about progress in
its
application. It also informed the Regional Manager that its
application was made on the basis that if the prospecting right
was
granted it would seek consent under s 11 of the MPRDA, to have the
right registered in favour of the Joint Venture between
itself and
ARM Mining Consortium Limited, the BEE group with which it was
already operating the Modikwa Mine up-deep from the Modikwa
Deeps
Properties. In a letter dated 13 May 2005 addressed to King
Sekhukhune III, the Regional Manager advised that his application
(lodged on 29 April 2005) in respect of the Modikwa Deeps Properties
would be ‘placed on hold’ pending the Minister’s
decision on applications that had already been accepted in respect of
those properties.
[10]
On 27 July 2005, the Regional Manager wrote to RPM confirming that
its application had been accepted
in terms of s 16(2) of the MPRDA.
Thereafter RPM submitted further reports, including its report on
consultations with the landowners,
its Environmental Management Plan
and financial guarantee.
[11]
On 6 February 2006, Genorah lodged a prospecting right application in
respect of five of the
Modikwa Deeps Properties.
[6]
On 20 February 2006, this application was accepted by the Regional
Manager and was duly processed. On 22 August 2006 the Deputy
Director-General: Mineral Regulation (DDG) granted Genorah’s
application over three Modikwa Deeps Properties. This right
related
to De Kom, Garatouw, and Hoepakrantz. On 7 June 2006, Prospecting
Right 256/2006 granted in favour of the King Sekhukhune
III was
notarially executed. This right related to Dingaanskop 543
(Dingaanskop), Indie 474 KS (Indie), and Fisantlaagte 506 and
not the
three Modikwa Deeps Properties in respect of which King Sekhukhune
III had applied for a prospecting right.
[12]
On 7 July 2006, the Regional Manager recommended refusal of the RPM
prospecting right application.
On 3 August 2006, the Regional Manager
recommended approval of Genorah’s prospecting right
application. From 22 to 28 August
2006, various functionaries of the
Department approved the recommendation for approval of Genorah’s
application in respect
of De Kom, Garatouw, and Hoepakrantz.
[13]
On 24 August 2006 the second respondent, the Deputy Director-General:
Mineral Regulation (DDG),
refused RPM’s application for a
prospecting right in terms of s 17(2)
(b)
(i) of the MPRDA,
following the Regional Manager’s recommendation. The refusal
letter read as follows:
‘
REFUSAL
OF APPLICATION FOR A PROSPECTING RIGHT: THE MODIKWA DOWN-DEEPS
PROPERTIES: THE FARMS DE KOM 252 KT, GARATOUW 282 KT, ZWEMKLOOF
283
KT, GROOTVYGENBOOM 284 KT, GENOKAKOP 285 KT, HOEPAKRANTZ 291 KT,
HOUTBOSCH 323 KT, NOOITVERWACHT 324 KT AND EERSTE GELUK 327
KT;
MAGISTERIAL DISTRICT OF SEKHUKHUNE
After careful
consideration of your application for a new prospecting right, the
Deputy Director-General: Mineral Regulation in
terms of section 17(2)
has, by virtue of powers delegated to him in terms of
section 103(1)
of the
Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act, 2002
decided
to refuse to grant a prospecting right in respect of the above
mentioned properties for the following reasons:
·
Section 17(2)(
b
)(i)
and (iii) as the granting of the right will result in the
concentration of the mineral resources in question under the control
of the applicant and will also result in an exclusionary act.’
RPM received the letter
on 11 September 2006.
[14]
On 12 September 2006, Genorah’s prospecting right was
notarially executed. On 14 September
2006, the tenth respondent, Nkwe
Platinum Limited (Nkwe), issued a media statement in which it
announced that it had concluded
an agreement with Genorah to acquire
the latter’s interest in the prospecting rights over two of the
Modikwa Deeps Properties.
[7]
The
agreement between Nkwe and Genorah for the acquisition of the
latter’s prospecting right was conditional upon the granting
of
the prospecting right in respect of the two properties to Genorah.
[15]
On 29 September 2006, the Regional Manager granted the prospecting
right applied for by King
Sekhukhune III over the Modikwa Deeps
Properties Genokakop and Grootvygenboom. On 4 October 2006, the
Regional Manager wrote to
the King advising of the grant to him of a
prospecting right over Genokakop, Grootvygenboom, Schoonoord,
Zwitzerland and Houtbosch.
[16]
On 5 October 2006, RPM lodged an appeal with the Minister in terms of
s 96
of the MPRDA against the refusal of its application for a
prospecting right. On the same day its attorneys wrote to the
Regional
Manager alleging that the acceptance of Genorah’s
prospecting application was irregular as it happened prior to a
decision
on its (RPM’s) application, and prior to expiry of the
period determined in terms of the MPRDA for an internal appeal
against
the refusal of its application, and a (possible) court
review. No response was received to this letter.
[17]
On 5 March 2007, RPM launched the application for review of the
refusal decision and the decision
to accept Genorah’s
application. Thereafter negotiations were held between RPM and DMRE
in an effort to have the dispute
settled amicably.
According
to RPM, the DDG was unhappy with the institution of the review
proceedings.
In November 2007, the Bapedi
community resolved to cede its prospecting right to Bauba.
On
19 December 2007, an amendment was effected on Prospecting Right
256/2006 (King Sekhukhune’s right over Dingaanskop, Indie
and
Fisantlaagte) to include Genokakop and Grootvygenboom.
[18]
While settlement negotiations in relation to the review application
were underway, in February
2008 RPM became aware that a prospecting
right was granted to Genorah in August 2006. Correspondence was
exchanged between RPM
and DMRE in relation to this matter. The DDG
urged RPM to enter into settlement negotiations with Genorah, which
it did. On 3 March
2008, the DDG consented to a cession of the
prospecting right in terms of
s 11(1)
of the MPRDA from King
Sekhukhune III to Bauba.
[8]
In
terms of the cession, the prospecting right in respect of Genokakop
and Grootvygenboom were ceded to Bauba.
Negotiations
between RPM and Genorah broke down in the same month.
[19]
On 12 August 2008, the DDG, acting in terms of
s 102
of the MPRDA,
granted consent for the addition of Houtbosch onto Bauba’s
prospecting right. On 17 February 2010, RPM became
aware from a media
release, that a prospecting right had been granted to Bauba.
According to RPM its attempts to ascertain the
description of the
properties in respect of which the right had been granted were
unsuccessful. On 19 December 2008, an amendment
was effected to the
review application to add the grant of the Genorah prospecting right
to the decisions that were to be reviewed.
ARM intervened and
was joined as a second applicant in RPM’s review application.
[20]
On 22 April 2010, following the decision of this Court in
Bengwenyama
Minerals (Pty) Ltd and Others v Genorah Resources (Pty) Ltd (Formerly
Tropical Paradise 427 (Pty) Ltd and Others
,
[9]
RPM
lodged an appeal to the Minister against the grant of a prospecting
rights to Bauba and Genorah. I
n
Bengwenyama
this Court held that the internal appeal provided for in
s 96
of the
MPRDA must be exhausted as stipulated in
s 96(3)
before instituting
review proceedings.
On
28 April 2010, the variation by the DDG in respect of PR256/2006 to
include Genokakop and Grootvygenboom, was notarially executed.
On 4
May 2010, RPM obtained a copy of the notarial deed of amendment, and
two days thereafter it amended its internal appeal to
include the
decision to amend PR256/2006.
[21]
RPM argues that the variations effected to the King Sekhukhune III
prospecting right 256/2006
to incorporate therein the Modikwa Deeps
Properties are invalid because the Minister had not delegated to the
DDG his authority
to consent thereto. And even if there had been such
delegation, the grant of new rights over these properties by way of
variation
was an impermissible circumvention of the requirements set
in
ss 16
and
17
of the MPRDA. On 29 September 2010 it instituted the
application for review and setting aside of the amendment decisions.
[22]
On 4 April 2011, Bauba lodged an application for renewal of its
prospecting right. On 7 April
2011, RPM addressed a letter to the
DDG, DG and the Minister seeking an undertaking that no further
rights would be granted in
respect of the Modikwa Deeps Properties
until its internal appeal had been determined. On 6 July 2011 Bauba’s
prospecting
right expired. On 11 September 2011, Genorah’s
prospecting right also expired. On 10 February 2012, a mining right
was granted
to Genorah over De Kom, Garatouw, Hoepakrantz and
Nooitverwacht. On 15 March 2012. RPM lodged an internal appeal
against the grant
of the Genorah mining right.
[23]
The internal appeals remained pending for years until the high court
(Basson J), in 2017, granted
an order declaring, amongst other
things, that RPM had exhausted its internal remedies of appeal in
respect of the acceptance and
refusal decisions. It should be noted
that in terms of
s 96(2)(
a
) of the MPRDA, the internal appeal
did not suspend the decisions as the DDG did not specifically order
suspension. The refusal
and the grant of rights therefore continued
to be effective. However, in terms of
s 96(2)
(b)
subsequent
applications for the same right on the same land were suspended
pending the finalisation of the appeal.
[24]
On 6 June 2012, Bauba’s prospecting right over Genokakop and
Grootvygenboom was renewed.
On 10 August 2012, RPM lodged an internal
appeal against that renewal decision. On 9 July 2015 Bauba applied
for a mining right.
Bauba’s renewed prospecting right expired
on 17 July 2015. On 27 August 2014, the addition of Houtbosch onto
the Bauba prospecting
right was notarised. On 23 November 2017,
Bauba’s mining right application was accepted by the
Department. No decision had
been made on that application when this
appeal was heard.
Litigation history
The
review application
[25]
In the review application RPM set out the events that preceded its
application for a prospecting
right in 2004. It argued that its
mineral leases and prospecting agreements in respect of the Modikwa
Deeps Properties had been
concluded in line with the agreements
reached with the DDG (who had represented the LMT Trust). By refusing
its application for
a prospecting right the Minister was acting in
bad faith, and contrary to the agreements which had been concluded
with her with
the aim of avoiding a concentration of mineral rights
in the hands of RPM.
[26]
RPM maintained that in principle, the granting of a prospecting right
would always have the effect
of preventing or excluding others from
obtaining the same right in respect of the same mineral and land.
Similarly, the granting
of such a right to an applicant who already
holds a mining right in terms of the MPRDA theoretically resulted in
a concentration
of the mineral resource in question under the control
of the approved applicant. It could never have been the intention of
the
legislature to impose a blanket bar to the granting of a
prospecting right to a holder of a mining right. Consequently, the
refusal
was arbitrary and was taken without good cause. It therefore
fell to be set aside under the provisions of
ss 5(3)
,
6
(2)(
e
)(
v
),
and/or 6(2)(
h
) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
3 of 2000 (PAJA).
[27]
In addition, the reference in s 17(2)(
b
)(iii) to concentration
of mineral resources was ‘perplexing’ because at the time
of considering the application it
would be unknown whether there were
any resources on the land. To avoid potential absurdities in the
interpretation of s 17(2)(
b
)(i) and (iii), a qualified reading
of the section was necessary – by interpreting s 17(2)(
b
)(iii)
as intending to prohibit ‘unreasonable’ concentration of
rights in the hands of a particular entity. In this
case, because the
DDG did not give adequate reasons for the refusal and did not apply a
qualified meaning to the section, but merely
regurgitated the
provisions of the section, the refusal was arbitrary.
[28]
RPM’s central argument, however, was that, in any event, the
clear transitional provisions
of the MPRDA which provided security to
a holder of old order rights should take precedence over the
provisions of s 17(2)
(b)
. Because the DDG had failed to
interpret the provisions of s 17(2(
b
) to be subject to the
clear and specific transitional provisions of the MPRDA, which
provided special protection to a holder of
an old order right in
order to bring it within the provisions of the MPRDA, the refusal
fell to be set aside under s 62(
d
) of PAJA.
[29]
In line with this argument it was submitted that the acceptance of
Bauba’s application
for a prospecting right by the Department,
on 29 April 2005, prior to the expiry of its (RPM’s)
exclusivity period was unlawful.
Furthermore, the acceptance of
Genorah’s application in February 2006, prior to determination
of RPM’s application
was in breach of the provisions of s 16(2)
of the MPRDA which prohibits the acceptance of a prospecting right
where another entity
holds a prospecting right, mining right, or
mining permit in respect of the same mineral on the same land. The
contention was that
the applications by Genorah and Bauba should not
have been accepted before a decision was made on RPM’s
application, and
before the internal appeal and the court review had
been finalised. Because both acts of acceptance were unlawful, all
subsequent
administrative action by the Department granting renewals
and further rights to Bauba and Genorah were invalid.
[30]
It was also contended that the refusal decision fell to be set aside
because the DDG failed to
take into account numerous factors,
including that the Modikwa Deeps Properties are situated adjacent to
and ‘down dip’
from the Modikwa Platinum Mine on which
RPM and ARM were already mining, which rendered them best suited to
access the minerals
on those properties.
[31]
The respondents, on the other hand, contended that the delay by RPM
in instituting and prosecuting
the review applications (which were
later consolidated) was fatal to the proceedings. The review
application in relation to the
refusal decision and the grant of the
prospecting right to Genorah, which decisions were taken in August
2006, was instituted in
March 2007 (and amended in December 2008). By
the time the application was heard the prospecting right had long
lapsed and Genorah
had been in possession of the mining right for
eight years. It had concluded all prospecting activities, and
subsequent thereto,
had expended more than R1.2billion in the
development of the Garatouw Platinum Mine in the exercise of its
mining right. The review
application challenging the 2008 amendment
decisions that resulted in the Bauba prospecting right over the
Modikwa Deeps Properties
was initiated on 29 September 2010.
[32]
The high court dismissed the consolidated review application based,
in the main, on unreasonable
delay in instituting and prosecuting the
review proceedings. It found the delay to have been extraordinary and
‘inexplicable’.
It remarked that RPM and ARM could have
been ‘more efficient and decisive’ in prosecuting the
application. Although
the Learned Judge found that the grant of the
Genorah prospecting right was improper, he exercised his remedial
discretion in favour
of Genorah by declining to declare it unlawful
and setting the decision aside.
On appeal
[33]
The appeal was brought and prosecuted by ARM. The parties persisted
in the arguments they had
advanced in the high court. ARM highlighted
that in refusing RPM’s application for a prospecting right, the
DDG ignored the
fact that its joint venture partner (ARM), was a
black company and a 100% shareholder in ARM Platinum which, in turn,
held 83%
in AMCL. The balance of the 17% shareholding was held by
Mampudima and Matimatjatji communities residing near the Modikwa
Deeps
Properties. Against this background, the suggestion that
granting a prospecting right to RPM would result in the concentration
of mineral resources and limitation of equitable access to it was
unfounded, it was argued.
[34]
It was also submitted that the delay in prosecuting the application
could not be attributed to
any remissness on RPM’s part.
Instead it was the State respondents who caused the delay by refusing
to provide documents
and by disobeying court orders. It was also
pointed out that both Genorah and Bauba delivered their answering
papers more than
two and six months out of time respectively.
Furthermore, the appellants contended that they should not be
punished because the
respondents proceeded to expend huge expenditure
on the mines when they knew of the challenges to the approval of
their prospecting
rights.
The Law
[35]
In
Minister
of Mineral Resources and Others v Sishen Iron Ore Company (Pty) Ltd
and Another
[10]
the Constitutional Court set out succinctly the circumstances in
which the MPRDA was passed and the objectives thereof. At paragraph
10 the Court said:
‘
In
the discharge of its obligations to transform the mining industry,
one of the major sectors of our economy, Parliament passed
the MPRDA.
As its preamble proclaims, the MPRDA was enacted in part to eradicate
all forms of discriminatory practices in the mining
and petroleum
industries and to redress the inequalities of past racial
discrimination. Pivotal to achieving these objectives was
placing all
mineral and petroleum resources in the hands of the nation as a whole
and making the state the custodian of the resources
on behalf of the
nation. This is one of the fundamental changes brought about by the
MPRDA. By vesting all mineral and petroleum
resources in the nation,
the MPRDA dispensed with the notion of mineral rights or rights to
minerals which before 1 May 2004 were
held by private persons.’
At
paragraph 13 the Court held:
‘
In
view of the fact that black people did not own land because of
dispossession and legal instruments that prohibited ownership,
drastic measures were necessary to open up opportunities in the
mining industry for the previously excluded majority. This became
one
of the primary objectives of the MPRDA.’
[36]
These remarks by the Constitutional Court elucidate the purpose for
which the MPRDA was enacted.
An overview of the relevant provisions
will be helpful for proper consideration of the contested decisions.
The sections are set
out below as they read when the contested
decisions were made, prior to the commencement of the Mineral and
Petroleum Resources
Development Amendment Act, 49 of 2008, on 7 June
2013.
[11]
[37]
As a starting point s 2 of the MPRDA set out the following objectives
of the Act; to:
‘
(a)
recognize the internationally accepted right of the State to exercise
sovereignty over all the mineral and petroleum resources
within the
Republic;
(b) give effect to the
principle of the State’s custodianship of the nation’s
mineral and petroleum resources;
(c) promote equitable
access to the nation’s mineral and petroleum resources;
(d) substantially and
meaningfully expand opportunities for historically disadvantaged
persons, including women, to enter the mineral
and petroleum
industries and to benefit from the exploitation of the nation’s
mineral and petroleum resources;
(e) promote economic
growth and mineral and petroleum resources development in the
Republic;
(f) promote employment
and advance the social and economic welfare of all South Africans;
(g) provide for security
of tenure in respect of prospecting, exploration, mining and
production operations;
(h) give effect to
section 24 of the Constitution by ensuring that the nation’s
mineral and petroleum resources are developed
in an orderly and
ecologically sustainable manner while promoting justifiable social
and economic development; and
(i) ensure that holders
of mining and production rights contribute towards the socio economic
development of the areas in which
they are operating.’
[38]
Chapter 3 of the Act regulated the administration of the MPRDA. In
terms of s 7, the Republic
and the sea were divided into regions.
Each region had a regional manager designated by the Director-General
to perform the functions
assigned to him or her under the Act or any
other law.
[12]
One such
function was the processing of mineral and petroleum reconnaissance
applications.
[39]
Section 9 regulated the sequence in which multiple applications for
the same mineral on the same
land would be processed. If the Regional
Manager received more than one application for a prospecting or
mining right in respect
of the same mineral and land on the same day,
she had to regard the applications as having been received at the
same time.
[13]
When processing the applications the Minister had to then give
preference to applications from historically disadvantaged
persons.
[14]
Applications received on different dates had to be dealt with in the
order of receipt.
[15]
[40]
Sections 16 and 17 regulated the procedure and requirements for
processing prospecting rights
applications. In terms of s 16(1),
applications had to be lodged in the office of the Regional Manager
in whose region the land
was located, in the prescribed manner, with
the prescribed, non-refundable application fee. In terms of s 16(2),
the Regional Manager
had to accept an application for a prospecting
right if –
‘
(a)
the requirements contemplated in subsection (1) [were] met; and
(b) no other person
[held] a prospecting right, mining right, mining permit or retention
permit for the same mineral and land.’
[41]
As stated, when the MPRDA came into effect on 01 May 2004, a
transitional, arrangement was provided
in the Act. Apart from Item 3
of Schedule II to the Act, which kept applications that were pending
under ss 6, 8, and 9 of the
Minerals Act
[16]
alive, in addition, transitional arrangements were provided, under
Items 8(1) and (2) of Schedule II, to protect the security of
tenure
and to give holders of old order rights opportunity to comply with
the new Act. In terms thereof, an unused old order right
[17]
which was in force when the MPRDA came into effect, continued to be
valid subject to the conditions under which it was acquired.
The
holder thereof was afforded an exclusive right for a period of a year
from 1 May 2004, to apply for a prospecting right or
a mining right
as the case might be.
[42]
Item 8 provided that:
‘
Processing
of unused old order rights
(1) Any unused old order
right in force immediately before this Act took effect, continues in
force, subject to the terms and conditions
under which it was
granted, acquired or issued or was deemed to have been granted or
issued, for a period not exceeding one year
from the date on which
this Act took effect, or for the period for which it was granted,
acquired or issued or was deemed to have
been granted or issued,
whichever period is shortest.
(2) The holder of an
unused old order right has the exclusive right to apply for a
prospecting right or a mining right as the case
may be, in terms of
this Act within the period referred to in item (1).
(3) An unused old order
right in respect of which an application has been lodged within the
period referred to in subitem (1) remains
valid until such time as
the application for a prospecting right or mining right, as the case
may be, is granted and dealt with
in terms of this Act or is refused.
(4) Subject to the
subitems (2) and (3), an unused old order right ceases to exists upon
the expiry of the period contemplated in
subitem (1).’
[43]
Once an application for a prospecting right was accepted as provided
in s16(2), the Regional
Manager had to notify the applicant, in
writing, within 14 days, of the receipt of the application, if it did
not comply with the
requirements set in s 16(1).
[18]
Section 17(1) provided that the Minister had to grant the application
within 30 days if:
‘
(a)
the applicant [had] access to financial
resources and [had] the technical ability to conduct the proposed
prospecting operation
optimally in accordance with the prospecting
work programme;
(b)
the estimated expenditure [was] compatible with
the proposed prospecting operation and duration of the prospecting
work programme;
(c)
the prospecting [would] not result in unacceptable
pollution, ecological degradation or damage to the environment;
(d)
the applicant [had] the ability to comply with the
relevant provisions of the Mine Health and Safety Act, 1996 (Act No.
29 of 1996);
and
(e)
the applicant [was] not in contravention of [the]
Act.’
[44]
On approval of the application, the holder of the prospecting right
became entitled to an exclusive
right to apply for renewal thereof in
respect of the same mineral, on the same land.
[19]
It also had an exclusive right to remove and dispose of the minerals
to which the right related when found during prospecting
operations.
[20]
On the other
hand, it was obliged to commence with the prospecting activities
within 120 days from the date on which the prospecting
right became
effective or any extended period granted.
[21]
Prospecting operations had to be conducted continuously and actively
in accordance with the prospecting work programme incorporated
in the
conditions of the prospecting right.
[22]
[45]
In terms of s 17(2) the Minister had to refuse an application for a
prospecting right where:
‘
(a)
the application [did] not meet all the
requirements referred to in subsection(1);
(b)
the granting of such right [would] –
(i)
result in an exclusionary act;
(ii)
prevent fair competition; or
(iii)
result in the concentration of the mineral resources in question
under the control of the
applicant.’
A
refusal had to be communicated to the applicant in writing within 30
days thereof, together with the reasons therefor.
[23]
[46]
Notably, after the amendment to the Act s 17(2) reads as follows:
‘
(2)
The Minister must, within 30 days of receipt of the application from
the Regional Manager, refuse to grant a prospecting right
if —
(
a
)
the application does not meet all the requirements referred to in
subsection (1);
(
b
)
the granting of such right will result in the concentration of the
mineral resources in question under the control of the applicant
and
their associated companies with the possible limitation of equitable
access to mineral resources.
’ (Emphasis added)
[47]
Sections 22 and 23 regulated the procedure and requirements in
applications for, and granting
of, mining rights. The prescribed
procedure and approval requirements were substantially similar to
those applicable to prospecting
right applications.
[24]
Renewal of mining rights was regulated under s 24 in a procedure
similar to renewal of prospecting rights.
[48]
Prior to the amendment, alienation and encumbrance of prospecting and
mining rights were restricted
under s 11(1) of the Act as follows:
‘
A
prospecting or mining right or an interest in any such right or a
controlling interest in a company or close corporation, may
not be
ceded, transferred, let, sublet, assigned, alienated or otherwise
disposed of without the written consent of the Minister,
except in
the case of change of controlling interest in listed companies.’
Discussion
[49]
Much of the argument on behalf of the appellants centered around the
acceptance of the respondents’
(Bauba and Genorah) prospecting
rights applications and the effect thereof on the subsequent
renewals, and the granting of Genorah’s
mining right. The
respondents persisted in their contention that the appeal should be
dismissed based only on the unreasonable
delay in the prosecution of
the review application.
[50]
There was indeed evidence of intermittent attempts at settlement
negotiations between the RPM
and DMRE’s functionaries from 2006
to the end of 2013, to the extent that a draft settlement agreement
was exchanged between
the DDG and Mr Mukoka of RPM on 17 December
2013. It is also correct that the Department delayed, repeatedly,
sometimes for long
periods, in furnishing RPM with requested
information and documents. In addition, the Regional Manager insisted
that RPM enter
into settlement negotiations with DMRE and Genorah,
even after the review proceedings had been instituted. Moreover, RPM
did not
immediately become aware of and first had to verify the
decisions that preferred Bauba and Genorah on the competing
applications.
The Department had to be compelled by court to furnish
the information required to institute the proceedings. RPM only
became aware
after almost two years that the King’s application
had been approved.
[51]
Nevertheless there were long periods of unexplained inaction by RPM
after becoming aware of the
Genorah approval decision and after the
institution of the review proceedings. Regarding the 10 month delay
after becoming aware
that the Genorah prospecting right had been
granted, the only explanation was that the matter was taken up with
the DDG who ‘never
reverted to RPM about the matter’.
[52]
Having become aware in 2008 that prospecting rights were granted in
2006, the appellants must
have been aware that, by that time only
three years of the five-year lifespan of the rights remained.
Importantly, under s19(2)
(b)
of the MPRDA, once Bauba and
Genorah were granted prospecting rights they became obliged to
commence with prospecting activities
within 120 days from the date on
which the rights became effective. The appellants therefore had to
institute and prosecute their
challenge to the relevant decisions
diligently. Yet it was at Bauba’s instance that there was
progress in the prosecution
of the review application after a long
period of inaction. Bauba instituted an application for the dismissal
of the review application.
This led to ARM seeking the joinder that
led to the consolidation of the separate review applications that had
been instituted
against Bauba and Genorah.
[53]
The delays had the effect that by the time the application for review
was heard by the high court
the original and renewed prospecting
rights had long expired. Genorah had secured a mining right and
Bauba’s application
for a mining right was pending. All that
was specified under s 22(2)(
b
) was that no application for a
mining right could be accepted if some other person held a
prospecting right, mining right, mining
permit or retention permit
for the same mineral and land. There was no evidence of a holder of
any such right or permit when Genorah
and Bauba applied for mining
rights on the properties in question.
[54]
Ultimately, a decision
on the lawfulness of the applications for the
prospecting rights granted, including the rights that were granted by
way of variations,
was of no practical effect. More so that a
prospecting right was not a pre-requisite for a mining right.
Consequently it is not
necessary to consider the appeal on the
granting of the prospecting rights. It is important to note, however,
that even if it were
to be found that the granting of prospecting
rights to Genorah and Bauba was unlawful that would not mean that a
prospecting right
should have been granted to the appellants. The
refusal decision remains to be considered on its own merits. In the
paragraphs
that follow I confirm, on the merits, the lawfulness of
the refusal of the appellants’ application for a prospecting
right.
It is not necessary to reach any conclusion in this appeal on
the effect of delays on the institution and prosecution of the review
application.
The refusal of RPM’S
application for a prospecting right.
[55]
The high court found that the refusal decision was neither unfair nor
irrational because of the
reasons set out in the DDG’s
recommendations. It found that there was nothing improper about
taking into consideration Anglo
Platinum’s 2005 annual report
which was an accurate public document. A further finding was that the
approach in s 17(2),
prior to its amendment, was too restrictive and
did not account for the objectives of the MPRDA. The pre-amendment s
17(2) had
to be interpreted liberally to achieve these objectives,
particularly the security of tenure which RPM enjoyed based old order
right, it was held.
[56]
Of relevance at this point is that before the amendment, s 17(2) did
not extend the assessment
of concentration of minerals to companies
associated with an
applicant
for a prospecting right.
[25]
Possible limitation of equitable access to mineral resources was also
not a specified consideration. Importantly,
the
Act had to be interpreted and applied to the facts of this case as it
read before the amendments. Such interpretation, however,
could not
ignore the context and purpose for which the relevant provisions were
enacted.
[57]
It
is trite that context is fundamental in the interpretation of all
written instruments. Statutes should be interpreted in accordance
with the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights. There is,
inter alia, the context provided by the entire enactment.
Furthermore, the general factual background to the statute, such as
the nature of its concerns, the social purpose to which it
is
directed and, in the case of statutes dealing with specific areas of
public life or the economy, the nature of the areas to
which the
statute relates provides the context for the legislation.
[26]
[58]
Section 17 in its pre-amended form of the MPRDA must be interpreted
to give effect to its objectives
and purpose. I have already set out
the objectives of s2 of the MPRDA.
[27]
They
included, giving effect to the State’s custodianship of the
nation’s mineral resources, the promotion of equitable
access
to such resources to all the people of South Africa, substantial and
meaningful expansion of opportunities for historically
disadvantaged
persons to enter into and benefit from the nation’s mineral and
petroleum resources, and the promotion of economic
growth and mineral
and petroleum resources development in the Republic.
[28]
[59]
In
In
Minister of Mineral Resources v Sishen
[29]
the Constitutional Court said the following about the objectives of
the MPRDA:
‘
The
promotion of equitable access by all South Africans to mineral
resources, the expansion of opportunities for historically
disadvantaged
persons to enter the mining and petroleum industries,
and the advancement of the social and economic welfare of all South
African
are cornerstones of that transformation. The state is
obligated to advance the realization of these goals. It is therefore
vitally
important to heed the provisions of s 4 when interpreting the
MPRDA.
This is not only because
s 4 expressly says so, but also for the reason that the MPRDA was
enacted to eradicate the inequality embedded
in all spheres of life
under the apartheid order. Equality is at the heart of our
constitutional architecture. It is not only entrenched
as a right in
the Bill of Rights, but it is also one of the values on which our
democratic order has been founded.
[60]
Given the context and objectives of the MPRDA I do not think the DDG
acted improperly in considering
the factors which RPM complains
about. They were relevant for the determination that had to be made.
In the recommendation, RPM’s
dominance in the platinum group
mining sector was highlighted.
[30]
It was recorded that according to the Anglo Platinum (RPM’s
holding company) 2005 Annual Report the Modikwa Platinum Mine,
which
RPM owns and operates, had still not reached the target production
levels of 240 000 tons per annum and therefore if
granted to
RPM, the prospecting right would not be immediately put to use to
attain the objectives of the Act. The DDG’s
assessment was that
the Modikwa Platinum Mine had ‘potential life-of-mine
resources’ that would last for over 100 years
(presumably from
the time of the memorandum). She reasoned that granting the
prospecting right applied for by RPM would result
in ‘an
additional 150 m oz 4E, to a depth of 1000 m (approximately) to RPM’s
existing mineral resources on Modikwa
Mining operation’. She
stressed that:
‘
Awarding
the properties under the new application to RPM (and therefore to
Anglo Platinum) will certainly contradict the stated
goals of the
MPRD Act, namely: “To promote equitable access of the nation’s
minerals and petroleum resources to all
the people of South Africa
and to expand opportunities for HDSA’s to enter the mineral
industry and to benefit from the exploitation
of the nation’s
mineral resources”’.
[61]
The DDG reasoned that in granting the right applied for, the
Department would be entrenching
the same position of locking-up the
area as was the case in the past. RPM’s dominant position would
continue to be entrenched,
thereby frustrating the transformation
objectives of the MPRDA. Her view, in other words, was that, if the
prospecting right for
the Modikwa Deeps Properties was granted to
RPM, other potential miners, especially from the historically
disadvantaged communities
would be excluded from accessing the
concerned market for a long period, whilst RPM still had vast amounts
(potential life of mine
resources of up to 100 years) of unmined
platinum at the Modikwa Platinum Mine, and, either directly, or
through related entities,
already had considerable access to the
minerals in question in the country. That reasoning and the decision
reached was consistent
with the purpose and objectives of the MPRDA.
[62]
The DDG further referred to 17 old order mining rights held by Anglo
Platinum in the name of
its wholly owned subsidiaries, and a further
four with its joint venture partners, which was more than all the
other companies
involved in the South African PGM industry combined.
She considered that not a single historically disadvantaged entity
held more
than five mining rights in the Eastern Limb or Western
Bushveld.
[63]
Even though associated companies were not expressly included in s
17(2) prior to the amendment,
there can be no dispute that they were
always part of the composition of the applicant entity. Ignoring the
extent of the benefit
derived from that kind of association between
companies would be contrary to the objectives and purpose of s 17(2)
even as it read
pre-amendment. It was a relevant factor in
considering whether there would be concentration of the minerals in
the hands of RPM.
[64]
RPM did not dispute the correctness of the contents of the Anglo
Platinum Annual Report. It also
did not dispute that it (RPM) was a
wholly owned subsidiary of Anglo Platinum, one of the largest mining
companies in the country.
On any reasonable approach this is the kind
of information that is relevant in determining whether the granting
of a prospecting
and mining right accords with the transformation
objectives of the MPRDA. As it was submitted on behalf of Genorah,
DMRE was obliged
to consider this information once it came to the
attention of the relevant functionaries. It was an integral part of
the determination
of the concentration of mineral rights as provided
in s 17(2).
[65]
The following reasoning by the Regional Manager gives even more
insight into her approach in
considering RPM’s application:
‘
The
properties under application and their resource potential present a
critical mass and an ideal opportunity to serve as a base
for a
company controlled by HDSA persons to successfully enter the South
African PGM Industry. In view of RPM/Anglo Platinum’s
dominant
position in the South African and world PGM Industry . . . its
application for the new properties cannot be supported.
. .’
Again, this reasoning is
consistent with the objectives of the MPRDA and in line with the
principles of interpretation of legislation.
On the other hand, the
contention that the DDG ignored the fact that RPM would be going into
a joint venture with a historically
disadvantaged entity was not
substantiated. That entity had been RPM’s associate in the
industry for some time and would
have already benefited from that
association.
[66]
The refusal of the prospecting right to RPM can therefore not be
faulted on the basis of the
approach she took in applying the
provisions of s17(2) of the MPRDA. It follows that there was no bar
to granting a mining right
to Genorah In the end, I cannot find that
the result reached by the high court was incorrect. The following
order is granted:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs including the costs of two counsel,
which costs shall be paid by the second appellant.
N
DAMBUZA
ACTING
DEPUTY PRESIDENT
Appearances:
For
1
st
a
ppellants:
M Seape
Instructed
by:
Norton Rose Fullbright Inc, Sandton
Webbers Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
2
nd
a
ppellants:
T Bruinders SC with E Webber
Instructed
by:
Bowman Gilfillan Inc., Sandton
McIntyre van der Post
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
4
th
,
6
th
,
7
th
and 10
th
respondents:
B Leech SC with F Hobden
Instructed
by:
Werkmans Attorneys, Sandton
Matsepes Inc,
Bloemfontein
For
8
th
and 9
th
respondents:
A Botha
SC with A Saldulker
Instructed
by:
Shaheed Dollie, Johannesburg
Matsepes Inc,
Bloemfontein
[1]
When
the review application was launched the Department was known as the
Department of Mineral Resources (DMR). On 29 May 2019,
the name was
changed to Department of Mineral Resources and Energy DMRE).
[2]
The separate applications by
RPM
and ARM challenging the granting of prospecting rights to Genorah
and Bauba were consolidated in November 2014.
[3]
Except
over the property known as Nooitverwacht 324 KT.
[4]
Item
8 of Schedule II to the MPRDA.
[5]
Grootvygenboom,
Houtbosch and Genokakop, (The King also applied for a prospecting
right over
Dingaanskop
543 KS, Dsjate 249 KT, Fisantlaagte 506 KS, Hoogste Punt 290 KT,
Indiё
474 KS, Malekskraal 509 KT, Mecklenburg 112 KT, and Schoonoord 462
KS).
[6]
Genorah’s
application was in respect of farms De Kom, Garatouw, Hoepakrantz,
Nooitverwacht, and Eerste Geluk.
[7]
Farms Garatouw 282 KT and De Kom 252 KT.
[8]
The
King had since passed away in December 2006.
[9]
Bengwenyama
Minerals (Pty) Ltd and Others v Genorah Resources (Pty) Ltd
(Formerly Tropical Paradise 427 (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2010] ZASCA 50; [2010] 3 All SA 577 (SCA).
[10]
Minister
of Mineral Resources and Others v Sishen Iron Ore Company (Pty) Ltd
and Another
[2013] ZACC 45; 2014 (2) BCLR 212 (CC); 2014 (2) SA 603 (CC).
[11]
Although
the wording of some of the provisions of the Act changed pursuant to
the amendment, the substance, structure and flow
of the Act remains
substantially the same post amendment.
[12]
Section 8 of the MPRDA.
[13]
Section
9(1)
(a)
.
[14]
Section
9(2).
[15]
Section
9(1)
(b).
[16]
Para
7 above
[17]
In terms of s1 of Schedule II an ‘old order right’ meant
‘an old order mining right, old order prospecting
right or
unused old order right as the case may be’.
[18]
Section
16(3).
[19]
Section
19(1)
(a)
read together with s18.
[20]
Section
19(1)
(c)
read together with s 20.
[21]
Section
19(2)
(b).
[22]
S
19(2)
(c).
[23]
Section
17(3).
[24]
Section
22 (1) & (2).
[25]
See
pragraphs 45 and 46 above.
[26]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v United Manganese of Kalahari (Pty)
Ltd
2020
(4) SA 428
(SCA) paras 16-17.
[27]
See p
ara
37 above
[28]
Section
2
(b)(c)(d)(e)
and (f)
of
the MPRDA.
[29]
Minister
of Mineral Resources v Sishen Iron
2014 (2) SA 603
at 45-47.
[30]
See
para 14 above.
sino noindex
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