Mier Local Municipality v Kootjies and Others (2267/2015) [2016] ZANCHC 81 (16 September 2016)

80 Reportability
Municipal Law

Brief Summary

Municipal Law — Authority to institute proceedings — Locus standi of municipal manager — Mier Local Municipality sought to invoke the rei vindicatio remedy against respondents regarding ownership of Portion 0 of Erf [...] Mier — Respondents challenged the authority of the municipal manager to act on behalf of the Municipality — Court held that the Municipality failed to prove proper delegation of authority to the municipal manager, but subsequent actions indicated ratification by the Municipal Council — Respondents' supplementary answering affidavit struck out for non-compliance with procedural rules — Municipality established ownership of the property, and the respondents' points in limine were dismissed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerned a motion application in the High Court of South Africa, Northern Cape Division, Kimberley, in which Mier Local Municipality sought relief primarily in the form of eviction under the rei vindicatio. The Municipality also sought an order striking out a supplementary answering affidavit filed by the first and second respondents without leave of the court, together with a costs order.


The principal parties were the Mier Local Municipality as applicant, and Mr Johannes Kootjies (first respondent) and Mr James Malgas (second respondent) as the respondents alleged to be unlawfully occupying municipal land and conducting prospecting and/or mining activities thereon. The Department of Mineral Resources, Northern Cape was cited as third respondent, but no substantive relief was sought against it.


The matter proceeded with preliminary objections raised by the first and second respondents, including challenges to the applicant’s authority to institute proceedings and the applicant’s ownership (and even the existence) of the property described in the papers. After determining the preliminary issues (including the status of the supplementary affidavit), the court considered whether the Municipality had established the requirements for eviction based on ownership and unlawful possession, notwithstanding the respondents’ reliance on a prospecting permit issued under the mineral resources regime.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the intersection between property-law vindicatory relief (eviction of alleged unlawful occupiers) and the respondents’ asserted entitlement to conduct prospecting activities pursuant to a permit issued by the Department of Mineral Resources, as well as the procedural propriety of affidavits in motion proceedings.


2. Material Facts


The court accepted that in 2014 the first respondent applied to the Department of Mineral Resources for a prospecting right (the judgment refers to an application in terms of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28 of 2002). In response, the acting Regional Manager: Mineral Regulation issued a letter dated 30 July 2014 identifying compliance requirements, including a requirement that the applicant notify and consult the landowner or lawful occupier and submit the results of such consultation by a stipulated date.


The evidence before the court reflected engagements between the respondents and the Municipality during 2014 and 2015. The Acting Municipal Manager (Mr Josef Willemse) maintained that the respondents were informed they needed to present their proposal to a municipal Standing Committee meeting on 15 September 2014, and that they failed to attend. The respondents disputed that they failed to attend, but the court treated the broader factual pattern as showing that the Municipality required further processes and documentation before any activities could proceed.


In March 2015 the second respondent approached the Municipality’s council and, on 16 March 2015, Mr Willemse addressed a letter to him setting out a range of requirements (including environmental-related requirements and other documentation and procedural steps) and directing that the necessary documents and a presentation be made to the Standing Committee. On the papers, the court accepted the Municipality’s position that the respondents failed to comply with these directives.


During July 2015 the Municipality’s Technical Manager (Mr Mienies) visited the site where the respondents were operating. The respondents informed him that they were prospecting for diamonds under prospecting permit No MP 12/2015, approved by the Department of Mineral Resources on 5 June 2015. The permit itself contained a term stating that it did not exempt the holder from other legal requirements, restrictive title deed provisions, or the rights of persons with an interest in the land.


A central factual feature relied upon by the court was that the land described in the prospecting permit was “certain piece of K. K. [...]” with specific coordinates and an area of 1.7 hectares, whereas the Municipality’s case was that the respondents were physically occupying and conducting operations on municipal property described as Rietfontein, Portion 0 of Erf [...], Mier (also referred to as Portion 0 of Mier [...]). The Municipality’s records indicated that K. K. [...] was registered in the name of a private owner (Willem Adriaan Knoesen), and that the respondents were not operating on that land but instead on municipal land, without municipal consent.


On 13 August 2015, the Municipality’s attorneys addressed a letter to the respondents asserting that they were conducting activities and had established a camp on municipal commonage (described as Portion 0 of Mier [...]) without permission and without supplying documentation to the Municipality, and demanded that they vacate by 17 August 2015, failing which urgent proceedings would be brought.


The respondents continued to occupy the land and continue their prospecting/mining-related activities even after being informed that they were on the wrong land (i.e., not the land described in their permit). The Municipality’s case, accepted by the court for purposes of the merits, was that the respondents had no consent to occupy the municipal property and had not complied with consultation and related requirements.


On ownership, the respondents initially asserted that they could not locate property described as Portion 0 of Erf [...] Mier in official records and contended that the property did not exist. The Municipality later produced a Deeds Office property copy (obtained from the Vryburg Deeds Office) indicating that the property was registered as a farm under the name Mier No [...], Portion No 0, under a specified diagram deed, and showing the Municipality as the sole owner. The court treated this document as resolving the uncertainty regarding the existence of the property and the Municipality’s ownership.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine several central questions arising from both procedural and substantive objections.


One set of issues concerned procedural and authority questions, namely whether the person who launched the application on behalf of the Municipality (the Acting Municipal Manager) had locus standi/authority, particularly where authority was challenged and where the respondents argued that no proper proof of authorisation had been provided.


A further preliminary issue concerned the existence and identification of the property and whether the Municipality had proved ownership of the property described in its papers, which is a core requirement for the rei vindicatio. This issue was primarily factual (existence and registration/ownership), but it also implicated the legal sufficiency of proof in motion proceedings.


Another procedural issue was whether the respondents’ supplementary answering affidavit was properly before the court without leave, and whether it should be struck out or treated as pro non scripto. This concerned the application of the Uniform Rules and the court’s discretion.


On the merits, the dispute required the court to decide whether the Municipality had met the requirements for vindicatory relief: whether it had proved ownership and that the respondents were in possession without consent. This involved applying established property-law principles to the facts as found on the papers, and also required consideration of the respondents’ reliance on a prospecting permit and the statutory requirement of consultation with landowners/lawful occupiers in the mineral regulatory framework.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the challenge to authority, the court considered the statutory position of a municipal manager under section 55 of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 and the constitutional location of municipal executive authority. The court referred to authority indicating that section 55 is a mechanism enabling a municipal manager to attend to municipal affairs on behalf of the council, but it does not divest the municipal council of executive power. The court also considered the principle that, where authority is challenged, an applicant may address it in reply and that a defect can be cured by subsequent ratification, as recognised in the case law.


Although the court noted that the Municipality had an opportunity to file written delegated authority and failed to do so, it considered the surrounding correspondence and conduct. It relied on evidence of the municipal manager’s interactions with the respondents, invitations for the respondents to present to council structures, and the involvement of other municipal officials. From this, the court inferred that the municipal manager was not acting independently in a manner disconnected from council authority, and it accepted that the Municipal Council had, at least by necessary implication, sanctioned and subsequently ratified the steps taken. On that basis, the authority objection was not upheld.


On the property existence and ownership objection, the court treated the respondents’ inability to locate “Portion 0 of Erf [...] Mier” in certain searches as having been overtaken by the Municipality’s production of a Deeds Office property copy. The court regarded that document as dispositive of whether the property existed and whether the Municipality was owner, and it noted that the respondents did not meaningfully engage with that document despite having received it before argument. The court therefore found that the applicant had proved ownership of the relevant property.


Regarding the supplementary answering affidavit, the court applied Rule 6(5)(e) of the Uniform Rules of Court, emphasising that further affidavits are permitted only with the court’s indulgence. Drawing on appellate authority, the court stated that a court will exercise its discretion to admit further affidavits only where good reason is shown, and that a party tendering a late or out-of-sequence affidavit must explain the lateness and satisfy the court that it should nonetheless be received. The court also relied on authority emphasising that a litigant wishing to file a further affidavit must bring a formal application for leave, and cannot simply insert additional papers into the file.


The court considered that the respondents’ motivation appeared linked to the Municipality’s reply on ownership and identification of the property, but it found it significant that the respondents had not brought a substantive application for leave and that they were legally represented. It accepted the Municipality’s argument that admitting the further affidavit would prejudice it, particularly given the sequence and the Municipality’s lack of opportunity to respond in like fashion. The court therefore excluded the supplementary answering affidavit.


On the merits and the vindicatory claim, the court proceeded from the principle that a prospecting right is a limited real right and that prospecting activities may not be undertaken without notification and consultation with the landowner or lawful occupier. The court relied on Constitutional Court authority describing the content of the consultation process and the rights and obligations of holders of prospecting rights and landowners/lawful occupiers. The court assessed the papers and found that the respondents’ engagement with the Municipality did not amount to proper consultation meeting the described requirements, particularly where the respondents proceeded to establish a camp and commence operations despite being told of municipal requirements and procedures.


A decisive part of the court’s reasoning was that the prospecting permit authorised activities on land described as “K. K. [...]”, not on the municipal property for which eviction was sought. The court treated the respondents’ physical occupation and activities as having occurred on municipal land without permission, and it relied on the permit’s own stipulation that it did not override other legal requirements or the rights of interested persons. The court also noted that, on the papers, it could not discern that the respondents had invoked the statutory mechanism of reporting an alleged impediment by the Municipality to the Regional Manager, nor that the Municipality or lawful occupiers had reported loss to the Regional Manager. In the court’s assessment, some form of protection or relief was warranted, and the Municipality had made out a case for eviction.


On costs, the court treated costs as discretionary and, considering the circumstances, found no reason to depart from the ordinary principle that costs follow the result.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted eviction-related relief. It ordered that any of the first and/or second respondents occupying any portion of the land described as Rietfontein, Portion 0 of Erf [...], Mier (identified on an annexure) and any persons occupying through them must vacate the property, remove belongings, equipment and machinery, and demolish and remove structures within 60 days.


The court further ordered that, in the event of non-compliance, the Sheriff, assisted where necessary by the South African Police Service, was authorised and directed to evict the respondents and those occupying through them and to demolish and remove structures.


The first and second respondents were ordered to pay the costs of the application jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved. The court also excluded the respondents’ supplementary answering affidavit from consideration.


Cases Cited


Manana v King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality [2011] 3 All SA 140 (SCA).


African National Congress Umvoti Council Caucus and Others v Umvoti Municipality 2010 (3) SA 31 (KZP).


Moosa and Cassim NNO v Community Development Board 1990 (3) SA 175 (A).


Smith v KwaNonqubela Town Council 1999 (4) SA 947 (SCA); [1999] 4 All SA 331 (SCA).


Hano Trading CC v JR 209 Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another 2013 (1) SA 161 (SCA).


James Brown & Hamer (Pty) Ltd (Previously Named Gilbert Hamer & Co Ltd) v Simmons NO 1963 (4) SA 656 (A).


Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd v Sewpersadh and Another 2005 (4) SA 148 (C).


Bengwenyama Minerals (Pty) Ltd and Others v Genorah Resources (Pty) Ltd and Others 2011 (4) SA 113 (CC).


Fripp v Gibbon & Co 1913 AD 354.


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (section 151(2)).


Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 (section 55).


Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act 28 of 2002 (including references to section 27 and section 16(4)(b) as discussed through cited authority, and additional provisions referred to in correspondence, including section 39, section 2(d) and (f), and section 100).


Mines Health and Safety Act 29 of 1996 (as referred to in correspondence reproduced in the judgment).


National Water Act 36 of 1998 (referred to in the quotation from Constitutional Court authority).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(5)(e).


Held


The court held that the Municipality’s authority to institute the proceedings was not defeated by the respondents’ challenge, because the evidence demonstrated that the Acting Municipal Manager’s actions were sanctioned by the Municipality’s structures and had been ratified by necessary implication.


The court held that the Municipality had proved that the property existed and that it was the owner, relying on a Deeds Office property copy reflecting ownership of the relevant Portion 0 property.


The court held that the respondents’ supplementary answering affidavit was not properly before the court because it was filed without leave and without a formal application explaining the indulgence sought, and it was excluded due to the procedural requirements and resulting prejudice.


On the merits, the court held that the respondents were occupying municipal land without consent and that their prospecting permit did not authorise operations on the municipal property in issue. The court further held that proper consultation requirements had not been met on the papers. The Municipality was accordingly entitled to vindicatory relief and an eviction order, with ancillary relief enabling enforcement.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that where authority to institute proceedings is challenged in motion proceedings, the applicant may address the challenge in reply, and a lack of authority at inception may be cured by subsequent ratification, provided the evidence supports such ratification.


It applied the principle that municipal executive authority vests in the municipal council, and that the institution of legal proceedings ordinarily requires appropriate delegation or authorisation; however, on the facts the court accepted implied ratification through council-sanctioned conduct.


The judgment applied the procedural principle under Uniform Rule 6(5)(e) that further affidavits beyond the ordinary sequence are not permitted as of right and require the court’s indulgence exercised on good reason, and that a party seeking such indulgence must provide an explanation and properly seek leave. Where a further affidavit is simply inserted without leave, the court may treat it as ineffective and exclude it, particularly where prejudice is shown.


On the merits, the judgment applied the property-law principle underlying the rei vindicatio that an owner is entitled to recover possession of property from a person who possesses it without consent, once ownership and unlawful possession are established.


It further applied the principle, drawn from Constitutional Court authority in the mineral law context, that a prospecting right is a limited real right whose exercise on land requires notification and consultation with the landowner or lawful occupier, and that possession of a prospecting permit does not confer unfettered authority to occupy or conduct operations irrespective of other legal requirements, title deed restrictions, or third-party rights.

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[2016] ZANCHC 81
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Mier Local Municipality v Kootjies and Others (2267/2015) [2016] ZANCHC 81 (16 September 2016)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
NORTHERN
CAPE DIVISION, KIMBERLEY
Case
number: JA 78/10
Case
No :
2267 /2015
Heard
on:
22/06/2016
Delivered
on:       16/09/2016
In
the matter between:
MIER
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY

Applicant
And
JOHANNES
KOOTJIES

1
st
Respondent
JAMES
MALGAS

2
nd
Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF MINERAL RESOURCES

3
rd
Respondent
NORTHERN
CAPE PROVINCE
JUDGMENT
MAMOSEBO
J
[1]
The applicant, Mier Local Municipality, has invoked the
rei
vindicatio
remedy against the first and second respondents, Mr
Johannes Kootjies and Mr James Malgas, respectively. It also sought
the striking
down of the respondents’ supplementary answering
affidavit as well as a cost order jointly and severally, the one
paying
the other to be absolved. No relief is sought against the
third respondent, the Department of Mineral Resources, Northern Cape.
Preliminary
issues
[2]
The respondents raised the following points
in limine:
First,
that the person acting on behalf of the Municipality has no locus
standi
to bring the application; secondly, whether the
Municipality is the owner of Portion 0 of Erf [...] Mier, and whether
the said property
does in fact exist.
The
authority of Mr Josef Willemse, to institute proceedings on behalf of
the applicant.
[3]
Mr Josef Willemse, the Acting Municipal Manager, Mier Municipality,
launched this application on behalf of the Municipality.
He
alleged that he is duly authorised to do so by virtue of the
delegated powers vesting in him by his appointment. Ms Stanton,

counsel for the applicant, argued that Mr Willemse has delegated
powers in terms of
s 55
of the
Local Government: Municipal Systems
Act, 32 of 2000
.  The respondents state that there was no proper
proof of authorisation to satisfy the Court that the Manager acted on
a specific
or general authorisation.
[4]
In
Manana v King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality
[2011]
3 All SA 140
(SCA) at 145f-g (para 17) Nugent JA held:

[17]
In my view
s 55(1)
is no more than a statutory means of conferring
such power upon municipal managers to attend to the affairs of the
municipality
on behalf of the municipal council.  There is no
basis for construing the section as simultaneously divesting the
municipal
council of any of its executive powers. Indeed, as I have
already pointed out, the Constitution vests all executive authority –

which includes the authority to appoint staff – in the
municipal council and legislation is not capable of lawfully
divesting
it of that power. To the extent that there might be any
ambiguity in the statute in that respect it must be construed to
avoid
that result”
[5]
The full bench in
ANC Umvoti Council Caucus and Others v Umvoti
Municipality
2010 (3) SA 31
(KZP) at 36A – B (para 8)
pronounced:

It
is clear that, where authority is challenged in the answering
affidavit, it is permissible to make out a case in reply [
Moosa
and Cassim NNO v
Community
Development Board
1990 (3) SA 175
(A) at 180H – J]. It is further clear that,
even if the authority was not in place when the litigation commenced,
actions
taken can be ratified subsequently. This was fully dealt with
in
Smith v
KwaNonqubela Town Council
[1999
(4) SA 947
(SCA);
[1999] 4 All SA 331
at  para 11] where the
following was stated:

It
was further argued that, after an objection has been taken to the
authority of a person to act on behalf of another, reliance
may not
be placed upon a ratification that did not exist when the objection
was taken….Lest there be any future doubt about
the matter,
this judgment holds that the point is bad….’
The
full bench continued to state the following at para 10E:

[10]
……..Since s 151(2) of the Constitution vests the
executive and legislative authority of a municipality in its

municipal council, it was necessary for the council to have delegated
the power to institute legal proceedings. Such a delegation
must be
in writing. Absent such a delegation, a council resolution was
required to empower an official to institute court proceedings
on its
behalf……”
[6]
The applicant had the opportunity to correct the objection taken in
reply by filing a written delegated authority but has failed
to do
so. However, based on the correspondence by the Municipal Manager
addressed to Mr Malgas dated 16 March 2015 outlining the
requirements
to be met as well as inviting the respondents to make submissions to
the Standing Committee of the Council; the invitation
of the
respondents to make their submission before the Municipal Council on
15 September 2014; as well as the involvement of Mr
Mienies, the
Municipality’s Technical Manager, it is evident that the
Municipal Manager was not on a frolic of his own and
that the
Municipal Council sanctioned what he had been doing and in fact by
necessary implication subsequently ratified it. See
also below paras
18 and 23.
Applicant
has not proved that it is the owner of Portion 0 of Erf [...] Mier
and that this property does in fact exist
[7]
The respondents maintained that after conducting searches not only in
the Surveyor General’s office but also in the Deeds
Registry,
they could not trace property known as Portion 0 of Erf [...] Mier.
They therefore concluded that the property does not
exist. Although
the Municipality initially conceded that it may not be the registered
owner of the said property it then submitted
that there is a legal
presumption that a municipality is deemed to be the owner of the
land. The respondents contended that since
the land was not surveyed
the Municipality cannot claim with certainty that the respondents are
indeed occupying Portion 0 of Erf
[...] Mier or not.
[8]
The Municipality subsequently attached the Deeds Office Property copy
obtained from the Vryburg Deeds Office on 04 May 2016
at 12h34 to its
heads of argument and furnished a copy to the respondents’
counsel. Discerned from the document is that the
property is
registered as a farm under the name Mier No [...] Portion No 0 under
Diagram Deed T348/1989 in extent 5033.2613H. It
also shows that Mier
Local Municipality has been the sole owner thereof.  The
information on this document is, in my view,
dispositive of the
uncertainty whether the property known as Mier, [...], 0 (Remaining
Extent) existed. Ironically, the respondents
are mute as far as this
copy, which was furnished to them prior to the matter being argued,
is concerned. The points
in limine
raised by the respondents
in this regard must therefore fail.
I
therefore find that the applicant is the owner of Portion 0 of Mier
[...], Northern Cape.
The
additional affidavit (supplementary answering affidavit)
[9]
The respondents have filed a supplementary answering affidavit which
the applicants applied for it to be struck out because
no leave was
sought from the Court. Ms Stanton submitted that allowing the
additional affidavit would be prejudicial to the Municipality
since
it will have no opportunity to also file an additional set.
[10]
Mr Slabbert, counsel for the respondents, argued that it is within
the discretion of the Court to depart from the Rules in
the interests
of Justice. Counsel submitted that should the court be inclined to
disallow the additional affidavit, the respondents
would suffer
prejudice. Ms Stanton further argued that the motivation for allowing
the additional affidavit should have been stated
in an affidavit,
particularly in that they are raising the mala fides of the attorney
who may have ill-advised the respondents.
Ms Stanton argued further
that it was not acceptable for the respondents’ counsel to try
and
make out a case from the bar
or in the
supplementary
answering affidavit.
[11]
Rule 6(5) (e) of the Uniform Rules of Court stipulates:

Within
10 days of the service upon him of the affidavit and documents
referred to in sub-paragraph (ii) of paragraph (d) of subrule
(5) the
applicant may deliver a replying affidavit.  The court may in
its discretion permit the filing of further affidavits.”
On
this aspect Erasmus AJA made the following remarks in
Hano
Trading CC v JR 209 Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another
2013
(1) SA 161
(SCA) at para 11:

[11]
Rule 6(5)(e) establishes clearly that the filing of further
affidavits is only permitted with the indulgence of the court.
A
court, as arbiter, has the sole discretion whether to allow the
affidavits or not. A court will only   exercise its

discretion in this regard where there is good reason for doing so.”
[12]
In
James Brown & Hamer (PTY) LTD (Previously Named Gilbert
Hamer & Co LTD) v Simmons, NO
1963 (4) SA 656
(A) at 660D
– F  Ogilvie Thompson JA made this authoritative
pronouncements:

It
is in the interests of the administration of justice that the
well-known and well established general rules regarding the number
of
sets and the proper sequence of affidavits in motion proceedings
should ordinarily be observed. That is not to say that those
general
rules must always be rigidly applied: some flexibility, controlled by
the presiding Judge exercising his discretion in
relation to the
facts of the case before him, must necessarily also be permitted.
Where, as in the present case, an affidavit is
tendered in motion
proceedings both late and out of its ordinary sequence, the party
tendering it is seeking, not a right, but
an indulgence from the
Court: he must both advance his explanation of why the affidavit is
out of time and satisfy the Court that,
although the affidavit is
late, it should, having regard to all the circumstances of the case,
nevertheless be received.”
[13]
It seems to me that the motivation for the respondents to file the
additional affidavit was informed by the Municipality’s
reply
pertaining to the ownership and identification of the property.
Although initially the Municipality used the phrase: “registered

owner of Portion 0 of Erf [...] Mier” but in its reply it then
said “although the property is not registered in a Deeds

Office, it is deemed to be the property of the Municipality in which
the immovable property is situated. The Municipality briefly
relied
on custom or a presumption for ownership it subsequently filed a
document from the Deeds Registry  that confirmed ownership
of
the said property to support the relief sought to evict the
respondents.  Ownership of the Mier property is now settled.
[14]
It remains unclear why the respondents failed to launch a substantive
formal application for leave to file the additional affidavit.
What
is further significant is that they seem to have made out their case
in the supplementary answering affidavit which runs from
page 70 –
105 of the paginated papers. Dlodlo J in
Standard Bank of SA
Ltd v Sewpersadh and Another
2005 (4) SA 148
(C) at para 13
said:

Clearly
a litigant who wished to file a further affidavit must make formal
application for leave to do so. It cannot simply slip
the affidavit
into the Court file (as it appears to have been the case in the
instant matter). I am of the firm view that this
affidavit falls to
be regarded as pro non scripto.”
[15]
Unlike a situation where a litigant is unrepresented and unaware of
the rules and processes when seeking an indulgence, the
respondents
in this case were legally represented and have failed to adhere to
the rules. I am satisfied that the admission of
the further affidavit
will indeed prejudice the Municipality. I therefore find the
additional supplementary answering affidavit
should be excluded.
Historical
background
[16]
Sometime in 2014, the first respondent, Mr Kootjies, applied in terms
of  s 27 of the Mineral and Petroleum Resources
Development Act,
28 of 2002 (MPRDA), to the Department of Mineral Resources (DMR),
Northern Cape, for a prospecting right on the
property described as
“certain piece of K. K. [...]” in the District of
Gordonia. In response to the application, the
acting Regional
Manager: Mineral Regulation wrote him a letter dated 30 July 2014 in
which the compliance issues were specified.
Of significance is
para 2.3 which required him to:

notify
in writing and consult
with the landowner or lawful occupier
and
any other affected party
and submit the result of such consultation to this office on or
before the 10
th
September 2014.”
(own emphasis)
[17]
On 27 August 2014 the respondents visited the office of the acting
Municipal Manager, Mr Josef Willemse, who informed them
that they
have to submit a proposal in respect of their anticipated prospecting
to the Standing Committee of the Municipality’s
council on 15
September 2014. By means of a letter dated 04 September 2014 Mr
Willemse confirmed their visit to the Municipality
and the fact that
they were notified that they should present their project to the
Council. Mr Willemse averred that the respondents
failed to attend
the Council meeting on 15 September 2014. The respondents disputed
this version.
[18]
During March 2015, the second respondent, Mr Malgas, approached
Council of the Municipality and was referred to the requirements
and
procedures that had to be complied with prior to any further
consideration of his application. On 16 March 2015 Mr Willemse

addressed the following letter to Mr Malgas:

I/S:
OPPERVLAK OOREENKOMS
Die
Raad van Mier neem kennis van u skrywe en die volgende besluit was
geneem.
Dat
daar ‘n omgewingsimpakstudie gedoen word en moet ‘n
omgewingsbestuursprogram vir goedkeuring in terme van artikel
39, en
dat kennis gegee word binne 180 dae vanaf die datum van kennisgewing
vir raadpleging aan alle belanghebbendes en geaffekteerde
partye.
Die
toekenning en die duur van mynregte is onderhewig aan subartikel (4)
en moet die Minister ‘n mynreg gee:
(a)
Dat die minerale
optimaal in oorstemming met die mynbou werkprogram gemyn kan word;
(b)
Die aansoeker
toegang het tot finansiële hulpbrone en die tegniese vermoë
het om die voorgestelde mynbedrywighede optimaal
uit te voer.
(c)
Dat die
finansiering plan verenigbaar is met die beoogde mynbedrywighede en
die duur daarvan.
(d)
Dat die mynbou
nie sal lei tot onaanvaarbare besoedeling, ekologiese agteruitgang of
skade aan die omgewing nie.
(e)
Die aansoeker
finansieël en andersins voorsiening gemaak het vir die
voorgeskrewe maatskaplike en arbeidsplan.
(f)
Die aansoeker
die vermoë het om te voldoen aan die toepaslike bepalings van
die Wet op Myne en Veiligheid, 1996 (Wet No 29
van 1996).
(g)
Die aansoeker
nie in stryd met ‘n bepaling van hierdie Wet is nie; en
(h)
Die toestaan van
sodanige reg sal verdere oogmerke bedoel in Seksie 2(d) en (f) en in
ooreenstemming met die handves beoog in artikel
100 en die
voorgeskrewe maatskaplike en arbeidsplan.
U
moet egter eers die nodige dokumente, asook ‘n voorlegging aan
die Staande Komitee van die Raad kom voorlê by die
volgende
Staande Komitee vergadering.”
[19]
The respondents failed to comply with the directive by the Municipal
Council. On the contrary, they occupied the property and
commenced
with their prospecting and/or mining activities.
[20]
On 24 July 2015 Mr Mienies, the Municipality’s Technical
Manager, visited the property with the respondents. They informed
him
that they are prospecting for diamonds as they are entitled to do by
virtue of the prospecting permit No MP 12/2015 approved
by  DMR
on 05 June 2015.  Of significance is the last paragraph on the
permit just above the Minister’s signature
where the following
appears:

This
permit does not exempt the holder from the requirements of any
provision of any other law or from any restrictive provisions
or
conditions contained in the title deed of the land concerned, nor
does it encroach upon the rights of any person who may have
an
interest in the land concerned.”
[21]
Mr Kootjies signed for the prospecting permit on 12 June 2016. The
description of the land on the mining permit as earlier
stated was
“certain piece of K. K. [...]. The area under application was
1.7 Ha in extent and the corners in terms of latitude
and longitude
were described as follows:
Corners

Latitude

Longitude
A

-26.74543

20.03141
B

-26.74567

20.02996
C

-26.74665

20.03048
D

-26.74671

20.03171
[22]
The Municipality searched its records and found that K. K. [...] is
property registered in the name of Willem Adriaan Knoesen.
The
coordinates thereof, according to the Surveyor-General’s plan
LG F 3273/1972,  are the following:
A
26.122134228º S

B       26.96446237º S
20.263694267º
E

20.343091549º E
C
26.999846051º S
20.222703172º E
Mr
Mienies informed the respondents that they are not occupying K. K.
[...] but property belonging to the Municipality without its
consent.
[23]
On 13 August 2015 Mr P Bergh from the firm Becker Bergh & More
Inc addressed this letter to the respondents, which was
received by
Mr Malgas:

UITSETTING:
RIETFONTEIN MINING
Met
verwysing na bostaande het ons opdrag van ons kliënt, Mier
Munisipaliteit, ontvang om hierdie skrywe aan u te rig. Dit
blyk dat
u met prospekteer en/of mynaktiwiteite besig is op Rietfontein naby
die begraafplaas en die fontein (gedeelte 0 van Mier
[...]). Ons
instruksies is voorts dat u ‘n kamp daar opgeslaan het. Hierdie
kamp en mynaktiwiteite word gedoen op ‘n
gedeelte van die
meentgrond van ons kliënt sonder dat u enige dokumente aan ons
kliënt of hul gevolmagtigde verteenwoordiger,
die Munisipale
Bestuurder, oorhandig het.
Ons
kliënt het dan hulle verteenwoordiger, die tegniese bestuurder,
Mnr J Mienies op 24 Julie 2015 na u gestuur om die aangeleenthuid
te
ondersoek. U was nie in staat om enige dokumentasie aan hom te
voorsien nie, maar het meegedeel dat u wel ‘n permit het
om te
mag myn en volgens u weergawe spesifiek by K. [...].
Ons
instruksies is dat hierdie plaas in die privaatseiendom van Mnr W
Knoesen is. Die plaas is verder ongeveer 30 km (dertig kilometer)

suid-oos vanaf die Mier gebied waar u tans is.
Ons
instruksies is verder dat u gedurende September 2014 ons kliënt
se waarnemende munisipale bestuurder genader het met die

verduideliking dat u toestemming vanaf die Departement Mineraal en
Energiesake verkry het om in die Mier gebied te mag prospekteer.
By
daardie geleentheid is u spesifiek versoek om ‘n behoorlike
voorlegging op 15 September2014 aan die staande komittee van
die Raad
te kom dien. U het egter versuim om dit te doen.
Ons
instruksies is dat gedurende Maart 2015 u Mnr Malgas die Raad genader
het en dat u spesifiek daarvan ingelig was, dat daar verskeie

vereistes is wat deur u nagekom moet word alvorens u met hierdie
bedrywighede sou kon voortgaan.
Dit
het onder andere ingesluit ‘n omgewing impakstudie, bewys van
toekenning en duur van die mynreg, ens. U het ook geen dokumente

voorgelê of die Raad of staande komiteehieroor kom toespreek
nie.
U
besit die grond onregmatig.
U
word hiermee kennis gegee om die eiendom van ons kliënt te
ontruim voor 12:00 middag op Maandag, 17 Augustus 2015, by versuim

waarvan daar ‘n dringende aansoek in die Hoë Hof Kimberley
gebring sal word vir u uitsetting.
Ongelukkig
sal ons verplig wees om ‘n gepaste kostebevel teen u te vra.”
[24]
As stated earlier, the Municipality describes the land as Portion 0
of Erf [...] Mier. It is the applicant’s averment
that it never
granted the respondents permission to occupy the land or to conduct
prospecting or mining activities on its land.
The respondents did not
provide an environmental impact study. They continue to occupy the
land even after being informed that
they are occupying the incorrect
piece of land and that the occupation is therefore illegal.
[25]
The fact that the respondents are prospecting within the municipal
boundaries of Mier Municipality required them to consult
with the
Municipality and to ensure that its requirement are also met and
adhered to. Being in possession of a mining permit did
not give the
respondents the carte blanche to erect a prospecting or mining site
wherever they liked.
[26]
The Constitutional Court has dealt with the issue of consultation in
Bengwenyama Minerals v Genorah Resources
2011 (4) SA 113
(CC)
at 140D-F (para 67):

[67]
The consultation process required by section 16(4)(b) of the Act thus
requires that the applicant must: (a) inform the landowner
in writing
that his application for prospecting rights on the owner’s
land has been accepted for consideration by
the Regional Manager
concerned; (b) inform the landowner in sufficient detail of what the
prospecting operation will entail on
the land, in order for the
landowner to assess what impact the prospecting will have on the
landowner’s use of the land;
(c) consult with the landowner
with a view to reach an agreement to the satisfaction of both parties
in regard to the impact of
the proposed prospecting operation; and
(d) submit the result of the consultation process to the Regional
Manager within 30 days
of receiving notification to consult.”
[27]
What the respondents seem to have done was to approach Mr Willemse
and notify him about their intention to apply
for a prospecting
permit. He   confirmed the meeting in writing that they indeed
visited the Municipality. Despite the fact
that there was follow-up
correspondence specifying what the Municipality required them to do
the respondents nevertheless set up
their machinery and commenced
with their   prospecting or mining activities. I am not
convinced that consultation requirements
were met.
[28]
The remarks by Froneman J at 128 para 38 in the
Bengwenyama Minerals
judgment (above) continues
instructively:

[38]
A prospecting
right is a limited real right in respect of the mineral and the land
to which it relates.
Holders of prospecting rights may enter the land with their
employees; they may bring any plant, machinery or equipment required

for the purpose of prospecting on to the land; and they may build,
construct or lay down any surface or underground infrastructure

necessary for that purpose. They may prospect for the mineral on or
under the land; may remove and dispose of it during the course
of
prospecting; may use water on the land subject only to the provisions
of the National Water Act; and may carry out any other
activity
incidental to prospecting which does not contravene the provisions of
the Act.
These
activities may not be done without notifying and consulting with the
landowner or lawful occupier of the land.
If the
landowner or lawful occupier impedes holders of prospecting rights in
the exercise of their rights, the holders must report
this to the
Regional Manager concerned.
Owners
or lawful occupiers of land on which prospecting will be conducted
must similarly notify the Regional Manager of any loss
suffered or
likely to be suffered as a result of the prospecting operation. In
both instances a process is then initiated which
may, depending on
the circumstances, result in payment of compensation to the landowner
or lawful occupier or a prohibition on
the commencement or
continuation of prospecting activities.
[29]
As already stated, the respondents have already commenced with the
prospecting or mining activities. The
respondents ought to have
engaged the Municipality properly before acquiring the limited
prospecting right. I could
not discern from the papers, neither was
it argued orally, that the respondents reported the “alleged
impediment by the Municipality”
to the Regional Manager nor did
the Municipality or     any of its lawful occupiers
report any loss suffered or
likely to be suffered as a result of this
prospecting operation to the Regional Manager. I am of the view that
the Municipality
must be granted some form of protection or relief.
The permit authorised the respondents to conduct business on a piece
of land
described as “K. K. [...]” and certainly not on
Portion 0 of Erf [...], Mier. The Municipality has
therefore
made out a case for the relief sought.
[30]
The question of costs remains
. There is no reason why costs
should not      follow suite. The award of costs
is wholly within the discretion
of the   Court. In
Fripp v
Gibbon & Co
1913 AD 354
at 363. In leaving the Magistrate
or Judge a discretion:
“……
the
law contemplates that he [or she] should take into consideration the
circumstances of each case, carefully weighing the various
issues in
the case, the conduct of the parties and any other circumstance
which may have a bearing upon the question of costs
and then make
such order as to costs as would be fair and just between the parties.
And if he [or she] does this, and brings his
[or her] unbiased
judgment to bear upon the matter and does not act capriciously or
upon any wrong principle, I know of no right
on the part of a court
of appeal to interfere with the honest exercise of his [or her]
discretion.”
[34]
In the result, the following order is made:
Order
1.
Any of the first (Mr
Johannes Kootjies) and/or second  (Mr James Malgas) respondents
occupying any portion of the land known
as Rietfontein, Portion 0 of
Erf [...], Mier and identified by numerals "1" - "4"
on Annexure “FA1”
(the Mier immovable property) and
anyone occupying the property through them are ordered to vacate the
property with all his/her/their
belongings, equipment and machinery
and to demolish and remove such structures within 60 days of this
order.
2.
Should any of the first
and/or second respondents
and
anyone occupying through them fail to comply with the order in
paragraph 1 above, the Sheriff and where necessary assisted by
the
South African Police Services, is authorised and ordered to evict
them from the described Mier immovable property and to demolish
and
remove such structures.
3.
The first and second
respondents are ordered to pay the costs of this application, jointly
and severally, the one paying, the other
to be absolved.
_____________________
MAMOSEBO J
NORTHERN CAPE HIGH COURT
For
the applicant:

Adv A Stanton
Instructed
by:

Haarhoffs Inc
For the 1
st
& 2
nd
respondent:          Adv
F Slabbert
Instructed by:

Rossouws, Lesie Inc
Duncan & Rothman Attorneys