Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 630South Africa
Bells Trust v Canvas Outdoor Pty (Ltd) and Another (A5065/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 630 (5 June 2023)
Headnotes
this appeal. We substituted the order of the court below with an order granting the appellant, the Bells Trust, leave to intervene in an application to review and set aside an administrative decision taken by the second respondent, the City. That decision held in abeyance an application lodged by the first respondent, Canvas, for approval to erect a billboard on a property Canvas controls near William Nicol Drive in Sandton. We indicated that we would give our reasons in due course. These are our reasons.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Bells Trust v Canvas Outdoor Pty (Ltd) and Another (A5065/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 630 (5 June 2023)
Bells Trust v Canvas Outdoor Pty (Ltd) and Another (A5065/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 630 (5 June 2023)
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sino date 5 June 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No.
A5065/2022
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
NOT
REVISED
In the matter between:
THE
BELLS TRUST
Appellant
and
CANVAS
OUTDOOR (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Second
Respondent
Neutral citation: The
Bells Trust v Canvas Outdoor (Pty) Ltd (A5065/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC
630 (5 June 2023)
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom WINDELL J and MIA J agree):
1
On 24 May 2023, we upheld this appeal. We substituted
the order of the court below with an order granting the appellant,
the Bells
Trust, leave to intervene in an application to review and
set aside an administrative decision taken by the second respondent,
the City. That decision held in abeyance an application lodged by the
first respondent, Canvas, for approval to erect a billboard
on a
property Canvas controls near William Nicol Drive in Sandton.
We
indicated that we would give our reasons in due course. These are our
reasons.
The billboards
2
The Bells Trust owns Erf 125
Glenadrienne Township, Johannesburg. On 24 February 2017, the Trust
applied to the City for permission
to erect a billboard on its
property. Canvas controls an adjacent property, Erf 127, on which it,
too, sought permission to erect
a billboard. Canvas applied for
permission to erect its billboard in 2016, well before the Bells
Trust lodged its application.
3
The City did not process either
application with alacrity. It appears at some point to have decided
to hold Canvas’ application
in abeyance. Aggrieved by this,
Canvas applied to this court to review and set that decision aside.
It also sought an order substituting
the decision for one approving
the erection of the billboard it wanted to put up. On 6 September
2017, Thobane AJ granted that
application.
4
Meanwhile, however, the City
processed the Bells Trust’s application. That application was
finally approved on 5 August 2019.
By that time, Canvas had erected
its own billboard on Erf 127, on a spot within 100 metres of the site
of the Bells Trust’s
proposed billboard, and, the Trust says,
less than 50 metres from the centre of the nearest intersection.
Section 6 (2) (a) of
the City’s Outdoor Advertising Bylaws
prohibits the erection of freestanding billboards within 100 metres
of each other.
Section 6 (3) (c) (iii) prohibits the erection of a
freestanding billboard within 50 metres of the centre of an
intersection.
5
Having been ordered by this court to
approve Canvas’ application, it stood to reason that the City
could not also approve
the Bells Trust’s application. To do so
was in breach of its own bylaw. On or before 16 January 2020, the
City withdrew its
approval of the Trust’s billboard,
principally on the basis that it was bound, by this court’s
order on Canvas’
review application, to approve Canvas’
own billboard application over that of the Trust.
6
Still, the City was itself aggrieved
by the order directing it to approve Canvas’ application. On 21
February 2020, the City
instituted an application to rescind the
order. The rescission application was advanced on the basis that the
court had not in
fact been asked to determine the merits of the
review application. It had only been asked to determine two points
in
limine
. A hearing on the merits of the
application was, by agreement between Canvas and the City, to be
postponed
sine die
.
The intervention
application
7
Seeing that the only way to get its
own billboard approved was to set aside the court order under which
Canvas had obtained permission
to erect its sign, the Bells Trust
sought leave to intervene in the review application. Such leave would
also have allowed it to
participate in the rescission proceedings,
those proceedings being interlocutory to the review.
8
On 20 July 2021, Noko AJ dismissed
the Bells Trust’s intervention application, holding that the
Trust had no direct and substantial
interest in the relief Canvas
sought in the review application. Noko AJ approached the case on the
basis that it was essentially
a dispute between two competing
advertisers. He reasoned that, notwithstanding the outcome of the
review application, Canvas’
billboard application would always
be preferred to that of the Bells Trust, because Canvas’
application was lodged before
the Trust’s application. By the
equitable maxim
qui prior est tempore
potior est
(very roughly “prior
in time stronger in law”), Canvas’ billboard application
had to prevail.
9
Noko AJ also considered the Trust’s
allegation that Canvas’ billboard had been erected in breach of
the City’s
bylaw, because it was within 50 metres of the centre
of an intersection, contrary to Section 6 (3) (c) (iii). It is not
clear from
Noko AJ’s judgment whether he found that the breach
of section 6 (3) (c) (iii) would not in itself have been sufficient
to
ground the Trust’s interest in the review application, or
whether the Trust’s contention that section 6 (3) (c) (iii)
had
been contravened was a “mere allegation” that ought to
have been “corroborated” by other facts or evidence
(see
the judgment of Noko AJ at paragraph 22). Either way, however, Noko
AJ concluded that the intervention application had to
be refused.
10
Noko AJ refused leave to appeal
against his judgment, but the appeal came before us with the leave of
the Supreme Court of Appeal.
The Bells Trust should
have been given leave to intervene
11
A party is entitled to intervene in
a matter in which they have a direct and substantial interest. The
intervening party has such
an interest if the relief sought in the
proceedings cannot be implemented without prejudicing that party’s
rights (see
Amalgamated Engineering
Union v Minister of Labour
1949 (3) SA
637
(A), p 653A, citing
Bekker v
Meyring, Bekker's Executor
2 Menzies
436).
Once the intervening party shows an interest of this nature,
they must be joined to the proceedings (
SA
Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner
2017 (5) SA 1
(CC),
paragraphs 10 and 11).
12
The relief sought and granted in the
review application was the substitution of the City’s decision
to hold Canvas’
application in abeyance with an order approving
that application. Although it seems on the record that Canvas’
billboard
was erected, apparently without the City’s consent,
before judgment on the review application was given, the relief
Thobane
AJ granted was carried into effect when it rendered lawful
the continued placement of Canvas’ sign on Erf 127.
13
This plainly affected the Bells
Trust’s rights. In the first place, the Trust is a neighbouring
property owner. Forgetting
for a moment its status as a competing
advertiser, if the Trust alleged that the sign constituted an
unlawful nuisance, in that
it had been put up in breach of the
bylaws, the Trust clearly had an interest in proceedings that led to
an order directing the
City to approve Canvas’ application to
erect it (see, for example,
River Gate
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Asmal NO
[2018]
ZAGPJHC 89 (29 March 2018)).
14
The Trust did more than enough in
its papers to substantiate its allegation that Canvas’ sign was
erected in breach of section
6 (3) (c) (iii) of the bylaw. What it
needed to do was allege facts that, if proved, would establish its
interest in the review
application. It does not matter whether those
facts are disputed. At the intervention stage, a court is required to
assume that
the facts alleged in the intervener’s founding
papers are true. No “corroboration” is required. If
Canvas’
billboard does breach the bylaw, then, in addition to
its interest as a neighbour, the Trust also has an interest as a
competing
advertiser, because Canvas’ sign will have to come
down, clearing the way for the Trust’s sign to go up. In other
words,
the “prior in time stronger in law” principle,
even if it is applicable in this legal context, will no longer
constitute
a bar to the success of the Trust’s billboard
application under the bylaw.
Mootness
15
It was contended that the appeal is
moot, because Canvas’ right to erect its billboard under the
approval embodied in Thobane
AJ’s order will expire on 6
September 2023, at which time both the review application and the
rescission application will
become moot. Even if the Bells Trust is
granted leave to intervene, the argument went, it is unlikely that
the Trust will be able
to do anything meaningful in the review or
recission applications before that date. It was argued that any order
we make would
therefore have no practical effect or result.
16
We rejected this submission for two
reasons. The first is that the argument entails a concession that the
appeal is not, in fact,
moot, because the event that will allegedly
render the dispute between the parties academic has yet to occur.
Everything is moot
in the long run. The question is whether, at the
time the court is asked to render a decision, there exists a live
controversy.
If there is, the court must decide it. It is not
entitled to peer into the future, and to speculate on whether and
when the dispute
between the parties will cease to matter (see, in
this regard,
Lehana's Pass Investment CC
v Africa Campus Trading 300 (Pty) Ltd
[2023] ZAGPJHC 111 (13 February 2023), paragraph 8).
17
Secondly, the practical effect of
our order is the mere fact that the Bells Trust is now a party to the
review application, and,
by extension, to the recission application.
That practical effect does not inhere in what the Trust might in
future do with its
rights as a newly minted party to the litigation.
It is impact enough that the Bells Trust is now a party to a case to
which it
was not joined before we made our order.
18
For all these reasons, we concluded
that the Trust’s intervention application should have been
granted, and we upheld the
appeal on the terms embodied in our order
of 24 May 2023.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared by Judges Wilson, Windell and Mia. It 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 5 June 2023.
HEARD ON: 24 May
2023
DECIDED ON: 24 May
2023
REASONS: 5 June 2023
For
the Appellant:
M
De Oliveira
Instructed
by
KWA
Attorneys
For
the First Respondent:
W
Krog
Instructed
by
Smit
Sewgoolam Inc
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