Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 572South Africa
Zwane v Johannesburg City Parks & Zoo and Others (26584/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 572 (18 August 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative law – City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and Crematoria By-Laws, 2004 – ‘Holder of Private Rights’ in graves – erection of ‘memorial work’ on grave – on written consent of ‘officer-in-charge’ – removal of memorial work from grave – only by ‘Holder of Private Rights’ – permission to be granted to applicant even if she is not registered as holder of private rights – common sense to be applied in applying By-Laws.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Zwane v Johannesburg City Parks & Zoo and Others (26584/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 572 (18 August 2022)
Zwane v Johannesburg City Parks & Zoo and Others (26584/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 572 (18 August 2022)
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sino date 18 August 2022
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
26584/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
18
th
August
2022
In the matter between:
ZWANE
,
GLADYS NANTULI
Applicant
And
JOHANNESBURG
CITY PARKS & ZOO
First Respondent
THE CITY OF
JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
MOLEFE
,
TILLY
JOYCE
Third Respondent
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
15 August 2022
Delivered:
18 August 2022 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 15:30 on 12
August 2022.
Summary:
Administrative law – City of
Johannesburg Cemeteries and Crematoria By-Laws, 2004 – ‘Holder
of Private Rights’
in graves – erection of ‘memorial
work’ on grave – on written consent of
‘officer-in-charge’
– removal of memorial work from
grave – only by ‘Holder of Private Rights’ –
permission to be granted
to applicant even if she is not registered
as holder of private rights – common sense to be applied in
applying By-Laws.
ORDER
(1)
The applicant be and is hereby declared to
be the ‘Holder of Private Rights’, as defined in section
8(1)(b) of Chapter
2 of the City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and
Crematoria By-Laws, 2004, in and in respect of the grave of her
deceased husband,
Simon Mkhunjulwa Zwane, being grave number [....],
Westpark Cemetery in Johannesburg.
(2)
The first respondent, the second respondent
and the Officer-in-Charge of the Westpark Cemetery are hereby ordered
and directed to,
within ten days from date of this order, enter the
name of the applicant in the Register contemplated in section 8(1)(a)
of Chapter
2 of the City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and Crematoria
By-Laws, 2004, as being the ‘Holder of Private Rights’ in
and
in respect of the grave of her deceased husband, Simon Mkhunjulwa
Zwane, being grave number [....], Westpark Cemetery in
Johannesburg.
(3)
The applicant is hereby granted permission
to dismantle and remove from the grave of her late husband any and
all existing memorial
works on the said grave of her later husband,
Simon Mkhunjulwa Zwane, being grave number [....], Westpark Cemetery
in Johannesburg.
(4)
The applicant is hereby granted permission
to erect a new ‘memorial work’ in the form of a tombstone
or a headstone
(‘the tombstone’) on the grave of her
deceased husband, Simon Mkhunjulwa Zwane, being grave number [....],
Westpark
Cemetery in Johannesburg.
(5)
The first respondent, the second respondent
and the Officer-in-Charge of the Westpark Cemetery are hereby ordered
and directed to,
within ten days from date of this order, provide the
applicant with a written consent, in terms of section 27(1) of
Chapter 6 of
the City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and Crematoria
By-Laws, 2004, to dismantle and remove the existing grave marker from
the grave
of her late husband.
(6)
The first respondent, the second respondent
and the Officer-in-Charge of the Westpark Cemetery are hereby ordered
and directed to,
within ten days from date of this order, provide the
applicant with a written consent, in terms of section 24(4)(a) of
Chapter
6 of the City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and Crematoria
By-Laws, 2004, to erect the said tombstone.
(7)
Each party shall bear her / his / its own
costs of this opposed application.
JUDGMENT
Adams J:
[1].
The applicant, who is the surviving wife
of the deceased, one Simon Mkhunjulwa Zwane (‘the deceased’),
who died on 21
January 2019, seeks an order that she be permitted to
erect a tombstone on the grave of her deceased husband. The said
grave already
has what can best be described as a ‘grave
marker’, which is a very basic plaque on which is printed, in a
rather rudimentary
manner, the name of the deceased, his date of
birth and the date on which he died. The first and second
respondents, who shall
be referred to collectively in this judgment
as ‘the City of Johannesburg’, were not prepared to agree
to the erection
of the tombstone, because, so they argue, to do so
would offend the principle of legality in that it would amount to a
contravention
of the City of Johannesburg, Cemeteries and Crematoria
By-Laws, 2004 (‘the City By-laws’), which provide that a
‘memorial
work’ on a grave can only be dismantled and
removed by the registered ‘holder of private rights’ in
respect of
the grave, which is in fact the third respondent, who is
the sister of the deceased.
[2].
By all accounts, and having regard to
the fact that the applicant is the surviving spouse of the deceased,
she has every right to
erect a tombstone on the grave of her deceased
husband. What is more is that the third respondent and the other
family members
of the deceased apparently has no objection to the
applicant erecting the tombstone. At the very least, their quiescence
can and
should be interpreted as acquiescence. Applying common sense
and some basic logic, it has to be accepted that the applicant should
not have been prevented from erecting the tombstone upon her request
to do so.
[3].
This
was not to be the approach adopted by the City of Johannesburg, which
opted rather for a legal and an overly technical approach.
They took
the stance that the applicant did not seek to review and set aside
the registration of the third respondent as the registered
rights
holder in respect of the grave of the deceased, and therefore she was
precluded from erecting the tombstone. The registration
of the third
respondent as a rights holder, so the City contends, is an
administrative action and remains valid and effective until
set
aside. The City relies in that regard on the
Oudekraal
Estates
[1]
matter.
[4].
The City also appears to be of the view
that the applicant ought to have approached the family of the
deceased, with whom she has
a very acrimonious relationship, in order
to get their consent for the erection of the tombstone. The
applicant’s explanation
that she has this very acrimonious
relationship with the family of her later husband, was not accepted
by the City, which remained
adamant that the applicant cannot be
permitted to erect the tombstone until such time as she was
registered as the ‘rights
holder’ in respect of the
grave. This rigid and inflexible approach on the part of the City
persisted, notwithstanding the
fact that the third respondent opted
to play no part in these proceedings even after being served with the
application on 5 June
2021.
[5].
The question is simply this: Why was the
City so reluctant to take it upon themselves, upon request of the
applicant, to register
the applicant as the ‘holder of private
rights’. She clearly qualified to replace the third respondent
as such. And,
what is more, it can safely be inferred that the third
respondent has no objection to the transfer of the rights to the
applicant.
[6].
The City therefore opposes the
applicant’s application on the basis that, in terms of section
27(1) of chapter 5 of the City
By-Laws, it is only the holder of the
private rights who may dismantle or disturb any memorial work on a
grave. As such, so goes
the argument on behalf of the City, the
current memorial on the grave of the deceased cannot be removed or
replaced unless this
is done by the third respondent, as the
registered holder of rights. Because the existing ‘memorial
work’ cannot be
removed, so the City contends, a new headstone
can also not be erected. Therefore, so the argument is concluded, if
the City does
not oppose this application, it would be contravening
its own By-laws, by which it is bound.
[7].
The City takes their argument, based on
the rigid and inflexible approach, a step further and contends that
in bringing this application,
the applicant was ill-advised. She
should have applied for a review and setting aside of the previous
administrative decision,
that being the registration of the third
respondent as the ‘holder of private rights’, so the City
argues, in terms
of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, Act
3 of 2000 (‘PAJA’). The applicant would not be able to do
so, in
any event, as the PAJA review grounds do not exist. It cannot,
for instance, be said that decision of the public official is wrong
or irrational, so the City submits, and therefore the decision must
stand.
[8].
In sum, the submission on behalf of the
City is that, in terms of its By-Laws, the current gravestone cannot
be removed by anyone
other than the third respondent as the ‘holder
of private rights’ and, in any event, not without her consent.
In effect,
so the argument goes, the relief sought by the applicant
seeks to take away the third respondent’s rights as a rights
holder
in respect of the grave. The applicant should, as a first port
of call, have approached the third respondent, who is the registered
rights holder. The applicant has not done so, and therefore, so the
argument on behalf of the City is concluded, is not entitled
to the
relief claimed in this application.
[9].
There are two difficulties with the
approach adopted by the City.
[10].
Firstly, the said approach is not
supported by the wording of the By-laws, which, properly interpreted,
give the City, as the custodian
of any and all cemeteries within its
jurisdiction, the discretion to permit and allow the erection of a
‘memorial work’
on a grave in a cemetery. This is so, if
regard is had to the wording of the relevant section, irrespective of
who the ‘holder
of private rights’ is in respect of the
grave in question. The relevant section 24 of the City By-Laws reads
as follows:
‘
Erection
of memorial work
24.
(1) A person intending to erect a memorial work must make
and complete an application on the prescribed application
form to the
officer-in-charge.
(2)
Such application must be made not less than five working days before
the date of erection.
(3)
Memorial work may only be erected during working hours, but may, with
the approval of the officer-in-charge,
be erected outside working
hours.
(4)
No person may –
(a)
erect memorial work, or bring material
into a cemetery for the purpose of erecting memorial work, without
the written consent of
the officer-in-charge;
(b)
remove memorial work for additional
inscriptions or other alterations without the consent of the
officer-in-charge; or
(c)
erect a memorial work on a Saturday,
Sunday or a public holiday, without the written consent of the
officer-in-charge.
(5)
The Council is not liable for damage to memorial work resulting from
any subsiding soil.
(6)
A person erecting memorial work must at the request of the
officer-in-charge produce the written consent.
(7)
Memorial work or material to be used in the erection of such work,
may not be conveyed in a cemetery
or crematorium in a manner that may
damage the roadways, pathways, lawns, grounds or other memorials.
(8)
Any surplus material or rubble, resulting from the erection of any
memorial work, must be removed by
the person responsible for such
erection, immediately after its completion.’
[11].
As already indicated, on a proper
interpretation of this provision, the City, through its
‘officer-in-charge’, retains
an absolute discretion to
grant permission to any person to erect a memorial on a grave. And in
that regard, the fact that the
applicant is not the ‘holder of
private rights’, although a relevant consideration, is not the
do all and the end all
of the matter. It therefore, in my view, does
not avail the City to rely on the provision that only a holder of
private rights
can remove an existing memorial, to refuse the
applicant permission to erect the new tombstone. The City should
therefore have
acceded to the applicant’s request.
[12].
The second reason why the approach of
the City is not sustainable, relates to the definition of a ‘holder
of private rights’
in the By-Laws as applied to the facts in
this matter. And those are: (1) the applicant paid the prescribed
fees in respect of
the grave – this is undisputed and
unchallenged; and (2) the applicant is the executrix in the estate of
the deceased. This,
in my view, means that the applicant is in fact a
‘holder of private rights’ in respect of her deceased
husband’s
grave, as defined in the By-laws, and that she was
fully within her rights to insist on her name being entered as such
in the Register
kept by the City for that purpose. The relevant part
of s 8 of Chapter 2 of the By-Laws read as follows: -
‘
Private
rights
8.
(1) The holder of private rights includes –
(a)
a person who purchased a grave
or who received a grave as a gift from the purchaser and whose name
appears in the register of the Council;
(b)
a person who paid the prescribed
burial fees in respect of the first burial in the grave
;
(c)
a person to whom private rights to a
grave have been transferred;
(d)
a person who inherited the private
rights.’ (My emphasis)
[13].
The wording of this section is clear.
The applicant, who paid the prescribed burial fees in respect of the
first burial in the grave
of her deceased husband, is a ‘holder
of rights’ and the City and its officer-in-charge should have
registered her
as such.
[14].
There is a further reason why the
applicant should have been granted permission to erect the memorial
and that is the fact that
the existing memorial on the grave is, as
indicated, no more than a very basic grave marker, which can be
removed without causing
any damage to the grave or to the cemetery.
No one would suffer any prejudice if the said plaque is removed,
least of all the third
respondent.
[15].
For all of these reasons, the applicant
should be granted the relief claimed in this application.
Costs
[16].
The general rule in matters of costs is
that the successful party should be given his costs, and this rule
should not be departed
from except where there are good grounds for
doing so. On first principles, the City should therefore pay the
applicant’s
costs of this application.
[17].
On the flipside though the
application
was launched in the urgent court, but not proceeded with as an urgent
application ostensibly because the applicant accepted
that her matter
is not urgent. The applicant is therefore liable for the costs
relating to the urgent application.
[18].
Moreover, the issues raised in this
application by the City can, in my view, be said to have been raised
reasonably. It is so that
the City, as a public body, is required to
act lawfully and in accordance with the provisions of their own
By-laws. I do not think
that they can be faulted for having opposed
this application on the basis of the doctrine of legality.
[19].
I am therefore of the view that it would
be fair to grant no order as to costs. Such an order will be granted.
Order
[20].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The applicant be and is hereby declared to
be the ‘Holder of Private Rights’, as defined in section
8(1)(b) of Chapter
2 of the City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and
Crematoria By-Laws, 2004, in and in respect of the grave of her
deceased husband,
Simon Mkhunjulwa Zwane, being grave number [....],
Westpark Cemetery in Johannesburg.
(2)
The first respondent, the second respondent
and the Officer-in-Charge of the Westpark Cemetery are hereby ordered
and directed to,
within ten days from date of this order, enter the
name of the applicant in the Register contemplated in section 8(1)(a)
of Chapter
2 of the City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and Crematoria
By-Laws, 2004, as being the ‘Holder of Private Rights’ in
and
in respect of the grave of her deceased husband, Simon Mkhunjulwa
Zwane, being grave number [....], Westpark Cemetery in
Johannesburg.
(3)
The applicant is hereby granted permission
to dismantle and remove from the grave of her late husband any and
all existing memorial
works on the said grave of her later husband,
Simon Mkhunjulwa Zwane, being grave number [....], Westpark
Cemetery in Johannesburg.
(4)
The applicant is hereby granted permission
to erect a new ‘memorial work’ in the form of a tombstone
or a headstone
(‘the tombstone’) on the grave of her
deceased husband, Simon Mkhunjulwa Zwane, being grave number [....],
Westpark
Cemetery in Johannesburg.
(5)
The first respondent, the second respondent
and the Officer-in-Charge of the Westpark Cemetery are hereby ordered
and directed to,
within ten days from date of this order, provide the
applicant with a written consent, in terms of section 27(1) of
Chapter 6 of
the City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and Crematoria
By-Laws, 2004, to dismantle and remove the existing grave marker from
the grave
of her late husband.
(6)
The first respondent, the second respondent
and the Officer-in-Charge of the Westpark Cemetery are hereby ordered
and directed to,
within ten days from date of this order, provide the
applicant with a written consent, in terms of section 24(4)(a) of
Chapter
6 of the City of Johannesburg Cemeteries and Crematoria
By-Laws, 2004, to erect the said tombstone.
(7)
Each party shall bear her / his / its own
costs of this opposed application.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
15
th
August 2022
JUDGMENT
DATE:
18
th
August 2022 – judgment handed
down
electronically
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
Advocate Zweli Zakwe
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Machaka Chewe Incorporated, Protea
North,
Soweto
FOR THE FIRST AND SECOND
RESPONDENTS:
Advocate Christopher Gibson
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Moodie & Robertson, Braamfontein,
Johannesburg
FOR
THE THIRD RESPONDENT:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY:
No appearance
[1]
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
2004
(6) SA 222
(SCA).
sino noindex
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