Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1021South Africa
Mokoshane and Others v Member of the Executive Council for the Department of Roads and Transport, Gauteng Provincial Department and Others (2023/084551) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1021 (11 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 September 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mokoshane and Others v Member of the Executive Council for the Department of Roads and Transport, Gauteng Provincial Department and Others (2023/084551) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1021 (11 September 2023)
Mokoshane and Others v Member of the Executive Council for the Department of Roads and Transport, Gauteng Provincial Department and Others (2023/084551) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1021 (11 September 2023)
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sino date 11 September 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2023 –
084551
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES
In the application by
PHOLOSO
MOKOSHANE
1
st
Applicant
SBONGISENI
ELVIS MKIZE
2
nd
Applicant
SANDILE
PHAKATHI
3
rd
Applicant
NKANYISO
MOLEFE
4
th
Applicant
LAWRENCE
FRANS TSEKELELE
5
th
Applicant
LAURE
LINDAU
6
th
Applicant
MARSHALL
CHINAME
7
th
Applicant
TSHEPO
BALOYI
8
th
Applicant
TITOS
NYERENGAI
9
th
Applicant
METHULI
MOYO
10
th
Applicant
MPHO
SEAN BOKABA
11
th
Applicant
PHENDULANI
MSIYA
12
th
Applicant
KHOTHATSO
DAVID MOLEFE
13
th
Applicant
MPHO
GIVEN MAWEYA
14
th
Applicant
HLAMULO
OWEN MABULANA
15
th
Applicant
GEORGE
SARKUWANZA
16
th
Applicant
PARDON
MANDIDA
17
th
Applicant
GIVEMORE
MAPHOSA
18
th
Applicant
TEBOGO
JUSTICE
19
th
Applicant
SIYABONGA
HLAZANE
20
th
Applicant
XOLANI
NKOSI
21
st
Applicant
MICHAEL
MOLEFE
22
nd
Applicant
CLEVER
MUPUNDIKO
23
rd
Applicant
BOLT
SERVICES ZA (PTY) LTD
24
th
Applicant
and
THE
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF ROADS AND
TRANSPORT,
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
1
st
Respondent
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
2
nd
Respondent
MINISTER
OF POLICE
3
rd
Respondent
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER: GAUTENG FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES
4
th
Respondent
PROVINCIAL
COMMISSIONER: GAUTENG FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES
5
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT AJ:
Summary
Spoliation –
requirements – unlawful deprivation of possession- second
respondent’s officers impounded vehicles
used as taxi’s
that were not licenced as such – sections 50 and 87 of
National
Land Transport Act, 5 of 2009
, to be read with Notice 1813 of 18
December 2019 – applicants not unlawfully deprived of
possession by authorities
E-hailing taxis –
not specifically regulated – classified as sub-category of
metered taxis used for charter services
–
National Land
Transport Act
-
sections 66
and
67
Order
[1] In this matter
I make the following order:
1.
By agreement between the applicants and the
second respondent the application is withdrawn as against the second
respondent and
the applicants are ordered to pay the second
respondent’s wasted costs;
2.
The application as against the remaining
respondents is dismissed;
3.
The applicants are declared to be liable,
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, for
the costs of the first
respondent.
[2] The reasons for
the order follow below.
Introduction
[3] This is a
spoliation application. The first respondent impounded Bolt Bajaj
vehicles in the possession of the applicants
and the applicants
approached the court on the basis that they were unlawfully deprived
of possession of the vehicles by the officers
of the first
respondent, the Member of the Executive Council for the Department of
Roads and Transport in Gauteng.
The applicants also
sought relief against the second respondent, the City of Johannesburg
but this application was withdrawn with
a tender of costs.
[4] The
mandament
van spolie
originated
in the canon law.
[1]
The remedy
was described in the following terms by Van Blerk JA in
Yeko
v Qana
:
[2]
“
The fundamental
principle of the remedy is that no one is allowed to take the law
into his own hands. All that the spoliatus has
to prove, is
possession of a kind which warrants the protection accorded by the
remedy, and that he was unlawfully ousted.”
[5] As will be
shown below, the applicants cannot prove that they were unlawfully
ousted and the application must fail.
Urgency
[6] The notice of
motion is dated 23 August and the founding affidavit was signed on 25
August 2023. The applicants (whose
names were initially withheld in
the papers filed on Caselines because they say that they fear
intimidation by metered taxi drivers
[3]
)
say that on 17 and 18 August 2023, eleven Bolt Bajaj vehicles in
their possession were seized and impounded by SA Police Service
(SAPS) officers and Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department
(JMPD) officers and officials. The vehicles belong to a company
by
the name of MyNextCar and provided to the applicants in terms of a
subscription agreement.
The applicants say that
the vehicles are roadworthy and have valid roadworthiness
certificates. However the confirmation from the
authorities
referred
[4]
to as “FA3”
is not attached to the papers. There is a copy of a certificate
issued by the National Regulator for Compulsory
Specifications
[5]
confirming that the requirements of the application for the
homologation of Bajaj Qute Oscar vehicles were met on 5 April
2017.
[6]
[7] The applicants
demanded the immediate return of the vehicles on Sunday, 20 August
2023. Receipt was acknowledged on Monday
the 21
st
.
A further eleven
[7]
Bolt Bajaj
vehicles were impounded on 22 August 2023. The vehicles are used for
commercial purposes, namely transporting fare-paying
passengers. The
applicants allege that while the vehicles are impounded they are
precluded from earning a living and that this
fact renders the matter
urgent.
[8] The application
was served between 25 and 28 August 2023.
[8]
The notice of motion calls on the respondent to give notice of
intention to oppose on the 24
th
(the day before service
commenced) and more importantly called on the respondents to file
answering affidavits by close of business
on the 25
th
.
[9] I find that the
application for a
mandament
of spolie
on
the facts as set out by the applicant to be sufficiently urgent to
deal with in the Urgent Court.
[9]
The more fundamental disputes between the parties relate to the
classification of e-hailing operators in the public transport arena
and can not be dealt with in this application and on the facts set
out in the affidavits. I deal with these aspects only in the
context
of the question whether the applicants were unlawfully deprived of
possession.
The first respondent’s
opposition
[10] The first
respondent filed an answering affidavit and opposed the application.
The deponent informs the court that the
first respondent is
prejudiced by the very short notice in that he had to rely on input
from others in the organisation but was
unable to obtain confirmatory
affidavits on such short notice.
[11] The deponent
confirms that the vehicles would be returned upon payment of an
impoundment fee of R3,500 and a fine of
R1,500 for operating the
vehicles illegally.
[10]
They
would be permitted to operate the vehicles if and when they were in
possession of valid operating licences.
[12] The applicants
were using the vehicles in contravention of
section 50
of the
National Land Transport Act, 5 of 2009
. The section reads as follows:
“
50
Regulation of road-based public transport
(1) No person may
operate a road-based public transport service, unless he or she is
the holder of an operating licence or a permit,
subject to sections
47, 48 and 49, issued for the vehicle concerned in terms of this Act.
(2) An operating
licence may authorise the vehicle to which it relates, to operate
more than one service or type of service.
(3) Where an
application in connection with an operating licence concerns services
provided for in an integrated transport plan,
the provisions of that
plan, where appropriate and where possible, will dictate the decision
of the entity considering the application.”
[13] The applicants
have not applied for operating licences and the possession of
operators’ cards issued by the Traffic
Department of the second
respondent which is a business licence must not be equated with an
operating licence to use the vehicles
for commercial purposes in
terms of section 50 of the Act.
[14] In terms of
section 87 of the Act the first respondent was therefore justified in
impounding the vehicles. The relevant
sub-sections read as follows:
“
87
Impoundment of vehicles
(1) An authorised
officer who is satisfied on reasonable grounds that a motor vehicle
is being used by any person for the operation
of public transport
without the necessary operating licence or permit or contrary to the
conditions thereof, may impound the vehicle
pending the investigation
and prosecution of that person for an offence mentioned in section 90
(1) (a) or (b).
(2) A vehicle
impounded under subsection (1) must be delivered to the head of the
depot contemplated in subsection (4), who must
retain the vehicle in
the depot and release it to the person concerned only-
(a)when the criminal
charges against the person have been withdrawn or the person has been
acquitted of the offence charged; or
(b)in the case where
the person is convicted of the offence charged, and unless the court
has ordered otherwise, on payment to the
head of the depot of the
amount determined by the MEC, which is an impoundment fee.”
[15] The Bolt Bajaj
vehicles are used for e-hailing taxi services. E-hailing is a
relatively new concept that became prominent
in the public
consciousness Worldwide through the activities of the firm by the
name of Uber. E-hailing enables customers to hail
a taxi by
electronic means, typically a cell phone. The computer program links
the customer with a taxi and has the facility to
estimate distances
and travel time thus making it possible to provide the customer with
a quote when he or she enters the taxi.
[16] The regulatory
regime does not provide for the licensing of e-hailing operators and
these operators are currently licenced
as a sub-category of metered
taxi operators.
[11]
The
Department of Transport informed role players of its policy in a
comprehensive circular already on 25 February 2015. The Department
is
of the view that e-hailing services fall within the definition of a
charter service as defined in section 1 and described in
section 67
of the Act, and that e-hailing serves the purpose of the meter in a
metered taxi.
A taxi used in the
provision of an e-hailing service is available for hire by hailing
while roaming and may stand for hire at a
rank just like a metered
taxi, but unlike a metered taxi is not equipped with a sealed meter
for the purpose of determining
the fare payable.
[12]
This function is carried out electronically by computer software.
[17] The applicants
argue that because e-hailing services are not specifically regulated,
their vehicles can not be impounded
under section 87 of the Act. I do
not agree. In the absence of specific regulations or an amendment to
the Act to include the regulation
of e-hailing services, the
authorities are entitled to use the applicable legislation that is at
their disposal.
The vehicles that were
impounded are clearly taxis in the ordinary meaning of the word in
that they are vehicles used to convey
fare-paying passengers over
land. The policy and the circular have not been set aside on review.
[18] The applicants
were not unlawfully deprived of possession. The first respondent and
its officers acted within the limits
of their powers to confiscate
the vehicles.
[19] The applicants
point out that the officers who confiscated the vehicles were called
upon to exercise a discretion in
doing so. It is neither possible nor
necessary to analyse the discretion analysed by the officers who
impounded the vehicles.
The second
respondent’s opposition and the withdrawal of the application
as against the second respondent
[20] The second
respondent filed an answering affidavit
[13]
in which the City of Johannesburg denied any involvement in the
matter. The vehicles were not impounded and were not in the
possession
of the second respondent. On the list attached to the
founding papers by the applicants only one vehicle is reflected as
impounded
by the second respondent.
[21] The applicants
withdrew the application as against the second respondent and
tendered its wasted costs.
Conclusion
.
[22]
For these reasons I make the order in
paragraph 1 above.
J MOORCROFT
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered: This judgement
was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose name is reflected
and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the Parties /
their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of the judgment
is deemed to be
11 SEPTEMBER 2023
.
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANTS:
Z RAQOWA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
DLA PIPER (SOUTH
AFRICA) (RF) INC
COUNSEL
FOR FIRST RESPONDENT:
T K MLAMBO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
STATE ATTORNEY
COUNSEL
FOR SECOND RESPONDENT
X D MATYOLO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MALEBYE MOTAUNG MTEMBU
INC
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
31 AUGUST 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
11
SEPTEMBER 2023
[1]
Kleyn
'Possession'
in Zimmermann &
Visser (eds)
Southern
Cross-Civil Law and Common Law in South Africa
(1996)
835 – 46, referred to with approval by Cameron JA the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Tswelopele
Non-Profit Organisation and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality and Others
2007 (6) SA 511 (SCA)
para 21.
[2]
Yeko v
Qana
1973
(4) SA 735
(A) 739G. See also
Blendrite
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Moonisami and Another
2021 (5) SA 61 (SCA)
paras 6 to 8.
[3]
It is common cause on the papers that there is friction in the taxi
industry between the different branches of the industry.
These
branches compete for clientele and regulation takes place in the
interest of public safety.
[4]
Founding affidavit para 44, Caselines 01-32,
[5]
Caselines 02-217.
[6]
Under homologation reference number SO:78132.
[7]
The total should be 22 and a list of 22 vehicles is annexed to the
papers, but it is stated in the affidavit that 23 vehicles
were
impounded. Of the 22 vehicles on the list, only one is shown as
having been impounded by the second respondent.
[8]
Service affidavits, Caselines 07-1.
[9]
See
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Greyvenouw CC and
Others
2004
(2) SA 81
(SE),
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
2011 JDR 1832 (GSJ) para
9, and
South
African Informal Traders Forum and Others v City of Johannesburg
and Others
2014 (4) SA 371 (CC)
para 37.
[10]
See Notice 1813 of 18 December 2019.
[11]
See section 66 of the Act.
[12]
See the definition of a metered taxi service in section 1 of
the Act.
[13]
Caselines 08-6.
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