MEC for Co-operative Governance & Traditional Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal v Edumeni Municipality and Others (1425/17) [2017] ZAKZPHC 38 (24 March 2017)

80 Reportability
Municipal Law

Brief Summary

Local Government — Acting municipal manager — Appointment exceeding statutory limits — The MEC for Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal, sought to declare the appointment of the second respondent as acting municipal manager of Endumeni Municipality illegal, as it contravened section 54A of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act, which limits such appointments to three months without the MEC's written approval for an extension. The municipality extended the appointment indefinitely without seeking the required permission. The court held that the extension was unlawful and declared the appointment null and void, emphasizing that a government body cannot act beyond its legal authority.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an application in the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg, in which the MEC for Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal sought declaratory and interdictory relief concerning the lawfulness of an extended acting appointment to the office of municipal manager.


The applicant was the provincial MEC responsible for local government oversight in KwaZulu-Natal. The first respondent was Endumeni Municipality, the municipal council that made and extended the acting appointment. The second respondent was Desiga Padayachee, appointed as acting municipal manager. The third respondent was the Minister for Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs at national level, cited but not participating in the proceedings and with no substantive relief sought against him.


Procedurally, the matter arose after the municipality had first appointed the second respondent as acting municipal manager on 4 October 2016, and thereafter adopted resolutions extending that acting appointment beyond the period contemplated in s 54A(2A) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000. A separate earlier application by the MEC to set aside the October 2016 acting appointment (on qualification grounds under s 54A(2)) had been launched and was still pending at the time of this judgment. The present application concerned the later extension of the acting appointment without the MEC’s approval as required by statute. A rule nisi had already issued on 13 February 2017, and the court was asked to confirm parts of it.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the lawfulness, under the municipal governance framework, of the municipality’s decision to extend an acting municipal manager’s appointment beyond three months without applying to the MEC for an extension, as contemplated by s 54A(2A)(b), and whether interdictory relief should follow in circumstances where the municipality framed the matter as an intergovernmental dispute.


2. Material Facts


The court treated as common cause that the Local Government: Municipal Systems Amendment Act 7 of 2011 introduced s 54A into the Systems Act, including s 54A(2A)(a) limiting acting municipal manager appointments to three months, and s 54A(2A)(b) permitting a municipal council, in special circumstances and on good cause shown, to apply in writing to the MEC for a further extension not exceeding three months.


It was also common cause that on 4 October 2016 the Endumeni Municipality appointed the second respondent as acting municipal manager while the permanent municipal manager was suspended and disciplinary proceedings were underway. The second respondent’s initial acting appointment was due to lapse in late December 2016 or early January 2017 (the papers were unclear on the precise date, and the court indicated nothing turned on this).


On 23 December 2016 the municipal council resolved to extend the acting appointment to 6 January 2017. On 6 January 2017 the council adopted a further resolution extending the acting appointment indefinitely, in the sense that it would continue until the conclusion of disciplinary proceedings relating to the suspended municipal manager.


A key undisputed fact relied upon by the court was that the municipality did not apply to the MEC in terms of s 54A(2A)(b) for permission to extend the acting appointment.


The municipality advanced explanations in opposition, including that it needed the second respondent in office due to operational requirements and dissatisfaction with earlier deployees, and that it believed an application to the MEC would not receive an impartial decision because the MEC had already sought to have the second respondent removed in the earlier litigation. Instead of applying to the MEC for an extension, the municipality wrote to the national Minister requesting that the Minister note and support the council’s decision.


By the time of the hearing, and shortly before it, the Constitutional Court had delivered judgment in South African Municipal Workers’ Union v Minister of Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CCT54/16) [2017] ZACC 7 (9 March 2017) confirming constitutional invalidity findings concerning the Amendment Act, but suspending the declaration of invalidity for 24 months. In argument, counsel for the municipality accepted that, in light of the Constitutional Court’s judgment, an order declaring the indefinite extension unlawful could not be opposed, but resisted the ancillary interdicts on the basis of an alleged intergovernmental dispute.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine were whether the municipality’s extension of the second respondent’s acting appointment beyond the initial period, and in particular the indefinite extension, was unlawful and ultra vires due to non-compliance with s 54A(2A)(b), and whether such non-compliance rendered the appointment decision null and void as contemplated by s 54A(3).


A further question was whether the municipality could avoid or justify compliance with the statutory scheme by invoking the maxim lex non cogit ad impossibilia (the law does not compel the doing of the impossible), on the basis that it viewed an application to the MEC as bound to fail for lack of impartiality.


Another principal issue concerned the characterisation of the matter as an intergovernmental dispute under s 41 of the Constitution and the Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act 13 of 2005, and whether that characterisation should lead the court to decline the interdictory relief and refer the matter back for intergovernmental dispute-resolution processes.


These questions were primarily questions of law and the application of law to largely common-cause facts, with an element of evaluative judgment concerning whether the alleged dispute qualified as an intergovernmental dispute in the statutory and constitutional sense, and whether interdictory relief should follow once unlawfulness was accepted.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began from the statutory framework in s 54A. It treated s 54A(2A)(b) as imposing a positive legal obligation on a municipal council that wishes to extend an acting municipal manager’s appointment beyond the three-month limit: the council must apply in writing to the MEC, in special circumstances and on good cause shown, for an extension of up to a further three months. In the court’s view, the municipality’s decision to extend the appointment indefinitely without such an application meant the council purported to exercise a power it did not have.


The municipality’s reliance on lex non cogit ad impossibilia was rejected on the basis that the maxim applies as a defence to the failure to carry out a positive obligation only where performance is truly impossible. Relying on Rex v Canestra 1951 (2) SA 317 (A), the court held that the municipality did not contend that it was impossible to make the application to the MEC. Its real contention was that, in its opinion, it was “impossible” for the application to succeed because the MEC would allegedly be biased or predetermined due to the earlier challenge to the second respondent’s qualification.


The court considered that this reframing could not sustain the defence. It regarded as untenable the proposition that where the law prohibits conduct without prior permission, a party may disregard the permission requirement merely because it believes permission will inevitably be refused, even if the refusal would (in the party’s view) be incorrect. On this reasoning, non-compliance with s 54A(2A)(b) could not be excused, and the declaratory relief that the appointment was unlawful had to follow, particularly as no other basis was advanced to resist that declarator.


Turning to the argument based on s 41 of the Constitution and the Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act, the court addressed whether there was a genuine intergovernmental dispute capable of referral for dispute-resolution rather than judicial enforcement. The court reasoned that a disagreement about whether an organ of state should be permitted to act illegally cannot constitute an intergovernmental dispute of the kind contemplated by the constitutional and statutory framework. Once the extension was accepted to be unlawful, the dispute could not be framed as a legitimate contest about how powers should be exercised; rather, it concerned the cessation of an unlawful state of affairs.


The court reinforced this by reference to constitutional principle, quoting the observation in Fedsure Life Assurance v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council and Others [1998] ZACC 17; 1999 (1) SA 374 (CC) that the legislature and executive in every sphere are constrained by the principle that they may exercise no power and perform no function beyond that conferred by law. In the court’s analysis, the municipal council had unilaterally exercised a power it did not possess.


The court also analysed the statutory definition of an intergovernmental dispute under the Framework Act, stating that the disagreement between the MEC and the municipality had not yet attained that status. It reasoned that if the municipality had applied to the MEC for an extension and the MEC had refused, a dispute could potentially have arisen from the MEC’s statutory power to approve or refuse extensions. However, because the municipality did not apply at all, that dispute never crystallised in the manner contemplated by the Framework Act. For that reason, there was no dispute to refer back for intergovernmental resolution processes.


Additionally, the court observed that even if such a dispute had arisen, it would be difficult to see how its existence could justify or render lawful the municipality’s unilateral extension in the meantime. The consequence of the court’s reasoning was that both the declaratory order and the interdictory relief restraining continued acting in the position had to be granted.


On costs, the court identified that the second respondent abided the court’s decision and the third respondent took no part. The costs issue therefore lay between the MEC and the municipality, both organs of state. The court disregarded the existence of the earlier pending litigation, noting it was not before the court and turned primarily on unresolved qualification issues. The court considered the policy context of s 54A as aimed at preventing abuses such as the circumvention of lawful processes through open-ended or repeatedly extended acting appointments, while indicating that it was not satisfied on the papers that the municipality’s extension fell within that targeted category of abuse, notwithstanding its unlawfulness. In the result, the court held that each party should bear its own costs.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court confirmed the relevant parts of the rule nisi previously issued on 13 February 2017. It granted declaratory and interdictory relief that had the effect of declaring the second respondent’s extended acting appointment unlawful and restraining the municipality from permitting, and the second respondent from performing, the functions of acting municipal manager under the unlawful extension.


As to costs, the court made no adverse costs order against the municipality. It ordered that each of the applicant and first respondent pay its own costs.


Cases Cited


Rex v Canestra 1951 (2) SA 317 (A)


Fedsure Life Assurance v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council and Others [1998] ZACC 17; 1999 (1) SA 374 (CC)


South African Municipal Workers’ Union v Minister of Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CCT54/16) [2017] ZACC 7 (9 March 2017)


Legislation Cited


Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000


Local Government: Municipal Systems Amendment Act 7 of 2011


Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act 13 of 2005


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (section 41)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the municipality’s resolution extending the second respondent’s acting appointment as municipal manager without applying to the MEC in terms of s 54A(2A)(b) was unlawful, ultra vires, and null and void, and that the maxim lex non cogit ad impossibilia did not excuse the municipality’s non-compliance because it was not impossible to apply; the municipality merely believed the application would fail.


The court further held that the matter did not present a referable intergovernmental dispute under s 41 of the Constitution and the Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act 13 of 2005, because there could be no genuine intergovernmental dispute over whether an organ of state may act unlawfully, and because a dispute contemplated by the Framework Act could not arise where the municipality had not first invoked the MEC’s statutory power by applying for an extension.


The court consequently confirmed interdictory relief preventing the continuation of the unlawful state of affairs, and ordered that each of the MEC and the municipality bear its own costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that statutory provisions conferring powers and imposing obligations on organs of state must be complied with, and that where legislation requires prior approval before a course of conduct may be pursued, an орган of state cannot lawfully bypass that requirement on the basis that it anticipates refusal of the approval.


It applied the principle associated with lex non cogit ad impossibilia, as described in Rex v Canestra 1951 (2) SA 317 (A), that the maxim operates only where compliance with a positive legal obligation is truly impossible; a belief that compliance would be futile or unsuccessful does not constitute impossibility and does not justify non-compliance.


It reaffirmed, consistently with Fedsure Life Assurance v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council and Others [1998] ZACC 17; 1999 (1) SA 374 (CC), that in South Africa’s constitutional order the legislature and executive in every sphere of government may exercise no power and perform no function beyond that conferred by law, with the consequence that a municipal council cannot validly take decisions outside its statutory powers.


It further applied the approach that the intergovernmental dispute-resolution framework in s 41 of the Constitution and the Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act 13 of 2005 presupposes a dispute arising from the exercise of statutory powers or functions, and that such a dispute does not crystallise where the party alleging the dispute has not first invoked the statutory mechanism (here, by applying to the MEC for an extension).

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[2017] ZAKZPHC 38
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MEC for Co-operative Governance & Traditional Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal v Edumeni Municipality and Others (1425/17) [2017] ZAKZPHC 38 (24 March 2017)

NOT
REPORTABLE
KWAZULU-NATAL
DIVISION, PIETERMARITZBURG
CASE
NO:  1425/17
In
the matter between:
THE
MEC FOR CO-OPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
&
TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS,
KWAZULU-NATAL
APPLICANT
and
ENDUMENI
MUNICIPALITY
1
ST
RESPONDENT
DESIGA
PADAYACHEE
2
ND
RESPONDENT
MINISTER FOR CO-OPERATIVE
GOVERNANCE
AND TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS
3
RD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered
on :  FRIDAY, 24 MARCH 2017
OLSEN
J
[1]
The Local Government : Municipal Systems Amendment Act No. 7 of 2011
(the “Amendment Act”) was promulgated on 5
July 2011.
It introduced, inter alia, s54A of the Local Government : Municipal
Systems Act, No. 32 of 2000 (the “Systems
Act”).
[2]
Section 54A (2A) (a) of the Systems Act provides that an appointment
of an acting municipal manager cannot be for a period which
exceeds
three months.  Sub-section 54A (2A) (b) of the Systems Act goes
on to provide as follows.

A
municipal council may, in special circumstances and on good cause
shown, apply in writing to the MEC for Local Government to extend
the
period of appointment contemplated in paragraph (a), for a further
period that does not exceed three months.”
[3]
In January 2013 the South African Municipal Workers Union instituted
proceedings in the High Court, Gauteng Division, Pretoria
inter alia
for an order declaring the entire Amendment Act inconsistent with the
Constitution and invalid.  In February 2016
the high court
upheld SAMWU’s contention, made a declaration of constitutional
invalidity, and referred the matter to the
Constitutional Court for
confirmation.
[4]
That is how matters stood on 4 October 2016 when the first respondent
in these proceedings, the Endumeni Municipality, appointed
the second
respondent as its acting municipal manager.
[5]
That appointment generated an application by the applicant in these
proceedings, the MEC for Co-Operative Governance and Traditional

Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal, for an order setting aside the appointment
upon the basis that the second respondent was not qualified
as
required by s54A(2) of the Systems Act (as amended) with the result
that, as sub-section (3) of the section provides, the decision
was
null and void.  That application has not yet been finalised.
[6]
The second respondent’s acting appointment made in October 2016
was due to lapse either on 23
rd
or 31
st
December 2016, or on 3
rd
January 2017.  (The papers are not clear on this; but nothing
turns on it.)  Presumably with that prospect in mind, on
23
rd
December 2016 the first respondent’s council passed a
resolution extending the appointment to 6
th
January 2017.  On 6
th
January the council passed a further resolution extending the acting
appointment, on this occasion indefinitely in the sense that
the
acting appointment would last until the finalisation of disciplinary
proceedings underway in respect of the existing municipal
manager who
was and still is under suspension.  The first respondent did
this without applying in terms of s54A (2A) (b) to
the applicant (the
MEC contemplated by the section) for permission to extend the period
of appointment of the second respondent.
[7]
That generated the present application in which the applicant seeks
an order declaring the second respondent’s current
acting
appointment illegal, ultra vires and null and void upon the basis
that s54A (3) (b) is to the effect that, questions of
the
qualifications of an appointee aside, if an appointment is made in
contravention of the Act the decision to make the appointment
is null
and void.  Further ancillary orders are sought restraining the
second respondent from continuing in office and from
performing the
duties or acting in the position of an acting municipal manager in
any manner whatsoever.
[8]
In its affidavit delivered in opposition to the present application
the first respondent sought to justify its conduct in extending
the
acting appointment without permission on the following bases.
(a)
As a matter of fact the first
respondent needs to have the second respondent in office as its
acting municipal manager.  The
suspended municipal manager has
been away for a considerable period.  Until the first
appointment of the second respondent
the position of acting municipal
manager was filled by deployees of the applicant.  They could
not do the job properly.
The second respondent, who was already
an employee of the first respondent and familiar with its affairs,
was therefore appointed.
He proved to be capable. That is why
he was re-appointed.
(b)
It was wrong of the applicant
to enforce the provisions of s54A of the Systems Act as the High
Court had declared it constitutionally
invalid.  It amounts to
the MEC ignoring a court order merely on the pretext that it has no
force until the Constitutional
Court confirms it.   Respect
for the High Court order required the applicant to defer to the High
Court decision.
(This argument was not advanced before me.)
(c)
The first respondent claimed
that the principal that “the law does not compel a person to
perform that which is impossible”
in any event  excused it
from compliance with s54A (2A) (b) of the Systems Act. Explaining the
argument in his answering affidavit
the first respondent’s
mayor said that “it was impossible for the first respondent’s
municipal council to expect
an impartial and unbiased decision from
the applicant” on an application for permission to extend the
period of appointment
of the second respondent because the applicant
had already made her stance clear in the earlier application in which
she sought
to have the second respondent removed because he was not
qualified.  For that reason, the mayor explained, instead of
applying
for permission, the first respondent addressed a letter to
the National Minister (who is cited in this application as third
respondent),
saying that because the provincial department could not
be objective in the matter the first respondent appealed to the
National
Minister’s “good office to note the council’s
decision to appoint [the second respondent]…and support the

institution and the people of Endumeni in accommodating such
decision”.
(d)
Finally the first respondent
answered the applicant’s case with reference to s41 of the
Constitution.  The first respondent
contended that this case
evidences the existence of an inter-governmental dispute and that, no
effort having been made to settle
it or exhaust other remedies, this
court should refer the dispute back as contemplated by s41 (4) of the
Constitution.
[9]
When the papers in the present application were complete, and five
days prior to the hearing before me, the Constitutional Court
handed
down its judgment confirming the declaration of invalidity made by
the High Court in Gauteng.   However the declaration
of
invalidity was suspended for a period of 24 months to allow the
legislature an opportunity to correct matters.  (See
South
African Municipal Workers’ Union v Minister of Co-Operative
Governance and Traditional Affairs
(CCT54/16)
[2017] ZACC 7
(9 March 2017).)
[10]
Before me counsel for the first respondent has taken the stance that,
given the judgment of the Constitutional Court, he cannot
oppose the
grant of an order declaring the extended appointment of the second
respondent for an indefinite period illegal, ultra
vires and null and
void.  I find this concession somewhat inconsistent with
counsel’s argument that the maxim
lex
non cogit ad impossibilia
excused the first respondent’s failure to seek the applicant’s
permission to extend the second respondent’s appointment.

I will accordingly deal with that argument.  However counsel
pressed as his main argument the proposition that notwithstanding
the
judgment of the Constitutional Court, this case continues to reflect
an inter-governmental dispute which justifies the refusal
of the
ancillary orders sought by the applicant which have as their target
the immediate vacation by the second respondent of his
acting
office.
[11]
The first respondent’s reliance on the maxim
lex
non cogit ad impossibilia
may be disposed of without further ado.  As pointed out in
Rex
v Canestra
1951
(2) SA 317
(A) at 324D the maxim describes a defence to a failure to
carry out a positive obligation imposed by law.  Sub-section 54A

(2A) (b) of the Systems Act imposes a positive legal obligation on a
municipal council to apply in writing to the MEC to extend
the period
of appointment of an acting municipal manager.  The fact of the
matter is that the first respondent has not contended
that it was
impossible for it to make such an application.  That disposes of
the issue.  The first respondent’s
contention is in fact
that, in its view, it would be “impossible” for its
application to succeed.  Besides the
fact that its view of the
matter may very well be wrong, the first respondent’s argument
rests on an untenable proposition
that where the law prohibits a
course of conduct without prior permission, and one believes that a
request for prior permission
will incorrectly but inevitably be
refused, one may simply disregard the legal requirement that
permission should be obtained and
proceed with the course of
conduct.  No other objection having been raised by or on behalf
of the first respondent to the
proposition that the current
appointment should be declared invalid, that part of the relief must
be granted.
[12]
The two further orders sought by the applicant (and reflected in the
rule nisi already issued in this matter) are orders restraining
and
interdicting the first respondent from allowing the second respondent
to continue as acting municipal manager; and restraining
and
interdicting the second respondent from performing those duties.
The first respondent contends that there is a dispute
between the
applicant and the first respondent over the question as to whether it
is right and proper that the second respondent
should hold and
continue to hold the position of acting municipal manager.  As I
understand the argument for the first respondent
it is that, despite
the illegality of his current appointment as acting municipal
manager, this court should decline to make orders
preventing the
performance by the second respondent of the duties of an acting
municipal manager and refer that dispute back to
be dealt with under
the
Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act No. 13 of 2005
.
[13]
Counsel for the applicant argues that the present proceedings have
nothing to do with any dispute between government bodies.
He
argues that the first respondent has acted in breach of the law and
the applicant seeks no more nor any less than an order
compelling
rectification of that breach; i.e. the cessation of the current
unlawful state of affairs.
[14]
It seems to me that there cannot be a genuine intergovernmental
dispute, of the kind contemplated by the Framework Act or by
s41 of
the Constitution, over the question as to whether a government or
organ of State should be permitted to act illegally.
In this
case it is now accepted that the extension of the second respondent’s
appointment was unlawful.  The council
purported to exercise a
power (unilaterally to determine an extension of the acting
appointment of a municipal manager) which it
did not have.  The
observations of Goldstone J in paragraph 58 of the judgment in
Fedsure
Life Assurance v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolital
Council and Others
[1998] ZACC 17
;
1999 (1) SA 374
(CC) are apposite.

It
seems central to the conception of our constitutional order that the
Legislature and Executive in every sphere are constrained
by the
principle that they may exercise no power and perform no function
beyond that conferred upon them by law.”
[15]
The Framework Act is the legislation required by s41 (2) of the
Constitution to facilitate the resolution of intergovernmental

disputes.  Such an “intergovernmental dispute” is
defined in that Act as one arising from a statutory power or
function
assigned to any of the parties to a dispute,  or from an
agreement between the parties regarding the implementation
of any
statutory power or function.  The current disagreement between
the applicant and the first respondent has not yet attained
the
status of an intergovernmental dispute.  If the first respondent
had applied to the applicant for the extension of the
second
respondent’s acting appointment, and the applicant had refused
to sanction it, that might very well have constituted
a dispute
arising out of the applicant’s statutory power to determine
extensions to the appointments of acting municipal
managers.
But that dispute could never arise – that state of disagreement
could never be reached – unless and
until the first respondent
sought the applicant’s sanction of the proposal, and it was
refused.  There is accordingly
at present no dispute to be
referred back to the parties to be dealt with in terms of the
Framework Act.
[16]
I would add the observation that if such a dispute had arisen, it is
difficult to see how the existence of it would have justified
or
rendered legal a unilateral decision by the first respondent to
extend the second respondent’s appointment as acting municipal

manager.
[17]
I accordingly conclude that both the declaratory and interdictory
relief sought by the applicant must be granted.
[18]
The applicant has asked that the first respondent pay the costs of
these proceedings.  (The second respondent abides the
decision
of the court and the third respondent took no part in these
proceedings, no relief having been sought against him.)
In
considering the question of costs I must ignore the fact that this is
the second piece of litigation which has arisen out of
the first
respondent’s conduct with regard to the acting appointment of
the second respondent.  The first of the applications
is not
before me.  On the information before me in this case that
application turns principally on the issue as to whether
the second
respondent is qualified to be appointed.  That issue remains
unresolved.
[19]
A brief consideration of the Amendment Act illustrates that,
certainly in relation to the provisions it introduced such as
s54A,
the amendments sought to remedy and put a stop to certain abuses
taking place at local government level.  The particular

provisions of s54A which feature in this case are aimed at seeing
qualified persons appointed as municipal managers, and at preventing

the abuse of circumventing lawful selection processes through the use
of open ended or repeatedly extended acting appointments
to the
office of municipal manager.  As to this latter consideration, I
am not satisfied on the papers before me in this case
that the
purported extension to the second respondent’s period of
appointment falls within the category of abuse at which
the provision
is aimed; this notwithstanding the fact that the extension was
nevertheless unlawful.  The issue of costs arises
only as
between governments.  I conclude that each party should pay its
own costs.
The
following order is made.
(1)
Paragraphs
1.1, 1.2 and 1.3 of the Rule Nisi issued on 13 February 2017 are
confirmed.
(2)
Each
of the applicant and first respondent will pay its own costs.
__________________________
OLSEN
J
Date
of Hearing: TUESDAY,  14 MARCH 2017
Date
of Judgment: FRIDAY,  24 MARCH 2017
For the Applicant : MR AJ DICKSON SC
with
Ms M MAZIBUKO
Instructed by: THABHETE
CEBEKHULU ATTORNEYS
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
OFFICE
30/31/32
20
OTTO ROAD
PIETERMARITZBURG
(Ref.:
Mr T Cebekhulu)
(Tel
No.:  033 – 342 4275)
For
the Respondents : MR PJ BLOMKAMP
Instructed by: ACUTT WORTHINGTON
INCORPORATED
c/o
TOMLINSON MNGUNI JAMES
RESPONDENTS’
ATTORNEY
165
PIETERMARITZ STREET
PIETERMARITZBURG
(Ref.:
M Browning/KP/67A0094/17)
(Tel.:
…033 – 341 9100)