Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 177South Africa
Municipal Employees Pension Fund v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (27756/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 177 (24 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 February 2023
Headnotes
where a litigant acts solely in his or her own interest, there is no broad or unqualified capacity to litigate against illegalities, something more must be shown.[3] [12] The authorities in our law make it plain that constitutional own - interest standing is broader than the traditional common law standing, but that a litigant must nevertheless show that his or her rights or interest are directly affected by the challenged law or conduct. [13] The following are the requirements to determine standing:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Municipal Employees Pension Fund v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (27756/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 177 (24 February 2023)
Municipal Employees Pension Fund v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (27756/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 177 (24 February 2023)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 27756/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
24 FEBRUARY 2023
In
the matter between:
THE
MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES
Plaintiff
PENSION FUND
And
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
BUILDING CONTROL
OFFICER, CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Second
Respondent
NORDIC
LIGHT PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
ASSOCIATED
MOTOR HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
BASILEUS
PROPERTIES P2 (PTY) LTD
Fifth
Respondent
WILLIAM
NICOL WEST PROPERTY OWNERS
Sixth
Respondent
ASSOCIATION NPC
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
Seventh
Respondent
Delivered:
By transmission to the parties via email and
uploading onto Case Lines
the Judgment is deemed
to be delivered. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 24
February 2023.
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI
J:
[1]
This is an opposed application for a declaratory order, alternatively
for the review and setting aside, in
terms of rule 53, of certain
decisions of the first and second respondents and auxiliary relief.
The decisions sought to be reviewed
relate to the rezoning of the
property owned by the third respondent.
[2]
The applicant, Municipal Employees Pension Fund (“The Fund”),
also seeks an order granting it
condonation extension in time in
respect of the late filing of its replying affidavit until 8 February
2022. Furthermore, the applicant
seeks an order striking out those
parts of the answering affidavits as set out in the notice in terms
of rule 6(15). The third
respondent, Nordic Light Properties (Pty)
Ltd (“Nordic Light”), is the registered owner of the
properties the rezoning
of which has been approved by the first
respondent, City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (“City
of Johannesburg”).
The initial notice of motion to challenge
the approval of the rezoning was launched by [....] Bryanston
Properties Pty Ltd
(“ [....] ”), the erstwhile owner of
William Nicol Shopping Centre. However, as the litigation was
continuing, it sold
the shopping centre to the Fund.
[3]
Nordic Light has raised, as a point of law in its heads of argument
of a point
in limine
that the applicant lacks the requisite
locus standi
to seek out the relief in the amended notice of
motion. It contends that this is so because when the decision sought
to be impugned
was taken, the Fund was not the owner of the property
and could not have raised any objection as it was not a rate payer
related
to the shopping centre. It matters not that the Fund
substituted [....] as the applicant subsequent to becoming the
owner
of the shopping centre.
[4]
During November 2017, a rezoning application was lodged by Nordic
Light who owns a property adjacent to the
shopping centre for the
development of a residential multi -storey building. The challenge to
the approved rezoning was premised
on the fact that during the
development of the residential multi-storey building by Nordic Light,
there was likely going to be
a congestion of traffic which would
adversely affect the customers of the shopping centre. [....]
in its initial application
raised various grounds on why the decision
to approve the rezoning stood to be reviewed and set aside. The
points become of importance
when regard is had to the merits which
will be dealt with in the event the point
in limine
is
dismissed.
[5]
At the time of lodging the rezoning application, the shopping mall
was owned by [....] . This company
initiated the legal
proceedings for declaratory order and certain ancillary reliefs.
[6]
The shopping mall was sold by [....] to the present applicant
during 2021 and the transfer and registration
of ownership to the
applicant was registered on 15 December 2021. This was at the time
when the litigation between [....]
and the respondents was in
progress. At the heart of the defence of lack of standing by the Fund
is the fact that the Fund did
not have an interest in the rezoning
sought to be impugned because it had no title to the shopping centre,
was not a tenant or
a rate payer in respect of the shopping centre at
the time.
[7]
[....] and the applicant concluded an agreement in terms of which the
applicant will continue with the litigation.
The agreement was given
effect to by the Order of Sutherland DJP on 17 May 2022 in terms of
which [....] was substituted
by the Fund as the applicant.
Nordic Light argues that the substitution order cannot create the
standing where none existed.
[8]
Accordingly, [....] has no more interest on the subject
property owing to the disposal thereof by sale.
[9]
The controversy now is whether the Fund has the necessary standing in
the litigation. The respondents contend
it does not have any standing
despite the substitution of [....] by itself, the Pension Fund.
This is the only point, in
my view, which is raised
in limine
in the heads of arguments that should be determined. The Fund claims
it has standing because the substitution was not challenged.
[10]
Standing in litigation is a matter of procedural justifiability and
relates to the appropriateness of the party seeking
relief from the
court.
[1]
[11]
In
Giant
Concerts CC v Rinaldo Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2]
,
the
Constitutional Court had to consider leave to appeal against a
judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal that found it did not
have
legal standing to challenge the lawfulness of a contract under which
the third respondent, the eThekwini Municipality, sold
land to the
first respondent Rinaldo Investments (Pty) Ltd. The court held that
where a litigant acts solely in his or her own
interest, there is no
broad or unqualified capacity to litigate against illegalities,
something more must be shown.
[3]
[12]
The authorities in our law make it plain that constitutional own -
interest standing is broader than the traditional
common law
standing, but that a litigant must nevertheless show that his or her
rights or interest are directly affected by the
challenged law or
conduct.
[13]
The following are the requirements to determine standing:
(a) To
establish own-interest standing under a constitution a litigant need
not show the same “sufficient,
personal and direct interest”
that the common law requires
[4]
–
but must still show that a contested law or decision directly affects
his or her rights or interests or potential rights
or interests.
[5]
(b)
This requirement must be generously and broadly interpreted to accord
with constitution goals.
[6]
(c) The
interest must, however, be real and not hypothetical or academic.
[7]
(d)
Even under the requirements for common law standing, the interest
need not be capable of monetary valuation
[8]
– but in a challenge to legislation purely on financial
self-interest may not be enough-the interest of justice must also
favour affording standing;
[9]
(e)
Standing is not a technical or strictly – defined concept
[10]
– And there is no magical formula for conferring it. It is a
tool a court employs to determine whether a litigant is entitled
to
claim its time
[11]
– and
to put the opposing litigant to trouble.
(f)
Each case depends on its own facts. There can be no general rule
covering all cases. In each case, an
applicant must show that he or
she has the necessary interest in an infringement or a threatened
infringement
[12]
– And
here a measure of pragmatism is needed.
[13]
[14]
I now deal with whether or not it is appropriate to raise a point of
law in argument. It is now well – established
that a point of
law such as a challenge to standing may be raised by a party at any
stage, subject to the condition that the point
is supported by the
facts as they appear on the affidavits and that the point will not
result in prejudice or unfairness to the
other party.
[14]
[15]
In
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd v Government of the Republic of South
Africa
[15]
in confirming the
well-established practice of the legal argument, Joffe J ,as he then
was, said the following:
“
In
Heckroodt
NO v Gamiet
1959 (9) SA 244
(T) at 246A – C and Van Rensburg v
Van Rensburg en Andere
1963
(1) SA 505
(A) at 509 E – 510B, it was held that a party in
motion proceedings may advance legal argument in support of the
relief or
defence claimed by it even where such arguments are not
specifically mentioned in the papers, provided they arise from the
facts
alleged. As was held in
Cabinet
for the Territory of South West Africa v Chikane and Another
1989
(1) SA 349
(A) at 360 G, the principle is clear but its application
is not without difficulty. In
Minister
van Wet en Order v Matshoba
1990 (1) SA 280
(A) at 285 G it was held that this principle:
‘
word
egter gekwalifiseer deur die voorbehoud dat die Hof alleen so kan
optree as daar geen onbillikheid teenoor die respondent geskied
nie.
In die sake word hierdie element gewoonlik uitgedruk deur te vereis
dat alle relevante feite voor die Hof moet wees …
Hierdeur
word die mees voor die hand liggende bron van hawige geval gaan dit
egter on ‘n leemte in die getuienis.’
[16]
It is evident from the passage quoted that the court must guard
against unfairness to the other party and ensure that
the point of
law raised is supported by the facts that are in the papers before
it. Absent these facts, the point raised will not
be accepted by the
court.
[17]
The applicant in the instant case claims that it is prejudiced by the
point of law raised by the respondents. The applicant
filed a
supplementary affidavit to deal with the new point raised in limine.
[18]
The applicant now seeks to amend its notice of motion in an attempt
to circumvent the standing defence by stating that
its review is
based on the Promotion of Administration of Justice Act 3 of 2000
(“PAJA”). Its seeks a declaratory order
to the effect
that the original rezoning application served before the City of
Johannesburg was deemed to have been refused and
the consequent on
that declaration, an order that the final promulgation of the
rezoning be set aside. No relief is sought in respect
of the City’s
decision to approve the rezoning of the subject property. In the
alternative, the applicant persists in the
initial applicants
original prayer for the review and setting aside the City’s
decision to approve the rezoning.
[19]
The applicant states that whilst it was not the initial applicant in
the litigation as [....] was, however, following
its
acquisition of the shopping centre its interest will be affected by
the rezoning of the property of the third respondent and
that the
impact will affect it adversely.
[20]
The applicant referred me to a passage in
Minister
of Land Affairs and Agriculture and Others v DH Wevell Trust and
Others
[16]
where Cloete JA said the following:
“
It is not proper
for a party in motion proceedings to base an argument on passages in
documents which have been annexed to the papers
when the conclusions
sought to be drawn from such passages have not been canvassed in the
affidavits. The reason is manifest –
the other party may well
be prejudiced because evidence may have been available to refute the
new case on the facts. The applicant
contends that based on this
passage, the point
in
limine
must be dismissed.”
[21]
The facts in the quoted passage are distinguishable from the case
before me. In this case, when [....] issued the
proceedings and
the answer thereto was provided by the respondents, there was no
knowledge that the shopping centre was either
sold or on the point of
being sold. In other words, [....] had a clear standing to
pursue the proceedings. In fact, as at
February 2022 when [....]
replied to the answering affidavits, the shopping centre had already
been sold. The sale of the
shopping centre came to the knowledge of
the respondents in a reply to the answering affidavit. However, it is
evident following
the sale that the respondents were entitled to
raise the standing of the applicant. This is so despite the
substitution of the
parties that was ordered as already stated. The
agreement between [....] and the Fund that the latter would
continue with
litigation and the subsequent substitution order under
these circumstances, did not in my respective view, confer the
standing
where none existed.
[22]
The primary controversy remains whether as at 2020 when the rezoning
complained of was dealt with whether the subsequent
purchaser of a
property had standing to institute or more importantly even
substitute the original or initial applicant in the
proceedings of
this nature.
[23]
It should be stated that [....] was not acquired by the
applicant. Only the shopping centre was acquired
and transfer and registration of ownership was registered in
favour of the Fund. This, as already stated, is at the heart of the
point raised in limine that given the transfer to the Fund, the
latter lacks the necessary standing to continue with litigation.
[24]
The applicant contends that because clause 18 of the sale agreement
concluded between [....] and the applicant
states that the
parties agreed that the Fund (applicant) had purchased the letting
enterprise with the intention that it would
apply to be substituted
as the applicant in the review application and that it would
prosecute the application in order to procure
the relief formulated
in the notice of motion and that once the substitution happens
through a court order, the standing cannot
possibly be an issue.
[25]
The applicant contends that because the condonation as well as
substitution applications were not opposed by any of the
respondents,
it is impermissible for the respondents to raise standing
in
limine
as a defence.
[26]
I was referred to the case of
Techmed
(Pty) Ltd v Nissko Iwai Corporation
[17]
which Sutherland DJP relied on for his order of substitution.
[27]
I was also referred to a passage in Trustees for the Time Being of
the Legacy
Body
Corporate v BAE Estates and Estates (Pty) Ltd
[18]
where Makgoka JA said the following:
“
[35]
Significantly, this point was not even pleaded. In paras 8 – 10
above, I have set out fairly comprehensively,
the points in the
trustees’ answering affidavit upon which they rested their
defence to the application. This was not one
of them. The point was
raised for the first time in the application for leave to appeal.
Ordinarily, a point of lack of locus standi
should have been
pertinently raised in answering affidavit to enable BAE Estates to
meet it, and for the high court to pronounce
on it.
[36] It is
so that the mere fact that a point of law is raised for the first
time on appeal is not in itself a sufficient
reason for refusing to
consider it. If the point is covered by the pleadings, and if its
consideration on appeal involves no unfairness
to the other party
against whom it is directed a court may in the exercise of its
discretion consider the point.
[19]
It would be unfair to the other party if the point of law and all its
ramifications were not canvassed and investigates at trial.
[20]
In this case the point was neither covered in the affidavits, nor was
it canvassed and investigated in the high court. It is therefore,
patently unfair to BAE Estates to have to be confronted with the
point for the first time on appeal. For this reason alone, the
locus
standi point must be dismissed. This is clearly a correct principle.”
[28]
I have stated previously that it would not have been possible for the
respondents to raise the locus standi defence when
the answering
affidavits were filed as the subject properly had not yet, to their
knowledge, changed hands. As far as the respondents
were concerned,
[....] was the applicant in the matter. This is so because as
late as 8 February 2002, [....] prepared
the replying affidavit
as if it were still the owner of the subject property. This it did,
despite its full knowledge that it had
sold the property to the Fund.
The pleadings pertinently reveal that the point is covered by the
pleadings owing the disposal of
the shopping centre by [....]
to the Fund. It is therefore my considered view that the present
applicant was not prejudiced
by the point raised in limine on lack of
standing. The point should therefore be allowed to be raised.
[29]
I am fortified on this view by the fact that when the litigation
started, the Fund was not the owner of the subject property
and could
therefore not have been adversely affected by the alleged impugned
administrative action taken by the City of Johannesburg
to approve
the rezoning of the third respondent. If the standing were to be
found to exist under the present circumstances, this
would have an
unintended consequence of conferring standing retrospectively. This
is impermissible under common law.
[30]
The applicant, now, in the face of the lack of standing, as already
stated, seeks to challenge the approval of the rezoning
in terms of
PAJA. I was referred by counsel for the Fund to the case of
JDJ
Properties CC and Another v Umngeni Local Municipality and
Another
[21]
where the court held that owners of land, and lessees of land, have
locus standi to enforce a town planning scheme and a by –
law
or regulation which enacted for the benefit of a class of persons of
which such owner or lessee was a member. This is undoubtedly
the
correct point of law. As I understand it, the affected person must
still prove that he or she has standing in the administrative
action
sought to be impugned. Such interest must exist at the time the
administrative action challenged is taken. It can never
be the
purpose of the principle that an administrative action taken can be
challenged by subsequent owners or lessees of the land
retrospectively. This is so because in terms of the City of
Johannesburg By-laws, objections and challenge to rezoning for
instance,
have time limits within which objection must be raised. If
that were to be permissible, this would work against the true
intention
of the by-law concerned as well as PAJA in so far as
showing that the party has the locus standi to challenge an
administrative
action is concerned.
[31]
In support of the contention that the applicant has a standing in the
matter, I was also referred by its counsel to
Illovo
Opportunities Partnership #61 v Illovo Junction Properties (Pty)
Ltd
[22]
where Cachalia JA said the following:
“
[18]
Notwithstanding the fact that the appellant’s application for
declaratory relief is outwardly aimed at establishing the
rights and
obligations of third parties, the court’s decision has a
material bearing on its ability to exploit the development
rights in
the property, and if necessary its own rights to claim a repayment
from the seller in the event it is compelled for practical
reasons to
pay the contribution. Furthermore, properly understood, the order
sought carries with it necessary implication that,
if granted, the
appellant shall have the right to resist an application by the City
to enforce a claim for the contribution against
it, if it chooses to
exercise its rights under the scheme.
Finally, whether or not
the appellant succeeds in its application, the outcome of this
court’s judgment on the merits, i.e.
on the proper construction
to be given to the ordinance will be res judicata between the
parties, determining the legal rights
inter se of all three parties.
That is an important factor in deciding the standing issue.
[23]
[19] In my view the
appellant has, therefore, established a legal interest in the relief
sought. It follows that the seller’s
objection to the
appellants standing was not well taken.”
[32]
The facts of the
Illovo
case are distinguishable in that once
the scheme in the
Illovo
case came into operation the seller
would pay the required R8.8 million contributions. No such similarity
exists in the present
case because the approved multi storey
residential rezoning of the third respondent property has no
financial bearing on the Fund.
Instead, and of course without
venturing too much in the merits, the potential traffic congestion
likely to be caused by the construction
trucks that would likely
follow during construction which would disrupt the traffic flow to
the shopping centre was at the centre
of [....] ’s
initial application. Accordingly, as the approval took place prior to
the disposal of the subject property,
I do not find any legal basis
to say the applicant has locus standi.
[33]
The other important consideration is whether an agreement between the
buyer and seller can confer standing where none
existed. Put
differently, can standing be conferred retrospectively prior to the
sale of the property. The applicant submits that
it can and also that
the fact that there was no objection on the substitution of [....]
, the respondents should not be permitted
to raise a point in limine
on lack of standing based on the Sutherland DJP’S order of
substitution. I have not been referred
to any authority for the
proposition as advanced by the applicant.
[34]
It should be remembered that when [....] and the applicant
sought to agree that the latter would continue with
the litigation,
this was premised on the initial application that [....] had
commenced with.
[35]
Having regard to the trite principles on locus standi in a lawsuit, I
am of the view that the Fund has failed to show
that it does indeed
have locus standi to continue with the litigation and attack the
administrative decision taken before it became
the owner of the
subject property.
[36]
This is despite the fact that the applicant substituted [....]
in terms of the Sutherland DJP order.
[37]
It follows therefore that the respondents have succeeded with their
point
in limine
on lack of
locus standi
.
ORDER
[38]
The following order is made:
(a) The
application is dismissed with costs.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE
JUDGMENT RESERVED:
19 October 2022
DATE
JUDGMENT DELIVERED:
24 February 2023
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant: Adv
J Botha SC
Adv LM du Plessis
Instructed
by: Strauss
Scher Inc Attorneys
Counsel
for the First and
Second
Respondent: Adv
E Mokutu SC
Adv
X Stemela
Instructed
by: Malebye
Motaung Mtembu Inc Attorneys
Counsel
for the Third
Respondent:
Adv
GF Porteous
Adv
N Loopoo
Instructed
by: Guthrie
Colananni Attorneys
[1]
See
Cora Hoexter and Glenn Penfold, Administrative Law in South Africa,
Juta 3
rd
ed,
at 659
[2]
(CCT25/12)
[2012] ZACC 28
;
2013 (3) BCLR 251
(CC) (29 November 2012)
[3]
Supra
at para [35]
[4]
See
Ferreira v Levin N.O. and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO &
Others
[1995] ZACC 13
;
1996 (1) SA 984
(CC);
1996 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) at
para 488
[5]
See
Ferreira (supra) at paras 162 and 166 - 8
[6]
Ferreira
(supra) at para 165
[7]
See
Jacobs en Ander v Waks en Ander
[1991] ZASCA 152
,
1992 (1) SA 521
(A) at 535 A - B
[8]
Jacobs
above at 535 A - B
[9]
Jacobs
above at para 26
[10]
Jacobs
above at 534 A - B
[11]
Ferreira
above at para 165
[12]
Ferreira
supra at 541E
[13]
Jacobs
supra N 6 at 541E
[14]
Academy
of Learning (Pty) Ltd v Hancock and Others
2001 (1) SA 941
(C) at
paras [42] and [43]
[15]
1999
(2) SA 279
(T) at 324 H - I
[16]
2008
(2) SA 184
(SCA) at para [43]
[17]
2011
(1) SA 35
(SCA) at 40I to41B
[18]
2022
(1) SA 424
(SCA) at paras [35] and [36]
[19]
Alexor
Ltd and Another v The Richterveld Community and Others
[2003] ZACC 18
;
2004 (5) SA
460
(CC);
2003 (12) BCLR 1301
(CC) para 44; Cole v Government of the
Union of SA
1910 AD 263
at 273. Paddock Motors (Pty) Ltd v Igesund
1976 (3) SA 16
(A) at 24 -5 and Bank of Lisbon and South Africa Ltd
v The Master and Others 1987 (1) 276 (A) at 290
[20]
Road
Accident Fund v Mothupi 2000 (4) SA 38 (SCA)
[21]
2013
(SA) 395 SCA [26] - [35]
[22]
2014
JDR 1889 (SCA) paras [18 -19]
[23]
Ex
Parte Nell
1963 (1) SA 754
(A) at 760C
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