Deeps Betting Grounds (Pty) Ltd v Northern Cape Gambling Board (3018/2017) [2018] ZANCHC 18 (9 March 2018)

80 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Gambling — Licensing — Application for bookmaker's licence — Deeps Betting Grounds (Pty) Ltd sought a declaratory order for the Northern Cape Gambling Board to grant a final licence for bookmaker activities at Erf 7195, Upington — Gambling Board opposed on grounds of urgency and non-compliance with regulations — Court held that Deeps Betting failed to establish urgency and did not demonstrate irreparable financial loss, thus dismissing the application.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were brought by way of motion proceedings in the High Court of South Africa, Northern Cape Division, Kimberley. The applicant, Deeps Betting Grounds (Pty) Ltd (“Deeps Betting”), sought declaratory and mandatory relief against the respondent, the Northern Cape Gambling Board (“the Gambling Board”), aimed at securing authority to conduct bookmaker activities from particular premises in Upington.


The application (issued on 15 December 2017) was enrolled and argued on 9 February 2018 on a semi-urgent basis, although it was not first dealt with as an urgent matter in the motion court. The Gambling Board opposed the application, disputing both urgency and the applicant’s entitlement to the relief on the merits.


The dispute concerned whether Deeps Betting could, by way of a declaratory order, obtain the granting of a (final) bookmaker licence to operate at Erf 7195, 23 Scott Street, Upington, in circumstances where a prior court order had been granted in relation to Erf 3465, Upington, and where the Gambling Board had taken an administrative decision that Erf 7195 did not comply with the relevant regulations.


The application followed a sequence of earlier related applications between the same parties. Those prior matters had involved orders compelling inspections and processing of applications for bookmaker premises, as well as an ultimately unsuccessful contempt application. The present application was the first in which Deeps Betting expressly sought relief tied to Erf 7195 as the identified Upington premises.


2. Material Facts


Deeps Betting sought an order declaring that the Gambling Board may grant a final licence for bookmaker activities at Erf 7195 and compelling the Gambling Board to take all necessary steps, including granting the licence, to permit Deeps Betting to operate from those premises.


There were three prior applications relevant to procedural context. In the first application (case number 340/2017), an order was granted on 31 March 2017 directing the Gambling Board to inspect premises described as Erf 3465 Upington and thereafter to process the applicant’s application and communicate the outcome. In the second application (case number 1365/2017), an order was granted on 1 September 2017 directing the Gambling Board to take necessary steps to grant permission to conduct bookmaker activities at the Upington location again described as Erf 3465 Upington, within a stipulated period. In the third application (case number 2741/2017), Deeps Betting sought committal for contempt; that application was dismissed with costs on 2 December 2017, principally because the Gambling Board had been dissolved in March 2017, rendering compliance with the earlier order incapable of fulfilment (a position accepted by Deeps Betting).


Although the Upington premises in the earlier applications was consistently described as Erf 3465, the court recorded that the annexures in those earlier applications pertained to Erf 7195. The court further recorded that it was only in the present application that Deeps Betting stated that Erf 3465 had become unavailable after the order of 1 September 2017, and that the landlord had cancelled the lease. A letter dated 9 August 2017 was relied upon to indicate that “Erf 3465” was no longer available due to delay in authorising activities and that “the new premises” was Erf 7195, 23 Scott Street, Upington.


On urgency, it was not disputed that the Gambling Board informed Deeps Betting on 13 November 2017 that Erf 7195 had been inspected and that it did not comply with Regulation 7(c) of the Northern Cape Gambling Regulations, because it was situated within 362 metres of Upington High School.


The court considered the documentation relating to leases. It recorded that, on perusal of the prior court files, a lease agreement appeared to have been concluded only for Erf 7195 (an unsigned copy), commencing 1 November 2016, and that no lease agreement for Erf 3465 was attached to any of the prior applications. The court drew the inference (for purposes of assessing urgency and context) that Erf 7195 was therefore not newly procured after the order of 1 September 2017.


After argument on 9 February 2018, Deeps Betting applied to adduce further evidence by supplementary affidavit, principally seeking to introduce a letter from the Gambling Board dated 13 February 2018 stating that annual renewal applications for Deeps Betting’s bookmaker licences for several towns, including Upington, had been approved. The Gambling Board contended that the letter related to annual renewals of existing licences rather than approval of a specific site such as Erf 7195.


The Gambling Board also advanced (as part of the factual and legal matrix argued) that a temporary licence had been granted on 20 September 2013, subject to a condition that operations commence within six months failing which the licence would be revoked, and it argued that the temporary licence had lapsed due to non-compliance. Deeps Betting disputed the fairness of reliance on that alleged lapse, contending it could not operate without premises approval and in the absence of a functioning Board. The court ultimately did not decide the matter on the interpretation of Regulation 7(c) or on the alleged lapse point, focusing instead on the status of the administrative decision and the procedural route chosen by the applicant.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the matter warranted urgency under the Uniform Rules and, more substantively, whether Deeps Betting had made out a case for a declaratory order compelling the Gambling Board to authorise bookmaker activities at Erf 7195 in circumstances where an administrative decision had already been made that the premises was non-compliant, and where the earlier court order relied upon by Deeps Betting related (on its face) to different premises described as Erf 3465.


The dispute required the court to address a combination of procedural questions (urgency; admissibility of additional evidence), and questions concerning the application of legal principles to established facts, particularly the principle that administrative decisions are presumed valid until set aside by a competent court, and the limited ability of courts to vary or extend the reach of prior final orders.


Although the parties raised arguments concerning the meaning and application of Regulation 7(c), the court ultimately treated the decisive issues as turning on the legal effect of an extant administrative decision (non-compliance finding dated 13 November 2017) and the applicant’s choice to proceed by declaratory relief rather than review.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On urgency, the court considered the applicant’s reliance on commercial prejudice and alleged financial harm as the basis for invoking Rule 6(12). The court referred to authority emphasising that potential loss of profit, even if irrecoverable, generally does not justify disrupting the ordinary roll. It noted that applications sounding in money are common and ordinarily do not receive preferential treatment over other litigants.


The court found further that the applicant had not produced proof substantiating its allegations of irreparable financial loss. Those allegations were challenged in the answering affidavit and were not meaningfully addressed in reply. The court also placed weight on the undisputed fact that Deeps Betting had been informed on 13 November 2017 of the non-compliance finding regarding Erf 7195, and it considered the contention that urgency was self-created. Although it indicated that it would ordinarily have struck the matter from the roll for lack of urgency, it elected, in the particular circumstances, to dispose of the merits in the interests of justice.


Turning to the merits, the court addressed the nature of the relief sought. Deeps Betting itself characterised the matter as one that could support review and substitution in terms of Rule 53, but explained it had been advised to seek a declaratory order due to urgency. Counsel confirmed that the matter was not brought as a review.


Deeps Betting relied on Earthlife Africa v Eskom Holdings Ltd for the proposition that a declaratory order could be granted where the issues in review are not multi-faceted and can be disposed of by declaratory relief. The court rejected the applicability of that authority to the present case, distinguishing it on the basis that Earthlife involved a review context and the question of exhaustion of internal remedies, whereas the present matter involved an attempt to obtain relief effectively overriding an administrative decision without following the review pathway.


A key premise of the court’s reasoning was the principle articulated in Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others, namely that official decisions are presumed valid until set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction, save possibly where a decision is clearly invalid on its face. The court treated the Gambling Board’s decision communicated on 13 November 2017—that Erf 7195 did not comply with Regulation 7(c)—as an administrative decision that “still stands” and must be treated as valid unless and until impugned.


The court understood Deeps Betting’s case to be that the order granted by Pakati J on 1 September 2017 in respect of Erf 3465 should, in effect, be enforced or extended to Erf 7195, and that the Gambling Board’s opposition amounted to re-litigating a matter already decided. The court did not accept that framing, noting that the administrative decision regarding Erf 7195 post-dated Pakati J’s order and related to a different premises, and emphasising that the decision was presumed valid.


The court also referenced authority concerning the finality of court orders and the limited power of courts to vary their orders after they have been made, citing African National Congress v United Democratic Movement and others (Krog intervening), which in turn referred to Minister of Justice v Ntuli on the importance of finality in litigation. This context supported the court’s approach that the present proceedings could not be used to reconfigure the effect of earlier orders in a manner that bypassed the ordinary mechanisms for challenging administrative action.


On the supplementary evidence application, the court granted leave to adduce further evidence and admitted the additional affidavits and the Gambling Board’s letter of 13 February 2018. However, it was not persuaded that the letter advanced Deeps Betting’s case. The court accepted the Gambling Board’s contention that the letter related to annual renewal of temporary licences, and held it could not be treated as approval of Erf 7195 or as authorisation to conduct gambling activities on that site.


Having concluded that the administrative decision of 13 November 2017 remained operative and had not been set aside, the court held that Deeps Betting had not established a proper basis for the declaratory relief sought. In light of that conclusion, it found it unnecessary to deal with the parties’ arguments on the interpretation of Regulation 7(c).


On costs, the court applied the general principle that costs follow the result. It rejected the submission that the Gambling Board should have merely filed a notice to abide, and it also held that the lack of real urgency did not justify a punitive costs order.


5. Outcome and Relief


The application was dismissed.


The court ordered that Deeps Betting pay the Gambling Board’s costs on the ordinary party-and-party scale.


Although the matter proceeded despite the court’s view that urgency had not been established, the court disposed of the merits and did not grant any declaratory or mandatory relief compelling the licensing or approval of bookmaker activities at Erf 7195.


Cases Cited


Ledimo & others v Minister of Safety & Security & another [2007] JOL 21032 (O)


Earthlife Africa v Eskom Holdings Ltd 2005 (3) SA 156 (C)


Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2002 (6) SA 573 (C)


African National Congress v United Democratic Movement and others (Krog intervening) [2002] ZACC 24; 2003 (1) SA 533 (CC)


Minister of Justice v Ntuli [1997] ZACC 7; 1997 (3) SA 772 (CC)


Legislation Cited


Northern Cape Gambling Act 3 of 2008


Environment Conservation Act 73 of 1989


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(12)


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 53


Held


The court held that Deeps Betting had not established a basis for declaratory and mandatory relief compelling approval and licensing of bookmaker activities at Erf 7195. The Gambling Board’s administrative decision of 13 November 2017, finding the premises non-compliant with Regulation 7(c), remained operative and was presumed valid unless and until set aside by a competent court through appropriate proceedings. A declaratory order could not be used, in the circumstances presented, to bypass the need to properly impugn that decision.


The court admitted further evidence tendered after argument, including a letter reflecting annual licence renewals, but held that it did not amount to approval of Erf 7195 for bookmaker activities. The application was dismissed with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that administrative decisions are presumed valid and continue to have legal effect until set aside by a court of competent jurisdiction, as articulated in Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others 2002 (6) SA 573 (C). On the facts, this meant that the Gambling Board’s non-compliance determination in respect of Erf 7195 could not be ignored or overridden merely through declaratory relief.


The court reinforced the principle of finality in litigation and the limited power of courts to vary or revisit final orders once granted, with reference to African National Congress v United Democratic Movement and others (Krog intervening) [2002] ZACC 24; 2003 (1) SA 533 (CC) and Minister of Justice v Ntuli [1997] ZACC 7; 1997 (3) SA 772 (CC). While the applicant invoked earlier orders granted in relation to Erf 3465, the court’s approach underscored that such orders could not be treated as automatically determinative of a later dispute involving a distinct premises and a subsequent administrative decision.


On urgency, the court applied the principle that commercial prejudice and loss of profits typically do not justify urgent enrolment and preferential treatment on the roll, particularly where the prejudice sounds in money and is not substantiated by proof, as reflected in Ledimo & others v Minister of Safety & Security & another [2007] JOL 21032 (O). The court nonetheless exercised a discretionary case-management choice to determine the merits in the interests of justice, despite finding that urgency was not established.

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[2018] ZANCHC 18
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Deeps Betting Grounds (Pty) Ltd v Northern Cape Gambling Board (3018/2017) [2018] ZANCHC 18 (9 March 2018)

Reportable:

YES / NO
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to Magistrates:
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTHERN
CAPE DIVISION, KIMBERLEY)
Case
number:
3018/2017
Date
heard:
09/02/2018
Date
delivered:
09/03/2018
In
the matter between:-
DEEPS
BETTING GROUNDS (PTY) LTD

APPLICANT
AND
THE NORTHERN CAPE GAMBLING
BOARD

RESPONDENT
Coram
:
Stanton AJ
JUDGMENT
STANTON,
AJ
INTRODUCTION:-
[1]
This is an application in terms of which the applicant, Deeps Betting
Grounds (Pty) Ltd (“Deeps Betting”), seeks:-
1.1
a declaratory order that the
respondent, the Northern Cape Gambling Board (“the Gambling
Board”) may grant a final licence
to Deeps Betting to conduct
bookmaker activities, as contemplated in the Northern Cape Gambling
Act, 3 2008, at Erf 7195, known
as 23 Scott Street, Upington (“Erf
7195”); and
1.2
that the Gambling Board be
ordered to immediately take any and all necessary steps (including
the granting of the licence) so as
to grant permission to Deeps
Betting to conduct bookmakers’ gambling activities at Erf 7195.
[2]
The application was issued on 15 December 2017, on a semi-urgent
basis, and was set down for argument for 09 February 2018,
without
having been first dealt with as an urgent application on the motion
court roll.
[3] The Gambling Board opposed the
application on the following grounds, namely:-
3.1
Deeps Betting failed to make out a case why the application should be
heard as an urgent application,
alternatively, that any urgency, is
self-created;
3.2
Erf 7195 offends against Regulation 7(c) of the Northern Cape
Gambling Regulations (“the Regulations”)
as it is
situated within 362m of Upington High School; and
3.3
the licence in respect of Erf 3465 Upington
,
was granted without
following due process and the court order granted on 01 September
2017 did not ratify the irregularity in the
process.
PRECEDING
APPLICATIONS:-
[4]
Before I deal with the merits of this application, it is apposite to
refer to the three applications that preceded this application.
The
three preceding applications also included relief pertaining to three
additional premises, being in Galeshewe, Postmasburg
and Springbok.
These 3 additional premises are not relevant for purposes of this
application.
[5]
The first application, issued under case number 340/2017, was
initially opposed by the Gambling Board, but the opposition was

withdrawn prior to the filing of an answering affidavit. On 31 March
2017, Snyders AJ granted the following orders in the first

application, namely:-

1.
The respondent is ordered to, within five days after the granting of
this order, inspect the following
sites that applicant has identified
for licenced bookmaker activities contemplated in the Northern Cape
Gambling Act, 3 of 2008,
to wit:-
1.1
in Upington, the property known as Erf 3465 Upington, situated in the
//Khara Hais Municipality, Division
Gordonia, Northern Cape Province
and the portion of the building situated between Upington Volkswagen
Spares and Gatties Upington,
as depicted in the grey area on the plan
appended to the written lease agreement the Applicant had concluded
for these premises
and in accordance with Appendix 1 to the Founding
Affidavit;
2.
The respondent be ordered to, within seven days after the conducting
of the contemplated investigation
of these premises, finally process
the applicant’s application to conduct bookmaker actvities on
such premises, and to inform
the applicant of the outcome of such
investigations.”
[6]
The second application was issued during June 2017 under case number
1365/2017. The second application was opposed by the Gambling
Board,
but again the opposition was withdrawn without the Gambling Board
filing any answering affidavit. On 01 September 2017,
Pakati J issued
the following orders:-

1.
The Respondent is ordered to take any and all necessary steps so as
to grant permission to the
Applicant to conduct bookmakers’
gambling activities at the following locations, and so as to enable
the Applicant to start
its bookmaker’s activities sites
forthwith, to wit:
1.1
In Upington, the property known as Erf 3465 Upington, situated in the
//Khara Hais Municipality, Division
Gordonia, Northern Cape Province
and the portion of the building situated between Upington Volkswagen
Spares and Gattis Upington,
as depicted in the grey area on the plan
appended to the written lease agreement the Applicant had concluded
for use this premises;
2.
The Respondent be ordered to so authorise the conducting of such
bookmakers’ activities
at the sites mentioned in prayer 1
above, within five days after the granting of this order.”
[7]
During November 2017, Deeps Betting issued a third application, on an
urgent basis, under case number 2741/2017, in terms of
which it
requested an order committing the Gambling Board and the Chief
Executive Officer of the Gambling Board for contempt of
court. The
Gambling Board opposed the application and filed its answering
affidavit. The third application was dismissed, with
costs, by
Snyders AJ on 02 December 2017. Snyders AJ found, in essence, that
the order was incapable of fulfilment by the Gambling
Board or CEO as
the Gambling Board had been dissolved in March 2017, which position
Deeps Betting accepted.
[8]
In the three preceding applications, the Upington premises was
described as Erf 3465 Upington. No reference was made to Erf
7195 in
the affidavits. The annexures attached to the affidavits in the three
preceding applications, however, all pertain to Erf
7195.
[9]
It is for the first time in this application, that the Applicant
informs the court that Erf 3465 “
had
since become lost (post the granting of Pakati J’s order on 01
September 2017)

and that “
the
landlord of the previous property in Upington cancelled the lease.”
Deeps Betting attached a
letter, dated 9 August 2017, to its founding affidavit in which it is
recorded that “
The
site at Upington known as Erf 3465 in terms of the Court Order is no
longer available to our clients due to the delay of the
Board in
authorising the bookmaker activities. The new premises is situated at
Erf 7195, known as 23 Scott Street, Upington.”
THE ISSUES TO BE DETERMINED:-
[10]
The first issue to be determined is whether the matter is urgent and,
secondly, whether the the Gambling Board has made out
a case for a
declaratory order that the relief granted on 01 September 2017 in
respect of Erf 3465, should also be granted in respect
of Erf 7195.
URGENCY:-
[11] Mr
Grobler, on behalf of Deeps Betting, denied that the urgency was
self-created. He argued that Deeps Betting’s commercial

interests justify the application of Rule 6(12) as it cannot
institute an action for damages and, as such, had to proceed on a

semi-urgent basis to mitigate any financial harm.
[12] Mr
Modisa, on behalf of the Gambling Board, submitted that any urgency
that may exist, is self created as Deeps Betting has
since 10
November 2017 been aware of the fact that the Erf 7195 was found to
be non-compliant
with
Regulation 7(c).
[13] Mr
Modisa argued that Deeps Betting is not entitled to rely on financial
reasons to justify approaching the Court on an urgent
basis.
[14]
Rampai J, in Ledimo & others v Minister of Safety & Security
& another
[1]
,
summarised the
position with regard to whether the financial hardships of the
applicants constituted grounds of urgency sufficient
to justify the
extra-ordinary modification of the ordinary rules, as follows:-

Other
litigants waiting for their matters to be heard would be prejudiced
if priority were afforded to these applications as they
would have to
wait longer. And what distinguishes these two applications from other
matters? Applications for review such as these
occur commonly and are
not given priority. The prejudice that applicants are complaining
about is the possibility that they may
suffer losses of profits –
the losses, if any, sound in money. Assuming that such losses are
irrecoverable, that still does
not distinguish these matters from
many others awaiting their turn on the ordinary roll…
Moreover, the fact that a litigant
with a claim sounding in money may
suffer serious financial consequences by having to wait his turn for
the hearing of his claim
does not entitle him to preferential
treatment. On the other hand, where a person's personal safety or
liberty is involved or where
a young child is likely to suffer
physical or psychological harm, the Court will be far more amenable
to dispensing with the requirements
of the Rules and disposing of the
matter with such expedition as the situation warrants. The reason for
this differential treatment
is that the Courts are there to serve the
public and this service is likely to be seriously disrupted if
considerations such as
those advanced by the applicants in these two
matters were allowed to dictate the priority they should receive on
the roll. It
is, in the nature of things, impossible for all matters
to be dealt with as soon as they are ripe for hearing. Considerations
of
fairness require litigants to wait their turn for the hearing of
their matters. To interpose at the top of the queue a matter which

does not warrant such treatment automatically results in an
additional delay in the hearing of others awaiting their turn, which

is both prejudicial and unfair to them. The loss that applicants
might suffer by not being afforded an immediate hearing is not
the
kind of loss that justifies the disruption of the roll and the
resultant prejudice to other members of the litigating public.”
[15]
In this application, the Court was not provided with a copy of the
lease agreement in respect of either Erf 3465 or Erf 7195.
On perusal
of the court files in the three preceding applications, it is clear a
lease agreement was only concluded in respect
of Erf 7195, although
only an unsigned copy thereof was appended. No lease agreement in
respect of Erf 3465 was attached to any
of the three preceding
applications. The lease agreement in respect of Erf 7195 was to
commence on 01 November 2016. In my view,
Erf 7195 was therefore not
procured before Pakati J’s order was granted on 01 September
2017.
[16]
It is not in dispute that the Gambling Board informed Deeps Betting
on 13 November 2017 that Erf 7195 had been inspected and
that it was
established that this premises does not comply with Regulation 7(c).
[17]
In its founding affidavit, Deeps Betting avers that it will suffer
severe financial loss if the relief is not granted. These
allegations
are challenged by the Gambling Board in its answering affidavit, but
not addressed by Deeps Betting in reply. In the
absence of any proof
of financial loss, I am not persuaded that Deeps Betting made out a
case that
irreparable financial losses have been suffered or would be suffered,
as sufficient ground to justify a departure from
the ordinary court
rules.
[18]
Ordinarily I would have struck the application from the roll for want
of urgency. However, due to the circumstances of this
case, I have
decided that the interest of justice will be best served by disposing
of the merits.
AD
RELIEF SOUGHT:-
[19]
Deeps Betting, in paragraph 12 of its founding affidavit, states that
the facts
in casu
support an application for a review and substitutory relief in terms
of Rule 53 of the Uniform Rules of Court, but that it was
advised,
due to the urgency of the matter, to seek a declaratory order
instead.
[20]
Mr Grobler confirmed that the application before me is therefore not
a review application. He relied on the judgment in the
matter of
Earthlife
Africa v Eskom Holdings Ltd
[2]
and submitted that the Court may grant a declaratory order where the
issue in review is not “multi-faceted” and can
be
disposed of by way of a declaratory order.
[21]
In my view, this judgment has no application to the present case. The
Court in the Earthlife case was tasked with a review
application. A
point
in
limine
was raised that, prior to launching the application for review, the
applicant was required to first have exhausted its internal
remedies
in terms of the Environment Conservation Act 73 of 1989 Act (“the
ECA”). The internal remedy provided for
in the ECA was an
appeal to the Minister. This step was not made peremptory by the Act.
Although the applicant had lodged such
an appeal, it had launched the
review application without awaiting the outcome of the appeal. The
question raised by the respondents
was whether the review application
was barred until the appeal was disposed of.
[22]
With reference to the judgment in Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City
of Cape Town
and Others
[3]
,
it is trite that:-

Except
possibly for a decision which is clearly invalid on its face, all
official decisions are presumed to be valid until impugned
by a court
of competent jurisdiction;”
[23]
As I understand Deeps Betting’s case, Pakati J’s judgment
in respect of Erf 3465 should merely be enforced in respect
of Erf
7195.
[24]
According
to Mr Grobler, the Gambling Board, in opposing this application, is
attempting to retry an issue that has already been
decided by the
court.
Mr
Grobler submitted that Pakati J’s order of 01 September 2017 is
final and that no application for rescission is threatening
or
pending. He added that this court does not have the jurisdiction, as
a court of first instance, to support any subversion or

non-compliance with its final orders.
[25]
Mr Modisa submitted that this court cannot merely grant a license,
despite non-compliance, simply to satisfy the court order
dated 01
September 2017.
[26]
According to Mr Grobler, it is irrelevant that this application
relates to a different site than the one specified in the court
order
of 01 September 2017.
[27]
In the matter of African National Congress v United Democratic
Movement and others (Krog intervening),
[4]
Chaskalson J held that:-

This
Court has previously drawn attention to the limited power that a
court has to vary its orders after they have been made. In
Minister
of Justice v Ntuli
[5]
,
it was held:
'The
principle of finality in litigation which underlies the common law
rules for the variation of judgments and orders is clearly
relevant
to constitutional matters. There must be an end to litigation and it
would be intolerable and could lead to great uncertainty
if Courts
could be approached to reconsider final orders made in judgments
declaring the provisions of a particular statute to
be invalid.’”
[28]
The application was argued on 9 February 2018. On 19 February 2018,
Deeps Betting filed an application requesting that leave
be granted
to it to adduce further evidence and that the evidence tendered in
the supplementary affidavit, should be admitted.
[29] The Gambling Board opposed this
application and filed its answering affidavit.
[30]
In my opinion, there is no reason why the application to adduce
further evidence should not be granted. The evidence in the

affidavit, dated 16 February 2018, together with the answering and
replying affidavits affidavit are accordingly admitted. The
parties
agreed that I may finalise this judgment in the absence of any
additional oral argument.
[31]
In essence, Deeps Betting is requesting that a letter from the
Gambling Board to Deeps Betting, dated 13 February 2018, is
admitted
into evidence. Paragraph 2 of the letter reads as follows:-

We
hereby wish to inform you that your applications for annual renewal
of your Bookmaker licences for the following towns Kimberley,

Postmasburg, Upington, Colesburg, De Aar, Kuruman, Springbok were
approved by the Board.”
[32]
According to Deeps Betting, this letter confirms that the Gambling
Board has authorised Deeps Betting’s bookmaker activities
in
respect of all its premises.
[33]
The Gambling Board, however, contends that this letter merely relates
to the annual renewal of the licenses, and not the operation
of all
Deeps Betting’s gambling activities.
[34]
During the hearing of the application on 9 February 2018, it was
submitted on behalf of the Gambling Board that a temporary
license
was granted to Deeps Betting on 20 September 2013, on condition that
it will start operating within six months from the
date of the
receipt of the license, failing which, the license will be revoked.
Mr Modisa contended that the temporary license
lapsed due to the
non-compliance with the condition.
[35]
Mr Grobler argued that the Gambling Board should not be entitled to
rely on the expiration of the license for the dismissal
of the
application. He added that Deeps Betting could not comply with the
condition as it was unable to conduct any activities
prior to
approval of the premises, and in the absence of a functioning
Gambling Board.
[36]
I am not
persuaded
that the letter, dated 13 February 2018 bolsters Deeps Betting’s
application. In my view, the letter constitutes
a renewal of the
temporary licenses and cannot be considered as an approval of Erf
7195, or an authorisation to conduct gambling
activities on Erf 7195.
CONCLUSION:-
[37]
For the following reasons, I am not persuaded that Deeps Betting has
made out a case for a declaratory order:-
37.1
it is not
in dispute that the Gambling Board took its decision in respect of
Erf 7195 on 13 November 2017. This administrative decision
still
stands;
37.2
the administrative
decision was taken after Pakati J’s order of 01 September 2017,
which order was granted in respect of Erf
3465; and
37.3
this
decision is presumed to be valid, until impugned by a court of
competent jurisdiction.
[38]
In the circumstances, I deem it unnecessary to deal with the
arguments pertaining to the interpretation of Regulation 7(c).
COSTS:-
[39]
Mr Grobler argued that
a cost order should be granted in favour of Deeps Betting. In support
of his submission, he stated that the
Gambling Board should not have
opposed the application, but merely filed a notice of intention to
abide. I can, however, find no
reason why the costs should not follow
the result, with Deeps Betting to pay the Gambling Board’s
costs on a party and party
scale. Despite my finding that there was
no real urgency, it does not warrant a punitive cost order
WHEREFORE
I MAKE THE FOLLOWING ORDER:
The
application is dismissed, with costs.
____________
A
STANTON
ACTING
JUDGE
Northern
Cape Division, Kimberley
On
behalf of Applicant:
Adv
S Grobler (Van de Wall Inc.)
On
behalf of
Respondent:
Mr
C Modisa (State Attorney
)
[1]
[2007]
JOL 21032
(O) AT PARA 30
[2]
2005 (3) SA 156
(C)
[3]
2002
(6) SA 573
(C)
AT
PAGE 591
[4]
[2002] ZACC 24
;
2003
(1) SA 533
(CC) AT PARAS 14 AND 15
[5]
[1997] ZACC 7
;
1997
(3) SA 772
(CC) AT PARA 29