Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 318South Africa
City of Johannesburg v Hyde Park Gardens (Pty) Ltd ta Shell Hyde Park Gardens (2024/136466; 2023/077080; 2020/15428) [2025] ZAGPJHC 318 (24 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 March 2025
Headnotes
Summary of Paragraphs C – G of the Order:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## City of Johannesburg v Hyde Park Gardens (Pty) Ltd ta Shell Hyde Park Gardens (2024/136466; 2023/077080; 2020/15428) [2025] ZAGPJHC 318 (24 March 2025)
City of Johannesburg v Hyde Park Gardens (Pty) Ltd ta Shell Hyde Park Gardens (2024/136466; 2023/077080; 2020/15428) [2025] ZAGPJHC 318 (24 March 2025)
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sino date 24 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Numbers: 2024- 136466
2023-
077080 & 2020- 15428
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVIEWED: YES
24 March 2025
In
the matter between:
Case Number: 20-15428
In
the application for leave to appeal:
CITY
OF
JOHANNESBURG
Applicant
and
HYDE
PARK GARDENS (PTY) LTD t/a SHELL HYDE PARK GARDENS
Respondent
In
re:
Case
Number: 24-136466
ERF
784 ROBINDALE FIVE (PTY) LIMITED &
OTHERS
Applicants
vs
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY & ANOTHER
Respondents
and
Case
Number: 23-077080
In
the matter between:
ORDICODE
(PTY)
LTD
Applicant
vs
CITY
OF
JOHANNESBURG
Respondent
and
Case
Number: 20-15428
HYDE PARK GARDENS (PTY)
LTD t/a SHELL HYDE PARK GARDENS
Applicant
vs
CITY
POWER OF JOHANNESBURG SOC LIMITED [“CoJ] & ANOTHER
Respondents
JUDGMENT ON
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
BADENHORST AJ:
Introduction
1.
On 6 January 2025 I handed down judgment in
the above three matters. The following Orders which appear at the end
thereof are relevant
for the purposes of the CoJ’s application
for leave to appeal in C
ase Number: 20-15428
:
“
C. In HYDE PARK
GARDENS (PTY) LTD // CITY POWER JOHANNESBURG SOC LIMITED & OTHER
Case Number: 20/15428 [No. 9 on the roll] (“the
Hyde Park
matter”):
1) The second respondent
(City of Johannesburg) is found to be in contempt of paragraph 2 of
the Order made by the honourable Justice
Yacoob on 8 July 2020 under
case number 2020/15428 [“the Yacoob Order”];
2) The questions of:
i. the appropriate
sanction for the contempt of the Yacoob Order;
ii. which individuals, if
any, should be sanctioned; and
iii. the final
determination of case number 2020/15428 (including the resolution of
all the disputes arising in respect of City
of Johannesburg Municipal
Account No: 220096837 which are referenced in the Yacoob Order), are
referred for the hearing of oral
evidence before me (or another Judge
as the DJP may direct) on a date and at a time to be determined by
the Deputy Judge President.
3) Witness statements
i. The evidence shall be
that of any witnesses whom the parties or either of them may elect to
call, subject, however, to what is
provided in para. 3.2 hereof.
ii. Neither party shall
be entitled to call any witness unless:
a)
it has served on the other party at least 15 days before the date
appointed for the hearing (in the case of a witness to be called
by
the respondents) and at least 10 days before such date (in the case
of a witness to be called by the applicant), a statement
wherein the
evidence to be given in chief by such person is set out; or
b)
the Court, at the hearing, permits such person to be called even
though no such statement has been so served in respect of his
evidence.
4) Either party may
subpoena any person to give evidence at the hearing, whether such
person has consented to furnish a statement
or not.
5) The fact that a party
has served a statement in terms of para. 3.2 hereof, or has
subpoenaed a witness, shall not oblige such
party to call the witness
concerned.
6) Within 30 days of the
making of this order, each of the parties shall make discovery, on
oath, of all documents relating to the
issues referred to in para. 2
thereof, which are or have at any time been in the possession or
under the control of such party.
7) Such discovery shall
be made in accordance with Rule of Court 35 and the provisions of
that Rule with regard to the inspection
and production of documents
discovered shall be operative.
8) In the event that the
respondents again disconnect the applicants’ electricity supply
to Shell Hyde Park, located at 99
Winnie Madikizela Drive, Hyde Park,
Johannesburg (“the supply of electricity”), in breach of
the Yacoob Order, and
thereafter fail to reconnect the supply of
electricity within two hours of receiving a request (by email or
telephone call) to
do so, the applicant is hereby authorized to
engage an electrician and/or service provider to reconnect the supply
of electricity.
The reasonable costs incurred in effecting this
reconnection shall be borne by the party or parties responsible for
the breach;
9) The incidence of the
costs incurred up to now shall be determined after the hearing of
oral evidence.
D.
Respondents’
attorneys and counsel of
record are invited to make representations to this Court within 30
days of the publication of this order,
demonstrating why they should
not be prohibited from charging or recovering any fees from the City
of Johannesburg, City Power,
or Johannesburg Water for work performed
in respect of the matters decided in this judgment in the light of
their failures identified
herein. If such representations are not
filed in a timely manner, or if they are deemed unpersuasive,
supplementary orders to that
effect will be issued.
E. Mr
Ngwana
, the CoJ’s legal advisor, is
invited to make representations to this Court within 30 days of the
publication of this order,
providing reasons why he should not be
personally ordered to pay 20% of the costs incurred by the CoJ and CP
in these three matters,
arising from his failure to heed the Deputy
Judge President’s warning in paragraph [45] of the decision in
Millu
(case number 25039/2021). If such representations are not filed in a
timely manner, or if they are deemed unpersuasive, supplementary
orders to that effect will be issued.
F. This judgment, as well
as the following decisions—similarly critical of the
administration of the City of Johannesburg,
Ulcombe v City of
Johannesburg 18969/2022 (2023 02 01) per Strydom J;
AFHCO Calgro M3
Consortium (Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality
and others 2023 JDR 3337 (GJ) per Benson AJ
(23 August 2023);
Millu v City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (25039/2021)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 419 (18 March 2024) per Sutherland
DJP;
Ackerman v City of
Johannesburg (2022/9392) [2024] ZAGPJHC 334 (5 April 2024) per Chetty
J link;
Millu v City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (supplemental
judgment) (25039/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 420 (29 April
2024) per
Sutherland DJP;
Afhco Calgo M3 Consortium
(Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others
(2022/322) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1057 (18
October 2024) per Amm AJ,
must be brought to the
attention of the following officials of the City of Johannesburg:
a. The Executive Mayor;
b. The City Manager;
c. The Head of Revenue
Collection;
d. The Chief Legal
Advisor;
e. The Chief Executive
Officer of City Power;
f. The Chief Executive
Officer of Johannesburg Water.
They
are invited, within 30 days, to respond to:
The finding of contempt
of court in the Hyde Park matter (refer to paragraph [97]); and
The flaws in the
answering affidavits and arguments common to all three matters
(described in paragraphs [1], [2] and [103] –
[111] of this
judgment).
They
are further invited to respond to the criticism expressed in the six
previous decisions of this court listed above.
Any
response, or lack thereof, will be duly considered when determining
an appropriate sanction for contempt, addressing the outstanding
order for costs in the Hyde Park matter, and assessing the necessity
for further remedial action at higher levels of the governmental
hierarchy.
G. The
parties and relevant officials of the City of Johannesburg are
directed to email any representations delivered in terms of
paragraphs D - F above to the Registrar of the court, Mr. L Mabasa,
at LMabasa@judiciary.org.za for the consideration of the court,
copied to the applicants’ attorneys in the three matters
identified in A to C of this order and the Secretary of the DJP’s
Office, at
secretarydjp@judiciary.org.za
.”
2.
On 27 January 2025 the attorney for the CoJ
delivered a Notice of Application for leave to appeal against the
orders under C, D,
E, F and G of the judgment, repeated above.
3.
On 4 March 2025 well in advance of the
hearing of the application for leave to appeal, the Registrar
notified the parties that the
court intends,
mero
motu
to raise the question whether the
Orders in respect of which leave to appeal is applied for (namely
paragraphs C & D, E, F and
G of the Order quoted above) are
appealable considering:
3.1.
In respect of paragraph C 1 (the finding of
contempt of court in circumstances where the penalty for contempt has
not yet been determined),
in the light of the rule described in
Wahlhaus and Others v Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg and Another
1959 (3) SA 113
(A) at page 120 D/E as “the salutary general
rule that appeals are not entertained piecemeal”; and
3.2.
In respect of the balance of the Order
(paragraph C2 - 8, a referral to oral evidence and associated
procedural directives; D -
E, invitations to make representations; F,
an invitation to senior City Officials to consider and respond to the
finding of contempt
and court decisions critical of the City’s
administration and G, a procedural direction concerning communication
of any responses
made), in the light of the Zweni Rule (see Zweni v
Minister of Law and Order
1993 (1) SA 523
(A) at pages 532J –
533A) read with TWK Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld
Boerderybeleggings (Pty) Ltd and Others
2023 (5) SA 163
(SCA) at
paragraphs [21], [22] and [27] .
4.
In accordance with the notification, the
first question is to be decided is whether leave to appeal should (or
can) be granted at
this stage in the proceedings.
The Zweni test
5.
In Zweni v Minister of Law and Order
1993
(1) SA 523
(A) at pages 532J – 533A, the well-known test for
appealability was stated as follows with reference to the Supreme
Court
Act of 59 of 1959:
“
A
'judgment or order' is a decision which, as a general principle, has
three attributes, first, the decision must be final in effect
and not
susceptible of alteration by the Court of first instance; second, it
must be definitive of the rights of the parties; and,
third, it
must have the effect of disposing of at least a substantial portion
of the relief claimed in the main proceedings…
”
.
6.
As appears from this passage, the Zweni
test (as it has become known) is informed by the qualifying words,
“judgment or order”
in the (now) repealed Supreme Court
Act of 59 of 1959. These words do not appear in the
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
.
Section 16
of the new Act is cast in general terms
namely: “
an appeal against
any
decision
of a Division as a
court of first instance lies, upon leave having been granted
”
[underlined]
7.
This difference in the two Acts sparked a
debate in the Law Reports about the continued relevance of the Zweni
test and more particularly
whether the only qualifying test for leave
to appeal should be “the interests of justice” which is
the one applied
by the Constitutional Court to applications for leave
to appeal in that Court.
8.
The issue was carefully considered In TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd and Others
2023 (5) SA 163
(SCA). I refer to the following
passages of the decision by Unterhalter AJA (as he then was):
“
[21]
Whether the decision of a court is appealable is a matter of great
importance, both for litigants and for the discharge by
an appellate
court of its institutional functions. That is why the doctrine of
finality has figured so prominently in the jurisprudence
of this
court. As a general principle, the High Court should bring finality
to the matter before it, in the sense laid down in
Zweni. Only then
should the matter be capable of being appealed to this court. It
allows for the orderly use of the capacity of
this court to hear
appeals that warrant its attention. It prevents piecemeal appeals
that are often costly and delay the resolution
of matters before the
High Court. It reinforces the duty of the High Court to bring matters
to an expeditious, and final, conclusion.
And it provides criteria so
that litigants can determine, with tolerable certainty, whether a
matter is appealable. These are the
hallmarks of what the rule of law
requires.
[22] I do not consider
the
Superior Courts Act to
have supplanted the primacy of Zweni….
[27] To adopt the
interests of justice as the foundational basis upon which this court
decides whether to entertain an appeal would
put in place a regime
that is both unpredictable and open-ended. It would encourage
litigants to persuade the High Courts to grant
leave, when they still
have work to do, failing which, to invite this court to hear an
appeal under the guidance of a standard
of commanding imprecision.
That would diminish certainty and enhance dysfunction. It would also
compromise the freedom with which
the Constitutional Court selects
the matters it hears from this court.”
9.
It follows that the Zweni test of finality
determines whether the application for leave to appeal qualifies
under the Zweni test.
Summary
of Paragraphs C – G of the Order:
10.
Hyde Park Matter Proceedings (paragraph C of the Order):
10.1.
The City of Johannesburg is found to be in contempt for violating the
Yacoob Order.
10.2.
Three key issues (arising from that finding) are referred for oral
evidence: the sanction for
contempt, which individuals (if any) to
sanction, and finally resolution of the broader case in that matter
(including disputes
remaining over the municipal account).
10.3.
Procedures are put in place for witness evidence, document discovery,
and handling electricity
supply breaches, including cost allocation
for reconnection, if required in the interim.
11.
Representation by Respondents’ Attorneys and Counsel (paragraph
D of the Order):
11.1.
Attorneys and counsel are invited within 30 days to explain why they
should not be barred from
charging/recovering fees for work done on
the matter.
11.2.
Failure to timely file persuasive representations may lead to
supplementary orders prohibiting
fee recovery.
12.
Representation by the City’s Legal Advisor (Mr. Ngwana)
[paragraph E of the Order]:
12.1.
Mr. Ngwana must, within 30 days, provide reasons why he should not be
personally liable for
20% of the costs incurred, due to his earlier
failure to heed a prior warning.
12.2.
Lack of a timely or persuasive response may result in orders imposing
that cost share on him.
13.
Notification of Related Decisions of the courts in other matters
raising similar concerns as those expressed by this court
[paragraph
F of the Order]:
13.1.
A series of related judgments critical of the City’s
administration are listed.
13.2.
These decisions, along with the finding of contempt and identified
flaws in affidavits/arguments,
must be brought to the attention of
several key city officials.
13.3.
The officials are invited to respond thereto within 30 days.
13.4.
It is indicated that any
response, or lack
thereof, will be duly considered when determining an appropriate
sanction for contempt, addressing the outstanding
order for costs in
the Hyde Park matter, and assessing the necessity for further
remedial action at higher levels of the governmental
hierarchy.
13.5. Communication
of Representations [paragraph G of the Order]:
All parties and the
designated City officials must email their representations to the
court Registrar and copy the applicants’
attorneys and the
DJP’s Secretary, ensuring the court receives all input for
further consideration.
Only
the finding of contempt satisfies the Zweni test
14.
The finding of contempt [paragraph C 1 of the Order] unquestionably
meets all three criteria of the Zweni test for a “judgment
or
order”.
15. In contrast,
the rest of the Orders [C 2 – 9, D, E, F and G] (referral to
evidence to determine sanctions and outstanding
issues on papers in
Hyde Park Gardens matter, fee representations, cost allocation, and
further remedial measures in future) are
all subject to pending oral
hearings and additional representations invited by the Court.
16.
None of them satisfies the Zweni test of finality and accordingly the
application for leave to appeal in relation thereto
is impermissible
and deficient.
Reasonable
prospects of success: contempt of court
17.
Has the applicant established a reasonable prospect that another
Court would come to a different finding (
i.e. that no contempt is
established on the papers in the Hyde Park matter
.) And is so, is
it appropriate for leave to appeal to be granted at this stage when a
number of related matters have not yet been
resolved?
18.
I have carefully reconsidered paragraphs
[80] to [97] of the Judgment, especially paragraphs [94] – [97]
where the question
of contempt and CoJ’s defences are analysed
and determined. I am unpersuaded that another Court would take a
different view.
There is accordingly no reasonable prospects of
success on appeal.
19.
I
mention
en
passant
that
even if there was a reasonable prospect of success on appeal of the
contempt finding, mindful of general rule that appeals
are not
entertained piecemeal, I would not at this point have granted leave
to appeal. I appreciate that the finding made against
the applicant
is for civil (not criminal) contempt which means that Section 316 of
the Criminal Procedure Act does not apply, which
lays down as a
general rule
[1]
that what are
alleged to be wrong decisions made in the course of a criminal trial,
are only capable of correction by way of appeal
or review
after
the trial has ended
,
in other words not before the trial has run its course unless there
is a compelling reason justifying it. Although not applicable,
the
principle informing Section 316 is equally applicable in this matter
and strengthens the avoidance of a piecemeal procedure
as envisaged
by the applicant.
20.
It follows that the application for leave
to appeal fails the jurisdictional requirement of the Zweni test in
part and fails, regarding
the finding of contempt in the Hyde Park
Gardens matter, to satisfy the test of reasonable prospects of
success on appeal. It would
in any event have been inappropriate, in
my view, to cause a piecemeal process at this stage where the “trial”
has
not yet been concluded. In the case of the rest of the Orders,
they fail the Zweni test and leave to appeal is accordingly not an
available remedy at this stage of the yet incomplete proceedings.
21.
The application is accordingly dismissed
with costs, including the costs of two counsel where employed.
BADENHORST AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Heard: 24 March 2025
Judgment: 24 March 2025
APPLICATION
APPEARANCES
ERF
784 ROBINDALE FIVE (PTY) LIMITED // CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Case Number:
24-136466
For
the applicant: Adv B Casey
For
the respondent:
Adv
E Sithole
Instructed
by: Ramatshila – Mugeri Inc
ORDICODE
(PTY) LTD //
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:23-077080
For
the applicant: Adv M Rodrigues
For
the respondent:
Adv
E Sithole
Instructed
by: Madhlopa & Thenga Inc
HYDE
PARK
GARDENS
(PTY) LTD //
CITY
POWER JOHANNESBURG SOC LIMITED & OTHER
Case
Number: 20/1542
For
the applicant: Adv Yacoob Alli with
Adv
Zaheera Hoosen
For
the respondent:
Adv
E Sithole
Instructed
by: Madhlopa & Thenga Inc
[1]
S
v Zuma and Another 2022 JDR 0493 (KZP) paragraph [37].
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