Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1095South Africa
Body Corporate of Argyle Green v Appeal Authority City of Johannesburg and Others (Application for Leave to Appeal) (2021/9113) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1095 (28 October 2024)
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1095
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Body Corporate of Argyle Green v Appeal Authority City of Johannesburg and Others (Application for Leave to Appeal) (2021/9113) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1095 (28 October 2024)
Body Corporate of Argyle Green v Appeal Authority City of Johannesburg and Others (Application for Leave to Appeal) (2021/9113) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1095 (28 October 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_1095.html
sino date 28 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2021-9113
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
28
October 2024
In
the matter between:
THE
BODY CORPORATE OF ARGYLE GREEN SS890/1994
Applicant
And
APPEAL
AUTHORITY, CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
First
respondent
NIENABER
THE
CHAIRPERSON, MUNICIPAL PLANNING TRIBUNAL
Second
respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Third
respondent
PILOFIN
(PTY) LTD
Fourth
respondent
ORDER: APPLICATION FOR
LEAVE TO APPEAL
1. The application
for leave to appeal is dismissed.
2. The third
respondent in the main application is ordered to pay the costs of the
applicant, with counsel’s fees to
be taxed at Scale C in terms
of Rule 67A of the Uniform Rules of Court.
JUDGMENT: APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
[1]
For the sake of convenience, I refer to the parties as in the main
application, and the judgment and order I handed down
on 16 September
2024.
[2]
The City
respondents
[1]
seek leave to
appeal the order under two rubrics: firstly, the order striking
substantial portions of their answering and supplementary
answering
affidavits based on these containing inadmissible hearsay or opinion
evidence; and secondly, that the revised comments
of the Johannesburg
Road Agency (“
the
JRA
”)
remain valid and binding until set aside.
The
hearsay issue
[3]
Whilst
section 3 of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act
[2]
transformed the common law approach to hearsay evidence, the default
position remains that, “
hearsay,
unless it is brought within one of the recognised exceptions, is not
evidence, i.e. legal evidence, at all
.”
[3]
Accordingly, unless the presenter of hearsay seeks leave to enter
such hearsay into “legal evidence”,
[4]
it remains inadmissible and thus irrelevant. Being irrelevant, the
Body Corporate availed itself of the provisions of Rule 6(15),
seeking the striking out of offending portions of the answering and
supplementary answering affidavits of the City respondents.
[4]
The
provisions of Rule 6(15) do not constitute a close list of instances
where a court may be called upon to strike matter from
an
affidavit.
[5]
It is entirely
conceivable to seek the striking out of inadmissible evidence,
argument, and new matter in a replying affidavit.
As the Body
Corporate’s application rested on the inadmissibility of
portions of the answering and supplementary answering
affidavits on
the basis of hearsay, and opinion evidence, it was not required to
demonstrate prejudice.
[6]
[5]
The City respondents submit that, as the deponent to the affidavits
filed on behalf of the Body Corporate, Ms Gibbs, does
not state the
source of her alleged personal knowledge, I erred in criticising the
deponent to the affidavits filed on behalf of
the City respondents,
for his lack of personal knowledge.
[6]
This submission ignores the confirmatory affidavits of Mr Druce and
Dr Sampson, annexed to Ms Gibbs’ affidavits.
Both Mr Druce and
Dr Sampson were part of and present at the hearing before the MPT,
with Mr Druce being the author and presenter
of the Body Corporate’s
opposition to the rezoning application, and the appeal to the Appeal
Authority. Additionally, Mr
Druce expressly qualified himself as an
expert in town planning. Both Mr Druce’s and Dr Sampson’s
confirmatory affidavits
do more than just “
confirm the
contents of Ms Gibbs’s affidavit in so far as it relates to
me”
. Each of the confirmatory affidavits contain crucial
evidence of which they each have personal knowledge. Consequently,
although
Ms Gibbs’s affidavits contain allegations which are
hearsay, these are admissible on the basis of section 3(1)(b) of the
Amendment Act.
[7]
The same cannot be said of allegations contained in Mr Malahlela’s
affidavits, neither of which was supported by
any confirmatory
affidavits. The “
explanatory affidavit
” of Ms
Motaung, who was a constituent member of the MPT, contained nothing
to confirm the hearsay or opinion evidence of
Mr Malahlela. In fact,
Ms Motaung’s affidavit references only paragraphs 25 to 30 of
the supplementary founding affidavit
and makes no mention of either
the answering affidavit or the supplementary answering affidavit to
which it was annexed.
[8]
In contrast
to the “
sloppy
method of adducing evidence by way of a hearsay allegation …
supported by a so-called ‘confirmatory affidavit’
”
which confronted the court in
Drift
Supersand (Pty) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality
[7]
,
the City respondents herein did not present any admissible evidence
on the contentious issues. In neither the answering affidavit
nor the
supplementary answering affidavit does Mr Malahela even attempt to
justify the inclusion of the hearsay evidence or to
invoke the
Court’s discretion to allow the hearsay evidence. It was only
in when faced with the application in terms of Rule
6(15), and in
argument, that the City respondents, relying on
Lagoon
Beach Hotel
,
[8]
raised aspects such as it being impractical to obtain confirmatory
affidavits of each and every person who authored a document.
This
argument is not only unsupported by the contents of the answering or
supplementary answering affidavit, but it overlooks the
contentious
issues for determination raised on the affidavits.
[9]
The City respondents were not called upon to prove, by way of
confirmatory affidavits, each and every document or report
filed with
the MPT or the Appeal Authority. On my estimation, only four
documents were crucial to the issues for determination:
the call for
and the contents of the JRA’s revised comments (both of which
were attached to Pilofin’s affidavit), Pilofin’s
submissions to the appeal authority (which was attached to Pilofin’s
affidavit), and the report of the Group Legal &
Contracts &
Development Planning, allegedly annexed to the letter of 31 August
2020, advising of the appeal decision (attached
to the City
respondent’s answering affidavit.
[10]
The City respondents presented no admissible evidence to gainsay the
Body Corporate’s case that it never had sight
of these four
documents. Why the City respondents were unable to do so, Mr
Malahlela does not explain in any of his affidavits.
To add insult to
injury, the City respondents even sought to rely on documents annexed
to the affidavits filed on behalf of Pilofin,
and which documents did
not form part of the review record. No explanation was proffered why
these documents were not included
in the review record.
[11]
Ultimately, there is no factual or legal basis to argue that the City
respondents were obliged to obtain confirmatory
affidavits of a
myriad of persons from each of the entities and third parties
referred to in the heads of argument filed on behalf
of the City
respondents.
[12]
I am not prepared to accede to the entreaties of Mr Mokutu SC, who
appeared with Mr Stemela for the City respondents,
to grant leave to
appeal so that the City may obtain clarity on how it is to present
evidence in matters such as the present. Not
only is the answer
perforce fact-specific, but it is not for a civil court to advise a
litigant, who is ably legally assisted,
on the manner in which it is
to present its evidence.
[13]
On balance, I am not satisfied that an appeal against the orders
striking out portions of the answering and supplementary
answering
affidavits would have a reasonable prospect of success.
The
JRA’s comments issue
[14]
It was contended on behalf of the City respondents that the JRA’s
revised comments dated 12 October 2018 constitute
administrative
action in and of itself, which remain valid until set aside. As such,
it was argued that the JRA ought to have been
joined in the main
application so that the reasons for the revised comments could have
been made available to the court. Accordingly,
I erred to granting
the relief in the absence of the JRA.
[15]
By virtue
of the by-law
[9]
, the
determination of a rezoning application does not fall within the
purvey of the JRA, but that of the MPT, who is entitled to
call for
reports, comments and the like from relevant entities and third
parties. There is no dispute that the MPT did receive
various reports
and comments.
[16]
As set out in paragraphs 56 and 57 of the main judgment, one of the
most contentious issues relevant to the rezoning
application was the
issue of the ingress and egress of vehicles into and from the
proposed development. In fact, pursuant to the
hearing on 10 October
2018, the MPT regarded the issue of sufficient relevance, that it
resolved to seek revised comments from
the JRA. The revised comments
came in the form of the JRA’s letter of 12 October 2018.
[17]
Plainly, the contents of the JRA’s letter did not constitute a
determination or a decision, but merely a recordal
that the
“
JRA has no
objection that one common access point is proposed at the
intersection of Grayston Drive and Helen Road, as proposed
in the
attached sketch plan by WSP Engineers, Drawing No, 327503-GL-01. The
JRA has always maintained that this would be the desired
option.
”
[18]
Had the JRA’s revised comments constituted a determination or a
“decision”, as the City respondents
would have it, surely
the MPT would have been included as it in the November 2018 decision.
The MPT did not. In truth, the record
does not evidence that the
JRA’s revised comments were even tabled at the November 2018
meeting, much less discussed by the
members of the MPT prior to
making the November 2018 decision. It is in this context, that the
November 2018 lacks procedural rationality.
[19]
Accordingly, I am not satisfied that the JRA’s comments
constituted a “determination” which is susceptible
to
review and/or which ought to be set aside prior to the review of the
November 2018 decision.
[20]
In any event, as accurately pointed out by Mr Du Plessis, appearing
for the Body Corporate, had the JRA’s revised
comments in fact
constituted a “determination”, by virtue of section 151
(1) of the Constitution, read with Part B
of Schedule 5, such
determination falls within the purvey of executive powers and
functions of a municipal council, which is specifically
excluded in
(cc) of the definition of “
administrative action
”
in section 1 of PAJA.
[21]
In the result, I am satisfied that JRA issue would not have
reasonable prospect of success on appeal.
[22]
Accordingly, I make the following order as set out above.
SARITA
LIEBENBERG
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
For
the applicant (in the main application):
Adv
LM du Plessis
For
the first, second and third respondents
(in
the main application):
Adv
E Mokutu SC and Adv X Stemela
For
the fourth respondent (in the main application):
No
Appearance
Heard
on:
22
October 2024
Judgment:
28
October 2024
[1]
Being the first, second and third respondents in the main
application
[2]
Act 45 of 1988 (“
the
Amendment Act
”)
[3]
Vulcan
Rubber Works v South African Railways And Harbours
1958
(3) SA 285
(A) at 296F;
S
v Ndlovu Ndhlovu and Others
2002
(6) SA 305
(SCA)
(2002 (2) SACR 325
;
[2002] 3 All SA 760
;
[2002] ZASCA 70)
(
Ndhlovu
)
para 14;
LA
Group (Pty) Ltd v
Stable
Brands (Pty) Ltd And Another
2022
(4) SA 448 (SCA) at 206,
[4]
Pioneer
Foods (Pty) Ltd t/a Essential Foods v Shear N.O.
(JA21/22)
[2024] ZALAC 46
(18 October 2024) at para 23
[5]
E.g.
Titty’s
Bar and Bottle Store (Pty) Ltd v ABC Garage (Pty) Ltd
1974
(4) SA 362 (T)
at 368G;
Tshabalala-Msimang
v Makhanya
[2007] ZAGPHC 161
;
[2008]
1 All SA 509
(W) at 516
e
;
Breedenkamp
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2009
(5) SA 304
(GSJ) at 321B;
LF
v TF
2020
(2) SA 546 (GJ)
at para 25;
Clairison’s
CC v MEC for Local Government, Environmental Affairs and Development
Planning
2012
(3) SA 128 (WCC)
[6]
Cultura
2000 v Government of the Republic of Namibia
1993 (2) SA 12
(Nm) at 27H
[7]
2017
JDR 1611 (SCA):
[2017] 4 All SA 624
(SCA) at para 31.
Also
see
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
2019 (5) SA 386
(SCA) at para 3.
[8]
Lagoon
Beach Hotel v Lehane
2016 (3) SA 143 (SCA)
[9]
City of Johannesburg Municipal By-law, 2016
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Body Corporate of Valleyview Centre v Queen New York Cosmetic (Pty) Ltd (In Liquidation) (Reasons) (2023/070664) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1300 (20 December 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1300High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Body Corporate Ashwood Manor v MacGregor (027545/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1394 (30 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1394High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Body Corporate of Willow and Aloe Grove v City of Johannesburg and Another (41604/2020 ; 13541/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1451 (11 December 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1451High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Body Corporate Ashwood Manor v Macgregor (027545/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1153 (13 October 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1153High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Body Corporate of Argyle Green v Appeal Authority City of Johannesburg and Others (2021/9113) [2024] ZAGPJHC 943 (16 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 943High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar