Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1162South Africa
Chung-Fung (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mayfair Residents Association and Others (2023/080436) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1162 (13 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Chung-Fung (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mayfair Residents Association and Others (2023/080436) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1162 (13 October 2023)
Chung-Fung (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mayfair Residents Association and Others (2023/080436) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1162 (13 October 2023)
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sino date 13 October 2023
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Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case number:
2023/080436
REPORTABLE
OF INTERST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
13/10/23
In
the matter between:
CHUNG-FUNG
(PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
ANCHOR
PROJECTS (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Second
Applicant
And
MAYFAIR
RESIDENTS ASSOCIATION
First
Respondent
IMRAAN
MOHAMED
Second
Respondent
SALEEN
EBRAHIM
Third
Respondent
EBRAHIM
EBRAHIM
Fourth
Respondent
FEROZE
SAYED BHAMJEE
Fifth
Respondent
NAZIRA
EBRAHIM
Sixth
Respondent
RASHID
AHMED MOHAMED VORAJEE
Seventh
Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Eighth
Respondent
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG PROPERTY COMPANY SOC LIMITED
Ninth
Respondent
JOHANNESBURG
ROAD AGENCY (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Tenth
Respondent
Summary:
Urgent Applications
- The jurisdictional fact necessary for an applicant to approach a
court for relief in terms of Rule 6(12) is to establish the
absence of substantive redress at a hearing in due course. In
considering an applicant's ability to obtain satisfactory redress
in
a hearing in due course, regard must be had to the potential of harm
to the applicant in the period between the hearing in the
urgent
court and a hearing in ordinary course. A long delay may prevent an
applicant from obtaining redress in due course. The
refusal of a
hearing before an urgent court, in such circumstances, would defeat
and applicant's rights in terms of section 34
of the
Constitution. A court should be slow to refuse to hear an application
brought by way of urgency where an applicant's rights
in terms of
section 34 would be defeated.
An applicant seeking
urgent relief set out facts that establish of absence of substantive
redress at a hearing in due course. This
is not the same threshold as
irreparable harm for purposes of an interdict but lower. The label
"inherently urgent",
properly construed, does not relate to
causes of action, but, to the right that is sought to be protected or
the relief that is
claimed. Certain rights, by their very nature, if
infringed, require the attention of the urgent court provided that
the threshold
of absence of redress in due course has been satisfied.
Self created
Urgency
- Self created urgency is not constituted by
delay alone. Self created urgency implies a degree of
contrivance to queue
jump. An applicant, that is fully appraised of
its rights and any harm that it may suffer, cannot wait until the
last possible
moment to launch an urgent application for purposes
that would constitute an abuse, in particular, purposes which would
defeat
or delay the lawful exercise of rights by others.
Town Planning
- The Spatial Planning and Land Use Management Act, 2013
("
SPLUMA
") is national legislation
that empowers a local authority to promulgate a land use scheme. A
land use scheme promulgated in
terms of SPLUMA binds all persons and
the state, including its organs. SPLUMA empowers a local authority to
amend its land use
scheme subject to a prescribed process which
includes public participation. Once an amendment to a land use scheme
has been approved
and promulgated, it becomes part of the operative
land use scheme in the area of the local authority's jurisdiction and
has the
force of law.
Land Use Scheme
- A land use scheme prescribes, restrictively, the uses to which
land within a local authority's jurisdiction may be put, to which
it
may be put with a local authority's consent and in respect of which
there is an absolute prohibition. Once a land use scheme
is
promulgated, or an amendment scheme is promulgated, it is only those
rights in terms of the land use scheme that may be exercised
on the
property concerned.
The local authority is
obliged to ensure that all land within its area of jurisdiction is
only used for the purposes permitted.
The Court's powers
to suspend the operation of an amended land use scheme
-
Absent a challenge to the constitutionality of the Land Use Scheme,
it is doubtful that a court enjoys the power to suspend the
operation
of a land use scheme, given that it enjoys the force of law.
The Court's obligation
is to enforce the Rule of Law. Where the law in question is
unconstitutional, in which case a declaration
to that effect must be
made.
JUDGMENT
PULLINGER,
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1] The controv
ersy
in this application concerns the use to which Erf [...] Crown
North Township ("Erf [...]") may lawfully be put
in terms
of the eighth respondent's ("the City")
Land Use
Sche
me, 2018 ("the Scheme").
[2] The applicants
seek interim relief that they "…
be authorised to use
Erf [...] … for purposes of parking
" pending the
relief sought in Part B of their notice of motion. Part B
of the applicants' notice of motion concerns
an earlier judgment in
the litigation between these parties and the effect thereof in light
of the rezoning of Erf [...].
[3]
The
relief claimed by the applicants is effectively declaratory relief
which may, in the discretion of the court, be granted pursuant
to
section 21(1)(c)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
. This is not
unusual relief in the context of planning matters.
[1]
[4] The application
is opposed by the first to seventh respondents ("the Residents")
who, themselves, seek relief
couched in the form of a conditional
counter-application that pending the finalisation of the review
proceedings to which I refer
below, an interim interdict be granted
against the applicants and the City and ninth respondents from using
Erf [...] as
"
a parking lot or
for any commercial purposes, including warehousing, storage of any
goods, the repair of any motor vehicles, any
metalwork or welding, or
the letting and/or operating of shops
", "
admitting
any vehicles
" onto Erf [...] "…
for parking or
any other reasons connected to the wholesale malls operated by the
applicants or any entity related to the applicants
",
"
initiating, undertaking, or continuing with the construction
of any structure, including temporary structures made of metal or any
other material
…" on Erf [...], "
placing any
shipping containers, metal sheds or any similar structure…
"
on Erf [...], or "
allowing any person to stay
overnight…either in a vehicle or in any other manner
."
[5] The Residents
seek this relief if the interdict granted against the applicants, to
which I refer below, is set aside.
BACKGROUND
[6] It is common
cause that on 2 March 2021 the City's Municipal Planning
Tribunal resolved to permanently close
Erf [...] as a public
space and to amend the City of Johannesburg Land Use Scheme, 2016 by
rezoning it for the purposes of
parking. The Residents appealed
against the Tribunal's decision which appeal was refused on
30 August 2021.
[7] On
9 March 2022, in the Provincial Gazette Extraordinary of
that date, the City promulgated Local Authority
Notice 342 of
2002 in respect of Erf [...] from which date Amendment Scheme
20-01-2697 came into operation.
[8] The Residents
were dissatisfied with that decision, and on 28 February 2022
instituted the aforesaid review
proceedings in this court.
Notwithstanding the passage of a considerable amount of time, the
review proceedings remained pending.
The apparent cause of the delay
is the City's failure and/or refusal to provide a full record of the
decision which the Residents
seek to impugn.
[9] The
status
quo
, currently, is that the City has now delivered a full record
of the proceedings and the applicants are in the process of filing
a
supplementary founding affidavit as contemplated in Rule 53 of
the Uniform Rules of Court. It is apparent that the hearing
of any
review is many months away.
[10] This application is
set in the context of protracted litigation between the parties.
[11] In 2021 the
Residents launched an application under case number 2148/2019
claiming an interdict against,
inter alia
, the City and the
applicants. The gravamen of the relief sought was to require the City
to enforce the Scheme and interdict the
applicants from contravening
it by, in particular, "
[a]dmitting any vehicles onto
Erf [...] for parking or any other reasons connected to the
Dragon City Wholesale Mall or the
Dragon City Group of Companies
"
and conducting any business or activity on Erf [...] that causes
a nuisance and interferes with the general flow of
traffic on
Hannover Street and Park Drive in any manner.
[12] On 19 May 2021,
Adams J handed down a judgment in favour of the Residents. The
judgment and order of Adams J
was upheld by the Full Court of
this Division on 22 March 2023. A subsequent application
for leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Appeal and the
application for reconsideration failed.
[13] The Residents make
much of the fact that the applicants endeavoured, unsuccessfully,
before the Full Court to introduce new
evidence, that new evidence
being of the rezoning of Erf [...]. This was viewed by the Full
Court as a "neutral fact"
and did not constitute
extraordinary circumstances warranting its admission.
[14] The Appeal Court did
not consider the consequences of the rezoning of Erf [...] with
regards to the parties' respective
rights. But more on this below.
[15] As intimated above,
this application was brought by way of urgency. The Residents
vehemently opposed the enrolment of this
application as an urgent
application. It is in this context that it is necessary to say
something about urgent applications before
addressing the merits of
the application before me.
URGENCY
[16] The Rules of Court
in application proceedings prescribe time periods for the filing of
affidavits. Those time periods are,
per se
, considered to be
reasonable in applications where a litigant's access to Court, as
contemplated in section 34 of the Constitution
and its ability
to obtain relief, will not be adversely affected or defeated by a
hearing in the ordinary course.
[17] However, the Rules
make specific provision for a litigant to approach the Court on
abridged time periods for relief that cannot
wait for adjudication in
the ordinary course.
[18]
In
terms of Rule 6(12), an application is considered "urgent"
where a litigant could not obtain substantive redress
at a hearing in
due course. If the redress would not be substantive in due course,
the
matter falls to be determined as a matter of urgency. As said
by the Supreme Court of Appeal:
[2]
"…
Urgency is a reason that may justify deviation from the times and
forms the Rules prescribe. It relates to
form, not substance,
and is not a prerequisite to a claim for substantive relief."
[19]
The
threshold to establish the juristic fact of "absence of
substantive redress" is lower than that of "irreparable
harm" for the purposes of establishing an interim interdict.
[3]
[20]
Once
an applicant has established that it will not obtain substantive
redress at a hearing in due course, the Court concerns itself
with
the question of whether the abridgement of time periods from those
ordinarily prescribed by the Rules is commensurate with
the urgency
with which the redress is required.
[4]
Unreasonable abridgment of time periods may have adverse cost
implications for an applicant, even if it were to be successful
in
its urgent application.
[21]
It
must be apparent, therefore, that the right to approach the Court for
urgent relief is inextricably tied to a litigant's rights
under
section 34 of the Constitution.
In
Chief Lesapo,
[5]
the
Constitutional Court said:
"
[a]n
important purpose of s 34 is to guarantee the protection of the
judicial process to persons who have disputes that can
be resolved by
law…"
[6]
and
"… s 34
and the access to courts it guarantees for the adjudication of
disputes are a manifestation of a deeper
principle; one that
underlies our democratic order."
[7]
[22] It said further:
"[t]he
right of access to court is indeed foundational to the stability of
an orderly society. It ensures the peaceful,
regulated and
institutionalised mechanisms to resolve disputes, without resorting
to self-help. The right of access to court
is a bulwark against
vigilantism, and the chaos and anarchy which it causes.
Construed in this context of the rule of law
and the principle
against self-help in particular, access to court is indeed of
cardinal importance. As a result, very powerful
considerations
would be required for its limitation to be reasonable and
justifiable."
[8]
(emphasis
added).
[23] It is against this
fundamental consideration that the question of substantive relief in
due course should always be measured.
[24]
A
court should be slow to refuse to hear a matter where a litigant will
be deprived of substantial redress in due course. In deciding
whether
an applicant will be able to obtain redress at a hearing in due
course, the delay between the hearing before the urgent
court and a
court in the ordinary course is a weighty consideration. That is not
to say that a proper case need not be made out
justifying the reason
for approaching the urgent court and fully explaining the prejudice
that a delay in a hearing will present,
as well as the reasonableness
of the abridgment of time periods
[9]
because, concomitant with a litigant’s right not to be deprived
of access to court, it may not exercise these rights in a
manner that
occasions prejudice to other parties by imposing unreasonable time
periods that are not commensurate with the degree
of urgency
asserted.
[25]
In
delaying an approach to court unduly (attempts to settle an impasse
prior to launching an urgent application is not an undue
delay
[10]
)
thereby not affording a party’s opposition sufficient time to
place its case before the court, an applicant may cause prejudice
to
a respondent and necessarily impact upon the urgent court’s
ability to properly manage its roll which in turn undermines
the
proper administration of justice.
[26] It is in this
context that it is often said that an applicant has "created"
its own urgency through its delay in
approaching the court. The
notion of "self-created urgency" necessarily means more
than mere delay. In proper
cases, this is a reason for a court
to refuse to enrol and hear a matter as an urgent application.
[27]
In
Roets N.O.
[11]
for example,
this court found that the applicant had sat "
on
its laurels
"
and had unduly taken its time to approach the urgent court claiming
irreparable harm. This led to the application being
struck from
the roll on account of "self-created urgency". But I think
this decision properly understood, demonstrates
that "self-created"
urgency involves a degree of contrivance to jump the queue of
hearings in the ordinary course. The
contrivance in Roets N.O.
was to wait until the eve of a sale in execution to bring an urgent
application seeking a stay of the
sale pending,
inter
alia
,
a rescission application when the fact of a sale in execution had
been long known to the applicant. The effect of, as the learned
judge
phrased it, "sitting on one’s laurels" was, in that
case, designed to prevent a sale in execution from being
held in
order to defeat the rights of the judgment creditor. Had the
rescission application been brought timeously, there would
have been
no need to approach the urgent court at the last moment.
[28] Tangentially, where
a respondent complains of prejudice, the facts upon which it relies
must be clearly stated. A bald conclusion
of prejudice will not
suffice where answering papers have been delivered and the issues
ventilated.
[29]
The
proposition that any application made to an urgent court must be
fully and properly motivated holds true whether or not a matter
is
described as "inherently urgent", such as in instances of
spoliation,
[12]
restraints of
trade,
[13]
business rescue
applications
[14]
or the
like.
[15]
[30]
Although
this court has recently eschewed the use of the phrase "inherently
urgent"
[16]
in relation
to certain causes of action, it has recognised that the harm claimed
by an applicant is linked to the nature of the
right sought to be
enforced and protected rather than any category that the "right"
may fall into (i.e. the cause of
action relied upon).
[17]
This may well, in appropriate circumstances, render the relief
claimed "inherently urgent", but may have little
to do with
the cause of action.
[31]
Thus,
while it is long established that urgent relief may arise from
various and divergent causes including the protection of commercial
interests
[18]
and, I dare say,
matters that require expeditious adjudication in the public
interest,
[19]
each case must
be determined on its own merits and both the requirement of absence
of substantive redress in due course and the
reasonableness of the
abridgment of time periods must be properly traversed by an applicant
approaching the court for urgent relief.
[32] The applicants’
case is that since the interdict was granted against the use of Erf
[...] for purposes of parking, there
has been a marked decline in the
number of shoppers to the shopping centres conducted on adjoining
properties. This has a direct
impact on the ability of tenants to
meet their rental obligations to the applicants and in turn, the
applicants’ ability
to service loan obligations. There
is, so it is asserted, a knock-on effect to the tenants’
suppliers whose businesses
will also be impacted by the reduced
numbers of shoppers. Ultimately however, it is contended, that there
is an impact on the livelihoods
of those who directly or indirectly
earn a living from the shopping centres. It is therefore, in
the context of the rezoning
of Erf [...] (to specifically allow it to
be used for the purposes of parking), that the interdict against Erf
[...] from being
used for purposes of parking and the number of
people who have an interest in the use of Erf [...], that a hearing
before the urgent
court is required.
[33] The Residents deny
that this matter is urgent as contemplated. Their case is that
that applicants have failed to pass
the threshold of absence of
substantive relief. The Residents state:
"… At best,
the applicants have made the bald averment that the interdict granted
to the respondents has affected the
business of the applicants, and
that it will not be able to meet its obligations to Bidvest Bank.
The Court is remined that
the applicants are the architects of their
own misfortune, having unlawfully overdeveloped their retail
operations resulting in
an inadequacy of parking. The urgency
of their application is clearly manufactured."
[34] I find this argument
circular. If there is an inadequacy of parking because Erf
[...] cannot be used by the applicants,
it must follow logically that
fewer shoppers can or would shop at the applicants’ shopping
centres. If the applicants
have over-developed their shopping
centres, that may have other consequences, but these consequences are
unrelated to the question
which this court is asked to determine and
also unrelated to the question of whether the applicants will obtain
redress at a hearing
in due course.
[35] I do not understand
the circumstances in which the Residents came to the conclusion that
the facts asserted by the applicants
are contrived or
"manufactured". This suggests a degree of dishonesty
on the part of the applicants in respect
of which no factual
foundation has been set out.
[36] The Residents state
further,
"I respectfully
submit that there no basis for urgency. The applicants could
simply scale back their retail operations
and free-up more space for
parking. This would bring their conduct in accordance with the
law, and would also alleviate the
challenges that they allege they
face as a result of the interdict."
[37] Whether or not the
applicants have over-developed the shopping centres is not an issue
that falls to be determined. It
is the lawful use of Erf [...]
that falls to be determined. This is wholly distinct from whether or
not the shopping centres are
lawfully operated.
[38] The City does not
engage in the urgency debate.
[39]
Given
the principles I have set out above and the general importance of
this matter to the community surrounding Erf [...], I find
that the
applicants have passed the requisite threshold to found the
jurisdictional fact of absence of redress in due course.
The
Residents have presented no meaningful answer, outside of speculative
arguments,
[20]
that the
applicants have experienced a decline in shoppers or that their
tenants have experienced a decline in their businesses.
[40]
Given
that in the Johannesburg court system a hearing in the ordinary
course can take some six to nine months, I cannot find that
the
losses that both the applicants and their tenants are experiencing
can be put right after a lengthy passage of time.
The
applicants’ tenants face a decline in shoppers on a daily
basis. This is not a case, such as Salt,
[21]
where the applicants and their tenants can readily make alternative
arrangements in the interim.
[41] The Residents and
the City have filed answering affidavits (albeit outside of the time
period stipulated in the notice of motion).
The Residents and the
City may amplify their affidavits to address part B of the
application should it be necessary, as the applicants
have disavowed
reliance on their experts’ evidence for the purposes of the
relief claimed in Part A of their notice of motion.
[42] There is no apparent
prejudice to the Residents by the abridgement of the time periods and
none is asserted.
PRINCIPLES APPLICABLE TO
PLANNING LAW
[43] At the heart of this
application is a proper understanding of the nature of planning law
and, more particularly, the nature
and effect of town planning
schemes.
[44]
Town
planning is an exclusive area of local government executive
competence.
[22]
The
exercise of this power is regulated by the Spatial Planning and Land
Use Management Act, 2013 ("SPLUMA"). Prior
to SPLUMA, town
planning in the former Transvaal was regulated by the Townships and
Town Planning Ordinance, 1984 ("the Ordinance").
[23]
[24]
SPLUMA is national
legislation that came into effect on 1 July 2015. In terms of
section 24(1) of SPLUMA every municipality
in the Republic was
afforded five years to adopt and approve a single land use scheme for
its entire area of jurisdiction.
[45]
The
Scheme is an adopted and approved Land Use Scheme as contemplated in
section 24 of SPLUMA. It was published by the
City on
2 January 2019 and came into operation on 1 February 2019.
Upon coming into operation, it repealed
and replaced the sixteen
different Town Planning Schemes that had previously been in operation
across the greater City of Johannesburg.
[25]
[46]
In
Mungisa, Ntangu-Rare v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality
[26]
this Court
explained the nature of a town planning scheme with reference to the
Ordinance. It said
"… A town
planning scheme is a unique piece of legislative arrangement in terms
whereof each erf within the geographical
area covered by a scheme has
a specific zoning attached to it, which zoning permits only certain
uses specified in the scheme itself.
No provision is made in a
scheme for "grey areas". An occupier of an owner of an erf
either uses the property for the
purposes permitted by the scheme or
he does not …
The City's obligation to
enforce the Scheme is an integral part of the operation of the
Scheme." (emphasis added)
[47]
This
principle applies with equal measure with regard to SPLUMA and the
Scheme. The Scheme provides a zoning for every such piece
of land and
prescribes restrictively, the uses to which any land may be put. It
prescribes restrictively, the uses to which any
land may be put to
use with the consent of the City and the uses to which land may not
be put
[27]
(at least not
without a successful rezoning application).
[48] Section 26(1) of
SPLUMA which provides that
"
An
adopted and approved land use scheme-
(a)
has the force of law, and all land owners and users of land,
including a municipality, a state-owned enterprise and organs
of
state within the municipal area are bound by the provisions of such a
land use scheme"
and
means, necessarily, that it has the same status as any other statute
promulgated within the Republic and, an offence is created,
for
non-compliance therewith.
[28]
[49] Land Use Schemes are
not static. They may be amended from time to time. The
local authorities power to do so arises
from Section 28 of SPLUMA.
In the instant case, the process is set out in the City’s Town
Planning By-Law, 2016 ("the
By-Law").
[50] Section 21 of the
By-Law prescribes processes in the re-zoning application.
Succinctly stated, the process:
[50.1]
begins
with the notice being published in the provincial gazette, in
newspapers
[29]
and
at the subject property
[30]
as
well as written notice to the owners and occupiers of every
contiguous erf, including those on the opposite side of the
street;
[31]
[50.2]
includes
a public participation process in terms of which provision is made
for objections, comments and representations
[32]
and
the consideration thereof by a municipal planning tribunal;
[33]
and
[50.3]
if
a re-zoning application is granted, an Amendment Scheme is
promulgated,
[34]
giving a date
on which it will come into effect whereafter:
"[t]he
City shall observe and enforce the provisions of the scheme from the
date of it coming into operation and any person
who contravenes a
provision of an approved scheme shall be guilty of an offence."
[35]
[51] Thus an Amendment
Scheme has the effect of law from the date stipulated in the
promulgation notice.
THE ISSUES
[52] I return now to
address the issues.
[53] The applicants seek
declaratory relief that they may use Erf [...] for purposes of
parking. They do so, so it is stated, to
obtain the
imprimatur
of the Court given the interdict granted against the applicants at
the behest of the Residents against such use.
[54]
At
the time Adams J granted the interdict, the use of Erf [...] for
purposes of parking was unlawful. The learned Judge enjoyed
no
discretion in the matter, and was obliged to grant such an interdict
against the use of Erf [...] for purposes of parking.
[36]
[55]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in Lester,
[37]
put the proposition thus:
"
[28]
As stated, Lester has erected an unlawful structure on his
property — this fact is unchallenged and common cause.
The
jurisdictional basis for a demolition order in terms of s 21 has
therefore been established. All administrative actions,
such as
the unanimous resolution of Ndlambe's full council on 5 December 2010
not to approve the final revised plans, remain valid
and legally
binding until set aside on review or appeal. Absent any challenge on
appeal — internally in terms of s 9 of the
Act to a review
board, or on review in terms of PAJA to a competent court —
that resolution had legal consequences. In
Camps
Bay Ratepayers' Association and Another v Harrison and the
Municipality of Cape Town
the
Constitutional Court, in referring with approval to
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
, said
that:
'(A)dministrative
decisions are often built on the supposition that previous decisions
were validly taken and unless that previous
decision is challenged
and set aside by a competent court, its substantive validity is
accepted as a fact. Whether or not
it was indeed valid is of no
consequence. Applied to the present facts it meant that the approval
of the February 2005 plans must
be accepted as a fact. If the
footprint issue was part of that approval, that decision must
likewise be accepted as a fact unless
and until it is validly
challenged and set aside.'
See
also
Member of the Executive
Council for Health, Eastern Cape v Kirland Investments.
I have already found that the court below erred in finding that it
had a discretion whether or not to issue a demolition order.
Absent
such discretion, the court below simply had to uphold the rule of
law, refuse to countenance an ongoing statutory contravention
and
enforce the provisions of the Act." (emphasis added; footnotes
omitted)
[56] But, the
promulgation of the Amendment Scheme materially changes the context
in which that interdict was granted. It must be
axiomtic that where
an interdict is granted against the unlawful use of land, and that
unlawful use is regularised by a rezoning,
the interdict against the
unlawful use is no longer operative.
[57] The use of Erf [...]
for purposes of parking is no longer an unlawful. It may now lawfully
be used for that purpose and that
purpose alone.
[58] But as correctly
pointed out by the Residents, this is not where the interdict granted
by Adams J ended. The learned Judge
also granted wide ranging
relief to protect the Residents from various instances of nuisance.
[59] The Residents rely
on various authorities for the proposition that a court order is
binding and must be obeyed until set aside.
As a general proposition,
this is a correct exposition of the law, but the position is more
nuanced than that stated by the Residents.
Any judgment or
order is granted in the context of the facts proven at that time
viewed through the prism of the law as it
stands at that time.
[60]
In
Zondi,
[38]
the Constitutional
Court held, in relation to its power to extend a period of invalidity
of a statute, that:
"[n]ew
facts may emerge or circumstances may change and render the period of
suspension unjust or inequitable. In these circumstances,
this Court
not only has the power but also has the obligation under its just and
equitable jurisdiction to vary that period of
suspension and the
conditions attached to the suspension, if necessary, to reflect the
justice and equity required by the facts
of the case".
[39]
[61]
This
principle was applied by the Constitutional Court in Residents of Joe
Slovo.
[40]
It said:
"…
the
case of
Zondi
is
strong support for the proposition that where an order is made on an
assessment of the circumstances that existed at a particular
time, a
court retains the power to vary that order if these circumstances
change."
[41]
[62]
The
Constitutional Court went on to discharge part of the order it had
made
[42]
based
on a material change in circumstances.
[43]
[63]
The purpose for which I cite these decisions is
not to pre-empt the relief sought by the applicants under Part B of
their notice
of motion, but to demonstrate judicial cognisance of
changed facts and circumstances and illustrate that a judgment and
order reflects
the facts and law as they stood when the decision was
taken.
[64] The argument
advanced by the Residents, taken to its logical conclusion,
necessarily means that the City's hands were tied
by the order of
Adams J and that by virtue of the nuisance that the learned
Judge found, that the City would be precluded
from entertaining any
application for rezoning, whether of its own volition or upon
application by the applicants. That contention
cannot be correct, as
it would trammel upon the separation of powers doctrine.
[65] The intersection
between the nuisance complained of by the Residents and the effect of
the rezoning of Erf [...] is for
another court to determine
under Part B of the applicants’ notice of motion.
[66] The question that
will confront another court, in due course, is whether the materially
changed circumstances renders the remainder
of order granted by
Adams J otiose.
[67] Accordingly, if
Erf [...] is used for any other purpose, the City would be
obliged to take the steps necessary to bring
such unlawful use to an
end.
[68] The City, which
played a minor role in these proceedings, took the stance that
Erf [...] may only be used for parking
and that any other use
would be unlawful and addressed by them in accordance with SPLUMA,
the Scheme and the By Law.
[69] Accordingly, and for
present purposes, the only portion of the order granted by Adams J
that is affected by the change
in circumstances is the interdict
against the use of Erf [...] for the purposes of parking.
[70] In the
counter application, the Residents seek an interim interdict
against the use of Erf [...] for a wide range
of uses, including
parking, pending the outcome of the review proceedings that they have
instituted against the City.
[71] I have already found
that the promulgation of the Amendment Scheme in relation to
Erf [...] has the effect of law, and
is to be enforced like any
other statute. This, then, begs the question of the Court's power to
suspend the operation of a statute
pending a review.
[72]
Mr Ben Zeev,
for the Residents, suggested that the answer is to be found in the
Supreme Court of Appeal's judgment in
Govan Mbeki.
[44]
[73] Govan Mbeki
concerned certain Land Use Management By Laws promulgated by
three local municipalities. The effect of these
By-Laws was
identical. The By Laws concerned restraints placed on the
transfer of erven and land units within their respective
areas of
jurisdiction without the transferor of such erf or land unit
producing a certificate issued by the relevant municipality,
certifying that all spatial planning, land use management and
building regulation conditions or approvals in connection with those
erven or land units had been obtained and complied with.
[74] In that matter it
was contended that the effect of the By Laws was to impose an
embargo on the restriction of the transfer
of ownership, which
restriction was unconstitutional.
[75] Immediately, it is
apparent that the Supreme Court of Appeal was concerned with two very
different considerations to that before
me. First, in the instant
case, there is no challenge to the constitutionality of SPLUMA or the
By Law pursuant to which the
Amendment Scheme was promulgated.
Second, it was the finding of unconstitutionality made by the
Mpumalanga High Court that gave
rise to the suspension of the
impugned provision of the relevant By Law.
[76] It was in relation
to the suspension of the impugned provisions of the By-Law, that the
Supreme Court of Appeal said:
"[42] The High Court
suspended the declaration of invalidity for six months ‘
to
allow the competent authority to correct the defect
’. No
reasons were given in the judgment for this order. In the absence of
any such reasons for this deviation from the default
position of
setting aside unconstitutional exercises of public power, this order
was not competent. I can see no reason to keep
the invalid by-laws in
operation, especially because of the usurpation by the two
municipalities of legislative functions of other
spheres of
government. It follows that the suspension of the declaration of
invalidity of the by-laws must be set aside…"
(emphasis
added)
[77] The decision is
Govan Mbeki is not authority for the proposition that the Court may
suspend a statute. It is authority for
a very different proposition,
being that there is no basis for an invalid and unconstitutional
exercise of public power to remain
in operation.
[78]
I
have doubts that a court has the power to suspend the operation of a
promulgated Amendment Scheme. In Morar
[45]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal considered an application in which the
Court’s power to appoint a liquidator to a partnership
and the
extent of such of the powers that a court may vest in a liquidator.
It said:
"
[18]
When the court appoints a liquidator for a partnership it is
remedying the failure of the partners to attend to the liquidation
of
the partnership by agreement. Such failure may arise from
disagreement over the need to appoint a liquidator, or over the
identity
of the liquidator or over the powers that the liquidator
should enjoy. That being so it is logical to take as one's starting
point
the powers that the partners could themselves confer by
agreement, if they were not in a state of hostilities. The court is
then
asked to do no more than resolve a dispute between the partners
over the appointment of the liquidator or over the liquidator's
powers. It does so in a way that the parties themselves could have
done. The disagreement arises in consequence of the one partner
refusing to agree to the liquidator being appointed or the liquidator
having a particular power and that can be characterised as
a breach
of the obligations of co-operation and good faith that are central to
all partnerships. The court is then merely
enforcing the
contractual obligations of the partners themselves.
[19]
Once the court is asked to go beyond this it is necessary to identify
a source of its power to do so. That is central
to the rule of law
that underpins our constitutional order. Courts are not free to
do whatever they wish to resolve the cases
that come before them. The
boundary between judicial exposition and interpretation of legal
sources, which is the judicial function,
and legislation, which is
not, must be observed and respected. In this case no such source was
identified." (emphasis added)
[79]
I
do not need to resolve this conundrum however. As matters
stand, the use of Erf [...] for parking is lawful. The lawful
exercise of a right is not capable of being interdicted.
[46]
For present purposes, the balance of the order granted by Adam’s
J concerning issues of nuisance remains unaffected.
[80]
Moreover,
it is the Residents' case that the interdict granted by Adams J
against the use of Erf [...] for purposes which would
constitute
a nuisance may give rise to contempt. Should the Residents seek a
declaration of contempt coupled with an appropriate
coercive
order,
[47]
this, in and of
itself, is a suitable alternative remedy that may be employed to give
effect to Adams J's order.
[81] This leads,
ineluctably, to the conclusion that the conditional
counter application must fail.
CONCLUSION
[82] It must be plain, in
the circumstances, that the applicants are entitled to a declarator
that Erf [...] may be used for
the purposes of parking.
[83] As I am only dealing
with interim relief and more litigation of a substantial nature is
envisaged which will ultimately determine
the parties' rights, it is
inappropriate that any costs order is made at this time.
[84] In the result, the
following order is made:
1. It is declared that
Erf [...] may be used for parking in terms of Amendment Scheme
20-01-2697 promulgated in Local Authority
Notice 342 of 2002 on
9 March 2022.
2. The 1
st
to
7
th
respondents’ conditional counter application
is dismissed.
3.
The costs of this application are reserved for determination in
P
art B of this application.
A
W PULLINGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be
12h00
on
13 September 2023
.
DATE
OF HEARING:
6 September 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
13 September 2023
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
G FARBER SC
J L KAPLAN
ATTORNEY
FOR THE APPLICANT:
IAN LEVITT ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR THE 1
st
to 7
th
RESPONDENTS:
O BEN ZEEV
K V PLAATJIES
ATTORNEY
FOR THE 1
st
to 7
th
RESPONDENTS:
WEBBER WENTZEL
COUNSEL
FOR THE 8
th
RESPONDENT:
L FRANCK (MS)
ATTORNEY
FOR THE 8
th
RESPONDENT:
NCUBE INC ATTORNEYS
[1]
Bitou
Local Municipality v Timber Two Processors CC and Another
2009
(5) SA 618
(C);
Vereeiging
City Council v Rhema Bible Church, Walkerville and Others
1989
(2) SA 142
(T);
Esterhuyse
v Jan Jooste Family Trust and Another
1998
(4) SA 241 (C)
[2]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Services v Hawker Air Services (Pty) Ltd;
Commissioner, South African Revenue Services v Hawker
Aviation
Partnership and Others
2006
(4) SA 292 (SCA) at [9]
[3]
In
re: Several matters on the urgent court roll
2013
(1) SA 549 (GSJ)
[4]
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin & Another (t/a Makin's
Furniture Manufacturers)
1977
(4) SA 135
(W) at 137F
[5]
Chief
Lesapo v North West Agricultural Bank and another
[1999] ZACC 16
;
2000
(1) SA 409
(CC) at
[13]
[6]
At
[13]
[7]
At
[16]
[8]
At
[22]
[9]
Clemson
v Clemson
[2000]
1 All SA 622
(W) at 626;
Mangala
v Mangala
1967
(2) SA 415
(ECD) at 416 F
[10]
Transnet
Ltd v Rubenstein
2006
(1) SA 591
(SCA) at 603 B/C;
South
African Informal Traders Forum and Others v City of Johannesburg and
Others
2014
(4) SA 371
(CC) at [37] and [38]
[11]
Roets
N.O and another v SB Guarantee Company (RF) (Pty) Ltd and others
[2022]
JOL 55628
(GJ) at [26]
[12]
Clemson
(
supra
)
[13]
Advtech
resourcing (Pty) Ltd t/a Communicate Personnel Group v Khun and
Another
2008
(2) SA 375
(C) at [3]
[14]
Koen
v Wedgewood Village Golf and Country Estate (Pty) Ltd
2012
(2) SA 378
(WCC) at [10];
Matshazi
and Others v Mezipoli Melrose Arch (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2020]
ZAGHJHC 135 (3 June 2020) at [6] and [7]
[15]
For
example an unlawful search and seizure (
Gigaba
v Minister of Police and Others
[2021]
3 All SA 495
(GP); a commercial tenant unlawfully holding over where
a new lessee requires vacant possession of the let property (
CEZ
Investment (Pty) Ltd v Wynberg Autobody (Pty) Ltd
[2021]
ZAGPJHC 499 (29 September 2021) at [19] to [23] and the authorities
cited therein) or an unlawful arrest and detention
of an unlawful
immigrant (
Ashebo
v Minister of Home Affairs
2023
(5) SA 382 (CC)).
[16]
Volvo
financial Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose Trading
CC
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 846 (1 August 2023) at [6]
[17]
At
[8].
[18]
Twentieth
Century Fox Film Corporation and Another v. Anthony Black Films
(Pty) Ltd
1982
(3) SA 582
(W) at 586G
[19]
Consider
the Deputy Judge President’s notice dates 04 October 2021
entitled "Notice to Legal Practitioners about the
Urgent Motion
Court, Johannesburg" at paragraph 2.
[20]
In
relation to the probative value of speculative averments, see
Knoop
N.O and Another v Gupta and Another
2021
(3) SA 88
(SCA) at [19]
[21]
Salt
and Another v Smith
1991
(2) SA 186
(NM) at 187 D/E
[22]
Section
156 of the constitution read with Part B of Schedule 4 and Part B of
Schedule 5. The ambit and extent of these powers
was considered in
town planning matters was considered in
Govan
Mbeki Local Municipality and Another v Glencore Operations South
Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
2022
(6) SA 106
(SCA) at [14] to [19]
[23]
SPLUMA
does not expressly repeal the Ordinance
[24]
An
exposition of the various Ordinances that were applicable throughout
the Republic can be found in
Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality v Gauteng development Tribunal and Others
2010
(6) SA 182
(CC) at [30] to [32]
[25]
Clause
2 of the Scheme. One of the schemes repealed by the Scheme is
the Johannesburg Town Planning Scheme, 1979
[26]
An
unreported decision of the South Gauteng High Court per Masipa J,
under case number 25745/12 dated 15 November 2012
[27]
Clause
10 read with Table B
[28]
Section
58
[29]
Section
21(2)(a)
[30]
Section
21(2)(f)
[31]
Section
21(2)(k)
[32]
Section
21(5)
[33]
Section
21(6)
[34]
Section
22(7)
[35]
Section
22(8)
[36]
Chapmans
Peak Hotel (Pty) Ltd and another v Jab and Annelene Resturtants CC
t/a O’Hagans
[2001] 4 All SA 415
(C)
at
[18] and the authorities therein cited;
Bitou
Local Municipality
(supra)
at
[22] to [31] and the authorities therein cited;
Makgosi
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Edwin Harold Fichard N.O. and Others
,
an unreported judgment of Meyer J dated 12 July 2026 under case
number 24249/2015 at [30]
[37]
Lester
v Ndlambane Municipality
2015
(6) SA 283 (SCA)
[38]
Zondi
v MEC, Traditional and Local Government Affairs and Others
2001
(3) SA 1
(CC)
[39]
At
[39]
[40]
Residents
of Joe Slovo Community, Western Cape v Thubelisha Homes and Others
(Centre on Housing Rights and Evictions and Another
as
Amici
Curiae
)
2011
(7) BCLR 723 (CC)
[41]
At
[23]
[42]
Residents
of Joe Slovo Community, Western Cape v Thubelisha Homes and Others
2009
(9) BCLR 847 (CC)
[43]
At
[37]
[44]
supra
[45]
Morar
N.O v Akoo and Another
2011
(6) SA 311 (SCA)
[46]
Tiger
Trading Co v Garment Workers Union & Others
1932
WLD 131
at 133;
A
K Entertainment CC v Minister of Safety and Security & Others
1995
(1) SA 783
(E) at 797 I - J
[47]
As
to the distinction between coercive orders and punitive orders in
contempt proceedings see
Secretary,
Judicial Services Commission into allegations of State Capture v
Zuma and Others
2021
(5) SA 327
(CC) at [47]
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