Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 139South Africa
Thurwood Investments (Pty) Ltd T/A BKT Fiber JV v City Of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (59383/21) [2023] ZAGPJHC 139 (13 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Thurwood Investments (Pty) Ltd T/A BKT Fiber JV v City Of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (59383/21) [2023] ZAGPJHC 139 (13 February 2023)
Thurwood Investments (Pty) Ltd T/A BKT Fiber JV v City Of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (59383/21) [2023] ZAGPJHC 139 (13 February 2023)
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sino date 13 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 59383/21
In
the matter between:
THURWOOD
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
T/A
BKT FIBER JV Applicant
And
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY Respondent
JUDGMENT
VILJOEN
AJ
[1]
The applicant (“BKT”) was contracted
to install aerial fibre-to-the-home broadband infrastructure in some
regions of
Kwa-Thema. The operational areas relevant to this
application are situated within the respondent (“the COE”).
[2]
The COE has a wayleave policy to safeguard the
services infrastructure within the public road reserve. To control
and coordinate
work in the public road reserve, the COE requires
potential providers of public services to obtain a wayleave before
work may be
conducted in the road reserve. In terms of the policy, a
wayleave holder has permission to place a new service, do
excavations,
perform vehicular and pedestrian control, and perform
reinstatement work in the public road reserve. A wayleave may be
subject
to general conditions, e.g., a limited time to conduct the
work.
[3]
BKT applied for and was granted wayleaves that
enabled it to install the aerial fibre network in Kwa-Thema.
[4]
Armed with the approved wayleaves, BKT commenced
the construction of its network in September 2021. The network is not
yet completed.
[5]
On 21 October 2021, an extraordinary meeting of
the council of the COE purported to adopt a resolution in the
following terms:
“
RESOLVED:
1.
That Council must order HALTING the installation
of fibre through poles as it defaces the image of the City.
2.
That the City must ENGAGE the private contractors
to explore installation of fibre underground and stop the
installation of poles.
3.
That the City CONSIDERS reviewing the way-leave
[sic] application in which must specify[sic] that all installations
must be made
underground.”
[6]
The terms of the resolution could have been more
explicitly formulated, a testament perhaps to the haste with which it
was produced
and purportedly adopted.
[7]
Part B
of the notice of motion condenses the resolution's content to “
[a]
decision to halt aerial installation of fibre through poles
”
.
The resolution, however, must, as any other document, be read as a
whole.
[1]
The resolution, in
addition to demanding the immediate cessation of aerial installation,
envisages a consultation process with
fibre contractors to explore
the potential of a change to the installation methodology. It further
calls for the consideration
of the addition to wayleave applications
of a requirement that fibre should be installed underground,
presumably upon the conclusion
of consultation process.
[8]
It is common cause that the resolution was taken
without prior notification to or consultation with BKT, other
contractors similarly
occupied with installing aerial fibre
infrastructure or the public at large.
[9]
BKT learnt of the existence of the resolution
when, on 15 November 2021, the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Police
Department stopped BKT
from further work. Some letter-writing between
BKT’s attorneys and the COE ensued, culminating in confirmation
from the COE
that it considered the resolution valid and enforceable.
[10]
On 29 November 2021, BKT’s wayleave
consultant applied for the renewal of its wayleaves. The divisional
head of the Roads
and Stormwater Department of the COE verbally
stated in response that he could not grant any extension of wayleaves
because the
resolution had tied his hands. This communication was
followed by an email attaching a copy of the resolution.
[11]
BKT launched this application in December 2021.
Part A of the application sought, on an urgent basis, the suspension
of the resolution,
the prohibition of the enforcement of the
resolution and the extension of BKT’s wayleaves (with some
qualifications) pending
the outcome of Part B. Part A was struck from
the roll for lack of urgency on 11 January 2022.
[12]
Part B of the application, as I referred to above,
seeks the review and the setting aside of the COE’s “
decision
to halt aerial installation of fibre through poles as set out in a
resolution purportedly passed by the [COE] on or about
25 October
2021
.”
[13]
BKT argues that the resolution is unlawful. It
contends that it is procedurally unfair, contravenes the COE’s
Standing Order,
and violates the rights afforded licenced electronic
communications network service providers by section 22 of the
Electronic Communications Act
,
36 of 2005 (“the ECA”),
inter
alia
to construct and maintain
communications networks under, over or along streets or land reserved
for public purposes.
[14]
The COE defends the resolution by asserting that
community unrest and acts of violence in Kwa-Thema because of the
installation
of overhead fibre-to-the-home in that area urgently
compelled it to restore order. It contends that the matter's
exigencies justified
the resolution's adoption without notice. This
excuse has little to commend it, in my view.
[15]
In
adopting the resolution, the COE was obligated to act procedurally
fairly: patently, the resolution impacted the rights and legitimate
expectations of BKT, and other contractors, not to mention the public
at large.
[2]
Those potentially
affected by the resolution were thus entitled,
inter
alia
,
to adequate notice of the nature and purpose of the proposed
resolution and a reasonable opportunity to make representations.
[3]
It is so that prompt action was likely required if the COE’s
version of events is accepted. This did not, in my view, justify
the
total abandonment of the notice requirements.
[16]
It follows that COE’s order to halt ongoing
work was unlawful. However, as I shall explain below, an enquiry into
the unlawfulness
of the resolution has been overtaken by events. It
is thus unnecessary for me finally to pronounce on the procedural
fairness or
the other grounds of review BKT raised.
[17]
BKT asserts the right to work on the public road
reserve as the holder of wayleaves and in terms of section 22 of the
ECA.
[18]
It is quite correct that when this application was
launched, BKT was entitled vis-à-vis the COE on the strength
of its wayleaves
to proceed with its work. The resolution abrogated
that right insofar as it ordered a cessation of work, as I said.
[19]
The interim relief sought in Part A would have
maintained the status quo before the resolution. The resolution and
its enforcement
would be suspended, and the renewal of BKT’s
wayleaves secured pending the determination of Part B. BKT would
consequently
have been able to continue its work as its wayleaves
would remain current.
[20]
BKT, however, failed to secure interim relief.
Therefore, BKT’s wayleaves expired. The parties agree that BKT
can since the
expiration of its wayleaves no longer lawfully work in
the public road reserve. Reviewing and setting aside the resolution
will
not restore BKT’s wayleaves or the position as it stood
before the resolution was taken. BKT would remain unable lawfully
to
work in the public road reserve.
[21]
BKT appreciated the significance of extending its
wayleave. It applied, ultimately unsuccessfully, for the renewal of
thereof. In
the founding affidavit, BKT’s deponent states:
“
53.
Notwithstanding the above, upon BKT applying for an extension of the
previous aerial wayleaves, which it has a legitimate
expectation
would be granted, the COE refused to grant the extensions ostensibly,
[sic] on the strength of the Resolution.”
[22]
The
COE’s refusal to extend BKT’s wayleaves constituted
administrative action distinct from the resolution. The refusal
ought
to have been challenged by review proceedings. The relief BKT seeks
in Part B cannot invalidate the COE’s decision
not to extend
the wayleaves and will not resurrect them.
[4]
The relief sought would not even ensure the success of future
applications for new wayleaves. The COE must assess new wayleave
applications against its wayleave policy and decide whether to grant
or refuse any application on the merits thereof.
[23]
Herein
the present matter is distinguishable on the facts from the judgment
in
Vumacam
(Pty) Ltd v Johannesburg Roads Agency and others.
[5]
In the
Vumacam
matter
the decisionmaker refused to accept any application for a wayleave
for purposes of installing aerial fibre or CCTV cameras.
I do not
agree that the COE’s resolution should be interpreted as
creating an absolute bar to all future aerial fibre installations.
[24]
In the
context of section 22 of the ECA, I was referred to the judgments of
the Constitutional Court in
Tshwane
City v Link Africa and others,
[6]
and of the
Supreme
Court of Appeal
in
Dark
Fibre Africa (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town
[7]
and
Telkom
SOC Ltd v Cape Town (City) and another.
[8]
These judgments confirm that municipalities may not withhold consent
to section 22 licensees to construct infrastructure but may
regulate
how the licensees must exercise the power derived from that section
through, for example, wayleaves.
[25]
BKT contends that by requiring underground
installation instead of aerial installation, the COE thwarts the
provisions of section
22. Underground installation, the argument
goes, renders BKT’s venture uneconomical. It is submitted that
“
[if BKT] is not permitted to
install an aerial fibre network there, it cannot install a fibre
network at all.”
I have some
difficulty with this submission. Nowhere in section 22 or in the
judgments I was referred to was it suggested that a
municipality, in
regulating the so-called “modalities” of installation,
had to maintain the economic viability of a
licensee’s project.
[26]
In any event, even if section 22 could notionally
allow BKT to bypass the wayleave policy, the papers make no case that
it is the
holder of an electronic communications network service
licence. BKT is described in the founding papers as “
a
fibre network construction specialist contracted to prepare and
deploy aerial fibre broadband infrastructure in Kwa-Thema Wards
77,
78 and 80”
. Thus, BKT cannot
avail itself of rights conferred on section 22 licensees whatever the
content of these rights may be.
[27]
The
inevitable conclusion is that the resolution's validity as a
self-standing issue had become academic when BKT’s wayleaves
expired. A court ought not to entertain “abstract, academic or
hypothetical” questions.
[9]
[28]
In these premises, the application falls to be
dismissed.
[29]
I make the following order:
Part B of the application
is dismissed with costs.
H
M VILJOEN
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing: 11 October 2022
Date
of judgment: 13 February 2023
Appearances:
Attorneys
for the applicant: SCHINDLERS
ATTORNEYS
Counsel
for the applicant: ADV
S BUDLENDER SC WITH ADV P OLIVIER
Attorneys
for the respondent: DDV ATTORNEYS
Counsel
for the applicant: ADV
E SITHOLE
[1]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at [18]
[2]
Section
3(1),
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act,
2000
[3]
Section
3(2)
,
PAJA
[4]
C.f.
Shanduka
Resources (Pty) Ltd v Western Cape Nickel Mining (Pty) Ltd
[2017]
All SA 279
(WCC) at [50]
[5]
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 342
[6]
2015
(6) SA 440 (CC)
[7]
2019
(3) SA 425 (SCA)
[8]
2020
(1) SA 514 (SCA)
[9]
Normandien
Farms (Pty) Ltd v South African Agency for Promotion of Petroleum
Exploration and Exploitation SOC Ltd and others
2020
(4) SA 409
(CC) at [47]
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