Great North Taxi Association (GRENTA) v Limpopo Provincial Transport Regulatory Entity and Others (55626/12) [2019] ZAGPPHC 219 (14 June 2019)

80 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Transport Law — Operating licences — Rights of taxi associations — Great North Taxi Association sought declarations regarding operating licences allowing members to load passengers on specific routes — Respondents contended applicant lacked standing and failed to exhaust internal remedies — Court held that the applicant had the right to represent its members and that the failure to exhaust internal remedies was valid, resulting in dismissal of the application.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was a motion application in the Gauteng Division, Pretoria, in which the applicant sought primarily declaratory and mandatory relief concerning the scope and enforceability of minibus taxi operating licences on the route between Mokopane and Hammanskraal/Pretoria. The dispute arose within the context of inter-association conflict in the taxi industry and the regulatory oversight exercised by provincial transport authorities.


The applicant was Great North Taxi Association (GRENTA), a taxi association whose members operated between Hammanskraal/Pretoria and Mokopane. The principal respondents were the Limpopo Provincial Transport Regulatory Entity (as the provincial regulatory body), the MEC for Roads and Transport: Limpopo Province, and Great North Long Distance Taxi Association (GNLDTA) (another taxi association whose members were alleged to be operating on the same or overlapping routes). The Gauteng Provincial Regulatory Entity, the MEC for Roads and Transport: Gauteng Province, and the Registrar of Roads and Transport: Limpopo Province were later joined.


Procedurally, the matter began with relief sought against the first to third respondents. After a point in limine on non-joinder was raised, the applicant brought an interlocutory joinder application, which was granted on 03 November 2015, together with leave to supplement its papers. Following joinder, the additional respondents did not file notices to oppose. At the hearing, the applicant abandoned prayers relating to the production of documents and supplementation of affidavits (prayers 1.5 to 1.8 of the amended notice of motion).


The general subject-matter was whether the applicant’s members, holding operating licences for the route, were entitled to load passengers in Mokopane for Hammanskraal and Pretoria, and whether an earlier instruction by the Limpopo Registrar directing the applicant’s members to cease loading on the return leg was lawful and enforceable.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicant and the third respondent were registered taxi associations, and that their members operated services between Hammanskraal/Pretoria and Mokopane. The first and fourth respondents were the relevant provincial regulatory entities responsible, among other functions, for public transport oversight and operating-licence administration within their provinces. The second respondent was the Limpopo MEC responsible for roads and transport.


The immediate trigger for litigation was an instruction by the then Limpopo Registrar of Transport that, after offloading passengers in Hammanskraal or Pretoria, the applicant’s members should stop loading passengers from Mokopane to Hammanskraal/Pretoria. The applicant’s case was that this instruction effectively prevented its members from operating the return leg, despite the terms of their operating licences.


The court treated as materially established that the applicant’s members held operating licences authorising them to operate on the route Pretoria/Hammanskraal to Mokopane and back, and that this authorisation had not been withdrawn. The respondents did not dispute the validity of the applicant members’ operating licences as such.


The applicant alleged a troubled history between the associations, including violence and prior court orders restraining interference. The applicant further alleged that its members had operated the disputed route since 1985 and that the third respondent’s members only began operating the disputed route after changes to their authorisations around 2006. These background allegations were not treated by the court as the decisive basis for the outcome, although the court noted that the background described in the founding affidavit was not seriously disputed.


Two meetings featured in the chronology. First, at a meeting on 23 June 2006 convened by the sixth respondent, it was allegedly resolved that the third respondent’s members had no authorisation to operate from Mokopane to Hammanskraal and that the applicant’s operations should be restored; notwithstanding this, the third respondent’s members allegedly continued operating. Second, the papers referred to a further meeting on 5 May 2011 chaired by the sixth respondent where an agreement was allegedly reached that, in light of operating licences issued to members of the third respondent in 2010 for Mokopane to Pretoria, the associations would “work together” and the applicant’s members would operate Mokopane to Hammanskraal and not Pretoria. The court’s ultimate reasoning did not treat this as displacing the applicant’s members’ entitlements flowing from their licences.


A central factual contention advanced by the first and second respondents was that, despite the licences, the applicant’s members did not have an “automatic” right to load passengers at Mokopane, and could do so only if members of the third respondent did not wish to load. The court did not accept that this contention could negate the entitlement conferred by the operating licences.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine, first, a set of preliminary (procedural and jurisdictional) issues raised in the answering affidavits. These included whether the applicant disclosed a cause of action given the initial attachment of only one operating licence, whether there was non-joinder of affected parties, whether the applicant had locus standi to litigate on behalf of its members, and whether the applicant had failed to exhaust internal remedies before approaching court.


Secondly, on the merits, the dispute concerned the application of law to largely common cause facts, namely the legal effect of valid operating licences and whether the regulatory respondents could lawfully prevent the applicant’s members from loading passengers on the return leg at Mokopane.


To the extent that the applicant attacked the registrar’s instruction as ultra vires and unlawful, the matter also implicated administrative-law questions, but the court treated the exhaustion of internal remedies and lapse of time as decisive against the applicant on that aspect.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the preliminary issues, the court rejected the contention that no cause of action was disclosed due to the initial absence of members’ licences. The court relied on the fact that, pursuant to the interlocutory order of 03 November 2015, the applicant had been granted leave to supplement and had attached operating licences for 22 members.


The point on non-joinder involving the Limpopo Taxi Council was treated as moot because the Taxi Council no longer existed under the prevailing legislative framework, and the non-joinder objection was in any event noted as having been abandoned.


On locus standi, the court held that the applicant was entitled to represent its members. It emphasised that the founding affidavit alleged authorisation by a resolution of the applicant’s executive and that the outcome affected the members who operated on the disputed routes. The court further regarded the applicant’s representative role as “settled” by authority, citing the approach in Polokwane Local & Long Distance Taxi Association v Limpopo Permission Board and Other, which criticised a narrow standing enquiry where an association litigates in relation to decisions affecting its members, and highlighting that membership may be a prerequisite for permissions and licences under the applicable statutory scheme. The court also referred to Bongani Nkala and 15 Ors v Harmony Gold Mining Company and Others for the broader constitutional context recognising expanded standing, including class or group-based litigation, and considered there to be no reason in principle to exclude collective litigation in non-Bill of Rights contexts.


On the exhaustion of internal remedies, the court upheld the respondents’ preliminary point. It relied on section 92 (quoted in the judgment) providing for appeals to the Transport Appeal Tribunal by an aggrieved applicant, a licence holder affected by a decision, or any other person interested in or affected by the decision. The court found that the applicant’s members should have approached the Appeal Tribunal within the prescribed period regarding the registrar’s direction. The court held that even if the direction was ultra vires and unlawful, the failure to pursue the internal appeal meant the applicant could not, at this late stage, complain of it. The court also stated that the review challenge to the instruction had to fail because the applicant and/or its members had failed to seek reasons from the registrar for the direction stopping them from operating from Mokopane to Pretoria/Hammanskraal. The lapse of time and failure to proceed within the prescripts of internal remedies (and, as mentioned, an application under PAJA) were treated as fatal to that portion of the relief.


On the main operational dispute, the court accepted as determinative that the applicant’s members held operating licences authorising transport as per their terms between Pretoria/Hammanskraal and Mokopane, including return operation. It noted that this authorisation had not been withdrawn and that the applicant had shown sufficient cause to be allowed to operate in terms of the permission granted.


The court rejected the respondents’ position that the applicant’s members lacked an “automatic” right to load at Mokopane unless members of the third respondent permitted it. It reasoned that the existence of similar operating licences granted to members of the third respondent did not alter the applicant’s legal entitlement flowing from its members’ licences. Any practical consequences of “dual permission” on the route were viewed as a matter falling within the regulatory purview of the first and second respondents, rather than a basis to deny the applicant’s members their licensed operations.


In relation to costs, the court exercised its discretion in favour of the applicant, reasoning that the applicant had succeeded in the main dispute.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted substantive operational relief but did not grant all the declaratory relief initially sought. It issued an order directing the second respondent (the Limpopo MEC) to ensure that the applicant’s members operate in accordance with their operating licences from Mokopane to Hammanskraal and from Mokopane to Pretoria.


The court ordered that the respondents were liable for the costs of the application jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.


Cases Cited


Polokwane Local & Long Distance Taxi Association v Limpopo Permission Board and Other (490/2016) [2017] ZASCA 44 (30 March 2017).


Bongani Nkala and 15 Ors v Harmony Gold Mining Company and Others, Consolidated case number: 48226/12.


Legislation Cited


National Land Transport Act 5 of 2009, including section 24(1)(a) read with section 51, and section 92 (as quoted in the judgment).


Northern Province Interim Passenger Transport Act 4 of 1999.


National Land Transport Transitional Act 22 of 2000.


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000.


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, including section 2 and section 38(c).


Interim Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1993, including section 7(4)(b)(iv) (as discussed in the cited authority).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the applicant association had standing to litigate on behalf of its members in relation to regulatory decisions and operational entitlements affecting them, and that preliminary objections based on lack of cause of action and non-joinder (in the form presented) could not succeed on the papers.


The court further held that the applicant’s challenge to the registrar’s instruction could not succeed because the applicant and/or its members failed to pursue the available internal appeal remedy to the Transport Appeal Tribunal within the prescribed time, and the lapse of time and failure to follow the required processes were fatal to that aspect of the relief.


On the central operational question, the court held that the applicant’s members were entitled to operate in accordance with their valid operating licences on the disputed routes, and that the existence of operating licences held by members of another association did not legally diminish that entitlement. The court therefore directed the Limpopo MEC to ensure that the applicant’s members operate in accordance with their operating licences from Mokopane to Hammanskraal and from Mokopane to Pretoria, and granted costs in favour of the applicant.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A taxi association may have locus standi to litigate in its own name in matters affecting its members’ operating rights where the association is authorised to act and the outcome materially affects those members, particularly in a regulatory environment where licensing is connected to association membership and regulatory decisions impact collective operations.


Where legislation provides for internal remedies—including a statutory appeal to a specialist tribunal against an act, direction, or decision affecting operating licences—an aggrieved party is generally required to exhaust those remedies within the prescribed period before seeking judicial relief, and failure to do so may bar later attempts to challenge the decision, even where unlawfulness is alleged.


Valid operating licences confer legal entitlement to operate in accordance with their terms, and the grant of similar or overlapping operating licences to other operators does not, without withdrawal or lawful limitation, negate an existing licence-holder’s entitlement. Practical conflicts arising from dual permissions are matters for regulatory management rather than grounds to deny licensed operation.

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[2019] ZAGPPHC 219
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Great North Taxi Association (GRENTA) v Limpopo Provincial Transport Regulatory Entity and Others (55626/12) [2019] ZAGPPHC 219 (14 June 2019)

REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
Case No.: 55626/12
14/6/2019
In
the matter between:
GREAT
NORTH TAXI ASSOCIATION (GRENTA)
Applicant
and
THE LIMPOPO PROVINCIAL TRANSPORT
REGULATORY
ENTITY
1
st
Respondent
MEC
FOR ROADS AND TRANSPORT: LIMPOPO
PROVINCE
2
nd
Respondent
GREAT
NORTH LONG DISTANCE TAXI
ASSOCIATION
(GNLDTA)
3
rd
Respondent
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL REGULATORY ENTITY
4
th
Respondent
MECFORROADSANDTRANSPORT:
GAUTENG
PROVINCE
5
th
Respondent
REGISTRAR
OF ROADS AND TRANSPORT: LIMPOPO
PROVINCE
5
th
Respondent
JUDGEMENT
MNGQIBISA-THUSI,
J
[1]
In its amended notice of motion, the
applicant seeks the following relief:
1.1
an order declaring that the operating
licence (s) issued to a member (s) of the applicant grants a personal
right to such a member
limited only by the authority granted in such
licence.
1.2
an order declaring that the members of
the applicant have a right to load commuters in Mokopane to
Hammanskraal and Pretoria in
terms of the operating licences.
1.3
an order declaring the instruction of
Percy Ndala, the former Registrar of Transport in the Limpopo
Province, ordering the applicant's
members not to load in Mokopane to
Hammanskraal and Pretoria to be
ultra
vires
the Northern Province Interim
Passenger Transport Act, Act 4 of 1999 and hence unlawful.
1.4
an order directing the second respondent
to ensure that the applicant's members may operate in accordance with
the operating licences
from Mokopane to Hammanskraal and Pretoria,
Bosman Dairy Mall Taxi Rank (Pretoria).
1.5
an order directing the first and third
respondents to make available to the applicant's attorneys within
seven (7) days, legible
copies of all the operating licences held by
members of the third respondent authorising them to operate a minibus
taxi type service
from Mokopane to Hammanskraal and Pretoria.
1.6
an order directing the first respondent
to make available to the applicant's attorneys, all documentation on
the record in relation
to any operating licences issued to members of
the third respondent in respect of the route Mokopane to Hammanskraal
and Mokopane
to Pretoria.
1.7
an order directing the first and second
respondents to make available to the applicant's attorneys within
seven (7) days the documentation
requested and received from the
former registrar of transport, holding in respect of the operating
licences granted to members
of the third respondent.
1.8
an order permitting the applicant to
supplement its founding affidavit after such documents have been
received.
1.9
costs of this application.
[2]
At the hearing of this matter, the applicant abandoned prayers 1.5 to
1.8 (above).
[3]
The applicant and the third respondent
are taxi associations duly registered with the Gauteng and Limpopo
provincial departments,
respectively, with members operating between
Hammanskraal/Pretoria to Mokopane. The first and fourth respondents
are provincial
regulatory bodies in Limpopo and Gauteng,
respectively, whose functions include, inter alia, monitoring and
overseeing public transport:
and receiving and deciding on
applications relating to operating licences for intra-provincial
transport where no municipality
to which the function has been
assigned
[1]
.
They are empowered to regulate the
taxi
industry within their respective
provinces. The second respondent is a member of the executive
committee in the Limpopo Province
responsible for roads and transport
within provinces.
[4]
Initially, the applicant had cited the
first to third respondents for the relief sought. As a result of a
point
in limine
raised
by the first and third respondents with regard to the non-joinder of
the fourth to sixth respondents. including the Limpopo
Taxi Council,
the applicant brought an interlocutory application for the joinder of
the fourth to sixth respondents, which application
was granted on 03
November 2015. The applicant was also granted leave to supplement its
founding papers.
[5]
After being joined in the proceedings,
the fourth to sixth respondents did not file notices to oppose.
[6]
The genesis of the dispute is an
instruction issued by the then registrar of transport, Limpopo
Province
[2]
,
that the applicant's members should stop loading passengers from
Mokopane to Hammanskraal/Pretoria once they have offloaded passengers

they picked up in Hammanskraal or Pretoria.
[7]
In effect, the remaining prayers relate
to the first to the fourth respondents and are mainly concerned with
the applicant's members
being allowed to operate their taxis between
Hammanskraal and Pretoria to Mokopane and return.
[8]
Besides the issue of non-joinder raised
by the 1
st
and 3
rd
respondents, the respondents have also raised in the answering
affidavits the following preliminary points:
6.1
that the applicant has not disclosed any
cause of action in that in its founding affidavit it only attached
the operating license
of its chairman and not those of its other
members which the applicant professes to also represents in these
proceedings;
6.2
that the relief sought by the applicant
is not competent in that the applicant failed to also join the Taxi
Council of Limpopo which
will be affected by the outcome of these
proceedings; and
6.3
that the applicant does not have legal
standing to bring this application on behalf of its members.
6.4
that with regard to the decision made by
the sixth respondent. the applicant has not exhausted the internal
remedies.
[9]
the
first preliminary point (6.1 above) raised has no merit in that in
terms of the interlocutory order granted on 03 November 2019,
besides
being granted leave to join the fourth to the sixth respondents, the
applicant was also granted leave to supplement its
founding papers
which it did by also attaching to its amended notice of motion are
operating licenses issued to 22 members of the
applicants.
[10]     The
second preliminary point (6.2 above) raised is moot in that the Taxi
Council no longer exist in
terms of the prevailing Act.
[11]
The
third preliminary point raised by the first respondent has no merit
in that, it is not in dispute that the applicant is representing
its
members who are operating in the disputed routes. The right of the
applicant to represent its members is now settled. In Polokwane
Local
& Long Distance Taxi Association v Limpopo Permission Board and
Other
[3]
it was stated that:
"The full court's finding
that the appellant lacked
locus standi
on the basis that the
granting of a licence to an individual was not dependent on his
membership of the appellant, and that the
right to a particular route
arose from the allocation of that licence, is wrong on two fronts.
First, in terms of s 39(11) of the
Act '[n]o permission may be
granted unless the applicant is a member of an association that has
been registered by the Registrar
under s 29 and the application is
supported in writing by the association, or the Registrar certifies
in writing that the applicant
qualifies as a registered non-members
under that section and has applied for registration as such'. To this
extent the issuing
of a taxi licence is dependent on membership of an
association. Secondly, the appellant in its application for judicial
review,
relies upon the fact that this is a decision that affects its
members. The focus of the enquiry by the full court should therefore

have been the standing of the appellant and should not have been on
ancillary issues."
[12]     In
Bongani Nkala and
15
Ors
v
Harmony Gold Mining Company and Others
[4]
the court stated
that:
"The Interim Constitution
introduced numerous innovations into our law. One such innovation was
s 7(4)(b)(iv), which, in particular,
expanded the standing of a
person allowed to approach court. It provided for
"a
person acting as a member of or in the interest of
a
group or class of
persons"
to
approach court for appropriate relief, even if the person had no real
or direct interest in the relief.
[5]
The provision was replicated verbatim in section 38(c) of the
Constitution. It allows any person (natural or juristic) to approach

a court alleging that a right in the Bill of Rights (Chapter 2 of the
Constitution) has been infringed or threatened. Such person
may
approach the court
"as
a member of, or in the interest of,
a
group or class of
persons".
The
Constitution, therefore, makes special provision for class actions to
be brought in cases where there are allegations of a violation
of the
Bill of Rights: a class action in such a case is now part of
'·the
supreme law of the Republic".
[6]
Against this
background, there is no reason, logical or practical, to deprive
anyone from bringing a class action in a non-Bill
of Rights case. The
challenge posed by the Roman-Dutch Law unfamiliarity with the class
actions was referred to the South African
Law Commission ("SALC")
that met it by establishing Project 88 on which it reported in 1998".
[13]
In
the founding affidavit the deponent thereto avers that he is duly
authorised and mandated by the applicant after a resolution
of the
applicant's executive to institute these proceedings on behalf of its
members was taken. Bearing in mind that the individual
members of the
applicant were granted operating licences by virtue of being members
of the applicant, the outcome of this application
does affect the
members of the applicant and therefore the applicant does have a
direct and substantial interest in the relief
sought.
[14]
The preliminary point relating to the
non-joinder of the Taxi Council of Limpopo has also been abandoned.
[15]
With regard to the issue of the failure
by the applicant to exhaust the internal remedies, the first
respondent contends that if
the applicant was not happy with the
direction of the sixth respondent that the applicant's members should
cease picking up passengers
from Mokopane to Hammanskraal/Pretoria,
it should have taken its complaint to the Transport Appeal Tribunal
before launching these
proceedings.
[16]
Section 92 of the Act provides that:
"(1)
The following persons may appeal to the transport appeal Tribunal
against
an act, direction or decision of an entity that is granted or
refused an application relating to an operating license, in the
manner
and within the time prescribed:
(a)
the aggrieved applicant;
(b)
the holder of any operating license or
permit affected by the decision; or
(c)
any other person interested in or
affected by the decision.
[17]
The point raised by the first respondent
in relating to the exhaustion of internal remedies is valid. The
applicant's members should
have approached the Appeals Tribunal and
within the prescribed period for the decision of the then Registrar
to be dealt with.
Even if the Registrar's direction was ultra vires
and therefore unlawful, by failing to do so, the applicant cannot now
complain
as it failed to take action against the direction given by
the then Registrar. The issue of a review of the Registrar's
instruction
also has to fail as the applicant and/or its members had
failed to seek reasons from the then Registrar about his direction
stopping
them from operating from Mokopane to Pretoria/Hammanskraal.
[18]
The applicant's main complaint is that
the members of the third respondent are encroaching on the route
designated primarily for
the applicant and that despite the fact that
the applicant's members have operating licences to operate on the
Pretoria/Hammanskraal
to Mokopane route, they are prevented from
loading passengers from Mokopane to Pretoria/Hammanskraal unless
given permission to
do so by members of the third respondent.
[19]
A background of the events leading to
the institution of these proceedings is set out in the applicant's
founding affidavit, whose
contents are no seriously disputed by the
first and third respondents in their answering affidavits.
[20]
The applicant alleges the following. The
relationship between the applicant's members and those of the third
respondent has a troubled
history with in some instance violence
being used and court orders obtained in order to restrain one group
from interfering with
the other
[7]
.
The applicant's members started operating the disputed route from
1985. The applicant alleges that the members of the third respondent

only started operating the disputed route in 2006 after the then
Limpopo Operating Licencing Board had converted their licences
to
enable them to operate on the Mokopane to Pretoria route even though
they had previously operated the Mokopane to Johannesburg
route only.
To confirm that the members of the applicant's members authorisation
to operate the Pretoria/Hammanskraal to Mokopane
and back route, the
applicant has attached the operating licences of its members which
clearly indicate that the members are authorised
to operate on the
disputed route.
[21]
On 23 June 2006, the sixth respondent
called a meeting at which the applicant and the third respondent's
representatives were present.
At that meeting it was resolved that
the members of the third respondent had no authorisation to operate
from Mokopane to Hammanskraal
and that the applicant's operation on
that route should be restored. In spite of the resolution, the
members of the third respondent
continued to operate on that route.
[22]
In its answering affidavits, both the
first and third respondents do not dispute the validity of the
applicant's members' operating
licences. Instead the first
respondent, in the face of the applicant's members' operating
licences, alleges that those licences
do not allow the applicant's
members from loading passengers from Mokopane to Pretoria/
Hammanskraal. The first respondent alleges
that the applicant's
members' can load passengers at Mokopane only if there are no members
of the third respondent who wish to
do so. Further, the first and
third respondents allege that the third respondent did, before the
conversion of taxi permits to
operating licences in terms of the now
repealed National Land Transport Transitional Act
[8]
,
the third respondent has not attached to its papers proof that it had
been granted permission to operate on the disputed route.
However, it
appears that on 5 May 2011, a meeting chaired by the sixth respondent
where agreement was reached that in view of the
fact that in 2010 the
members of the third respondent were granted operating licences
authorising them to operate on the Mokopane
to Pretoria route, the
members of the two association would work together and that the
members of the applicant would operate the
Mokopane to Hammanskraal
and not Pretoria.
[23]
It is not in dispute that the members of
the applicant have been granted operating licences from
Pretoria/Hammanskraal to Mokopane
and back. This authorisation has
not been withdrawn. I am satisfied that the applicant has shown
sufficient cause for it to be
allowed to operate in terms of the
permission it has been granted.
[24]
As indicated in paragraph 15 (above),
the applicants have failed to exhaust the available internal remedies
in relation to the instruction
of the sixth respondent and due to the
lapse of time since the instruction was given and the prescribed
period within which it
ought to have appealed to the Transport appeal
tribunal or brought an application in terms of the provisions of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, the prayer in this regard
ought to fail.
[25]     In
its answering affidavit, the second respondent opposes any prayer
sought against him, in particular
prayer 1.7 (above) and alleges that
it is responsible for the supervision of the first respondent.
Further, the second respondent
relies on the contents of the first
respondent's answering affidavit. The second respondent makes common
cause with the first respondent's
contention that, firstly, the
applicant, despite the authorisation granted to its members in their
operating licences, that the
members of the applicant do not have an
automatic right to load passengers at Mokopane unless permitted to do
so by the members
of the third respondent. Secondly that the third
respondent has always had permission to operate the Pretoria to
Mokopane and back
route.
[26]
As indicated in paragraph 21 (above),
despite the respondents 'contentions, the applicant's members are
authorised to transport
passengers as per the operating licences. The
fact that a similar operating licences have been granted to members
of the third
respondents does not change the applicant's legal
entitlement to operate on the disputed route. In as far as the
consequences resulting
from such dual permission, that falls within
the purview of the first and second respondents to deal with.
[27]
With regard to costs I am of the view
that as the applicant is successful with regard to the main dispute,
it is entitled to its
costs.
[28]
In the result the following order is
made:
1.
The
2
nd
respondent it is directed to ensure that the applicant's members
operate in accordance with their operating licenses from Mokopane
to
Hammanskraal and Mokopane to Pretoria.
2.
The respondents are liable for the costs
of this application, jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved.
NP
MNGQIBISA-THUSI
Judge
of the high Court
Appearances
For
Applicant: Adv HJ Potgieter (instructed by HJ Groenewald Attorneys).
For
1
st
& 2
nd
Respondent: Adv MS
Phaswane (instructed by State Attorney).
For
3
rd
Respondent: Adv M Malowa (instructed by
Mashamaite MR Inc).
[1]
In terms of s 24(1)(a) read with s 51 of the National Land Transport
Act 5 of 2009 (the Act).
[2]
Registered in terms of the Limpopo interim passenger transport act 4
of 1999
[3]
(490/2016) ZASCA 44 (30 March 2017) at[para 21J.
[4]
Consolidated case number: 48226/12.
[5]
Section 7(4) of the Interim Constitution read: '(a) When an
infringement of or threat to any right entrenched in this chapter

(Bill of Rights Chapter) is alleged, any person referred to in para
(b) shall be entitled to apply to a competent court of law
for
appropriate relief, which may include a declaration of rights. (b)
The relief referred to in para (a) may be sought by -
(i) a person
acting in his or her own interest; (ii) an association acting in the
interest of its members; (iii) a person acting
on behalf of another
person who is not in a position to seek such relief in his or her
own name; (iv) a person acting as a member
of or in the interest of
a group or class of persons; or (v) a person acting in the public
interest.'
[6]
Section 2 of the Constitution.
[7]
For instance, on 4 October 2007 Judge Rabie (under case number
43816/2007) granted an order in favour of the applicant in terms
of
which the third respondent was ordered, inter alia, to take all
reasonable steps to ensure that its members do not assault,

intimidate of interfere with the members of the applicant.
[8]
Act 22 of 2000.