Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 179South Africa
Witwatersrand African Taxi Association v Gauteng Provincial Regulatory Entity and Others (2025/017039) [2025] ZAGPJHC 179 (3 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Witwatersrand African Taxi Association v Gauteng Provincial Regulatory Entity and Others (2025/017039) [2025] ZAGPJHC 179 (3 March 2025)
Witwatersrand African Taxi Association v Gauteng Provincial Regulatory Entity and Others (2025/017039) [2025] ZAGPJHC 179 (3 March 2025)
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sino date 3 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No. 2025-017039
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
3
March 2025
In
the matter between:
WITWATERSRAND
AFRICAN TAXI ASSOCIATION
Applicant
and
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL REGULATORY ENTITY
First Respondent
THE
NANCEFIELD DUBE WEST TAXI ASSOCIATION
Second Respondent
MEC
FOR ROADS AND TRANSPORT, GAUTENG
Third Respondent
THE MINISTER FOR THE
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
FOR
ROADS AND TRANSPORT
Fourth Respondent
THE
GAUTENG NATIONAL TAXI ALLIANCE
Fifth Respondent
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL TAXI COUNCIL
Sixth Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Seventh Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICE
Eighth Respondent
MEC
FOR COMMUNITY SAFETY, GAUTENG PROVINCE
Ninth Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
Section 5 (3) of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
provides that where an administrator
takes an administrative decision
without providing reasons it must “be presumed in any
proceedings for judicial review that
the administrative action was
taken without good reason”. Section 5 (4) provides an exception
to this rule where a person
affected by the administrative decision
has been informed of the decision-maker’s election to depart
from the duty to give
reasons, and of the justification for that
election.
The
decision
2
The applicant, WATA, is an
association of just over 700 taxi owners, some of which operate along
routes in Soweto. The first respondent,
the GPRE, was established by
the third respondent, the MEC, under the
National Land Transport Act
5 of 2009
. The GPRE is part of the MEC’s department (section 23
(1) of the Act), and consists of “dedicated officials”
from that department (section 23 (2)). The GPRE’s statutory
functions are to “monitor and oversee public transport”
in Gauteng (section 24 (1) (a)) and to “receive and decide on
applications relating to operating licences for intra-provincial
transport where no municipality exists to which the operating licence
function has been assigned” (section 24 (1) (b)).
3
On 16 January 2025, the
GPRE notified WATA of its decision to award the right to load
passengers and to “bind” (to terminate
a taxi’s
journey) on specified routes operated by WATA’s members to the
second respondent, NANDUWE. NANDUWE is a rival
association of taxi
owners. The decision was said to be “applicable immediately but
enforceable 21 days after receipt”
of the notice in which it
was contained. Soon after the decision was announced, NANDUWE began
preventing WATA from operating on
the contested routes. Although this
case was argued on the basis that the seventh respondent’s
police department, the JMPD,
and the eighth respondent, the SAPS, are
taking steps to implement the 16 January decision, there is scant
evidence of their conduct
and attitude on the papers. In particular,
it is not clear whether they have actively assisted in the
implementation of the 16
January decision, or have simply stood by
while NANDUWE did so itself.
4
Either way, the
enforcement of the decision means that taxis owned by WATA members
are not permitted to load passengers, or to terminate
their journeys,
along the defined routes. Despite demand, the GPRE has failed to
provide any reasons for its decision. At the hearing
of this matter,
Mr. Mlambo, who appeared for the GPRE and for the MEC (who also seems
to have been joined again as the fourth respondent),
did not suggest
that reasons had been given. Nor did he argue that the failure to
provide reasons was in any way justified.
5
WATA now seeks interim
relief restraining the implementation of the 16 January decision on
the basis that it is
prima facie
unlawful, because section 5
(3) of PAJA says so. The interim relief WATA seeks will operate
pending the resolution of a review or
internal appeal of the
decision, the grounds of which WATA says it is presently unable to
specify, precisely because the GPRE’s
decision was completely
unreasoned.
The
dispute
6
The GPRE’s decision
appears to have been taken against the backdrop of intense
competition over the routes to which it applies.
That competition has
on occasion been violent, and it has endured for at least ten years.
The fifth respondent, the GNTA, which
is an umbrella body for several
taxi associations, including WATA, filed an affidavit confirming that
it will abide my decision.
In that affidavit, a Mr. Piet Mahlangu
sets out some vital context, none of which seems to be disputed. Mr.
Mahlangu says that
the source of this ten-year conflict is a GPRE
decision to issue operating licences to both WATA and NANDUWE, which
permit them
to operate in competition with each other on the same
routes. It is suggested that some of these licences were invalidly
issued,
but it is not clear from the papers whether, over the last
ten years, anyone has sought to trace the authenticity of the various
operating licences issued, or to work out a sustainable framework
within which WATA and NANDUWE can share the contested routes.
The
upshot of this appears to have been a decision to refer the disputes
between WATA and NANDUWE to arbitration. The record in
this matter
contains a number of court orders, stretching back several years,
granting interim relief to one or other of the parties,
pending that
arbitration.
7
Two of those court orders
are of particular relevance. The first is an order of Hofmeyr AJ,
dated 13 September 2022, in which “the
disputes
relating
to the route and permits allocated to the members” of WATA and
NANDUWE were referred to arbitration.
That order, at least
prima
facie
, binds WATA and NANDUWE, together with the MEC, who
apparently brought the application on which it was granted. Neither
Mr. Mlambo
nor Mr. Mashaba, who appeared for NANDUWE, suggested
that the order was wrongly granted, or that it had been set aside.
Indeed,
it was common cause before me that the arbitration envisaged
in the order is set to proceed on 1 April 2025, before a senior
member
of the Johannesburg Bar.
8
I issued the second order
on 14 March 2024. My order restrains NANDUWE from harassing,
intimidating or otherwise interfering with
WATA members’
operations along the contested routes pending the outcome of the
arbitration. Again, that order was neither
appealed against nor
rescinded, and remains binding on all the parties to this
application.
9
The GPRE’s decision
to revoke WATA members’ rights to load and to terminate their
journeys on the defined routes appears
to have been taken on the
basis of a complaint initiated by WATA that NANDUWE had disobeyed my
order, and had continued to harass
WATA members using the contested
routes. Instead of addressing that issue, WATA complains, the GPRE
purported to resolve the problem
by effectively excluding taxis owned
by WATA members from operating on the contested routes.
10
Neither Mr. Mlambo, nor
Mr. Mashaba advanced anything like a coherent justification for that
decision. Mr. Mlambo’s submission
amounted to the proposition
that WATA has never had the right to operate on the defined routes in
the first place. He referred
me to a judgment of this court dated 2
December 2015, in which WATA was unsuccessful in reviewing a decision
to exclude it from
the contested routes. However, a cursory
examination of that decision reveals that WATA was unsuccessful
because the relevant authorities
denied that they had in fact taken a
decision to exclude WATA from the relevant routes, not because an
enforceable decision had
been taken to do so.
11
For his part, Mr. Mashaba
stated merely that I lacked the power to intervene because the GPRE
had decided that WATA would no longer
be entitled to operate on the
contested routes, and was statutorily empowered to do so. That
submission did no more than beg the
question. Whatever its statutory
powers, the GPRE is under a duty to act lawfully. On the face of it,
the GPRE’s 16 January
decision exceeded the parameters of the
complaints referred to it, and interfered with the terms of an order,
binding on the MEC,
to have the dispute between WATA and NANDUWE
referred to arbitration. Without any sense of why GPRE acted as it
did, the decision
is
prima facie
unlawful.
12
There is no serious
dispute that, prior to the enforcement of the 16 January decision,
there were members of both WATA and NANDUWE
operating on the
contested routes with operating licences which were, on their face,
validly issued. Since the enforcement of the
decision, WATA members
have been prevented from loading passengers and terminating their
journeys on the routes, even if they are
in possession of such a
licence. The 16 January decision states GPRE’s intention to
revoke WATA members’ licences,
but that aspect of the decision
does not appear to have been implemented yet.
The
relief sought
13
Mr. Veerasamy, who
appeared together with Mr. Sechaba for WATA, asked no more than that
I grant interim relief suspending the implementation
of the 16
January decision, and restraining the first to third respondents from
preventing those of WATA’s members with licences
from operating
on the contested routes. The relief would operate pending the
determination of an internal appeal or PAJA review
of the 16 January
decision. Mr. Veerasamy emphasised that WATA could not yet say
whether it would appeal or review the decision,
because no reasons
for it had been given. Mr. Veerasamy submitted that, if the reasons
suggested that the GPRE had acted
ultra vires
its enabling
legalisation, then a review would be necessary. If, however, GRPE had
acted within its powers, but simply got its
decision wrong, an
internal appeal would be necessary. It bears pointing out that the
GPRE’s decision itself envisages the
exercise of a right of
appeal or review against it, which makes GPRE’s refusal to give
reasons all the more peculiar.
14
Be that as it may, given
the total absence of any justification for the 16 January decision,
and the fact that the decision is clearly
inconsistent with two
orders of this court which seek to enable the dispute between WATA
and NANDUWE to be arbitrated, I am bound
to accept that WATA has a
prima facie
right of the strongest kind to the relief it
seeks. The balance of convenience must be firmly in WATA’s
favour, since it
seeks only to preserve the rights of those of its
members who are in possession of operating licences, without
interfering with
the rights of NANDUWE members who may also be in
possession of operating licences. WATA members in possession of
operating licences
are clearly suffering irreparable harm, not only
because, as WATA’s papers show, their income has likely taken a
substantial
dent since the 16 January decision was implemented, but
also because their rights to have their dispute arbitrated under the
orders
that Hofmeyr AJ and I made have been compromised. In the face
of GPRE’s baffling refusal to justify its decision, WATA
clearly
had no effective remedial alternative but to approach this
court.
Order
15
For all these reasons -
15.1 Pending the
final determination of an internal appeal or of a review of the first
respondent’s decision of 16
January 2025 (‘the decision’)
under the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
, which
must be launched within ten days of receipt of the first respondent’s
reasons for that decision, the first, second
and third respondents
are interdicted and restrained from –
15.1.1
implementing the decision recorded in the first respondent’s
letter of 16 January 2025, which is annexed to
the applicant’s
founding affidavit and marked “FA8”.
15.1.2 preventing
those of the applicant’s members who were on 16 January 2025 in
possession of an operating licence
permitting them to operate on the
routes set out in the decision from loading passengers or “binding”
on the routes
set out in the decision.
15.2 The eighth
respondent, and the police department of the seventh respondent, are
authorised to take such steps as may
be necessary to enforce this
order.
15.3 The first,
second and third respondents are directed, the one paying the other
to be absolved, to pay the applicant’s
costs, including the
costs of two counsel where employed. Counsel’s costs may be
taxed on scale “B”.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 3 March 2025.
HEARD
ON:
25 February 2025
DECIDED
ON:
3 March 2025
For
the Applicant:
I Veerasamy
S Mchunu
Instructed by Pather and
Pather Attorneys
For
the First and
T Mlambo
Third
Respondents:
Instructed
by the State Attorney
For
the Second Respondent: Mr. Mashaba
Instructed by HR Munyai
Attorneys
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