MAS Corporation (Pty) Ltd t/a MASCOR and Another v Umvoti Municipality and Another (2155/2013) [2013] ZAKZPHC 70 (12 April 2013)

78 Reportability
Municipal Law

Brief Summary

Municipal Law — Town Planning — Review of municipal decision — Applicants sought to review the approval of building plans by the Umvoti Municipality for renovations on property adjacent to their business — Applicants contended that the plans violated the Greytown Town Planning Scheme and the National Building Regulations — Municipality conceded to the illegality of its approval — Court held that the approval was unlawful and set aside the decision, directing compliance with the Town Planning Scheme before any occupancy certificate could be issued.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


These were motion proceedings in the KwaZulu-Natal High Court, Pietermaritzburg, in which the applicants sought relief arising from the approval by the first respondent municipality of building plans for renovations and alterations to the second respondent’s commercial property in Greytown. The matter was framed as an application for interim relief pending a review, but the court ultimately granted relief that reviewed and set aside the municipal approval of the plans and issued consequential interdictory and directive orders.


The first applicant, MAS Corporation (Pty) Ltd t/a MASCOR, conducted business in Greytown (including a filling station and vehicle and tractor dealerships). The second applicant, Mechanised Agricultural Supplies (Pty) Ltd, owned the immovable property from which the first applicant conducted its business. The first respondent was the Umvoti Municipality, the local authority responsible for building-plan approvals and administration of the Greytown Town Planning Scheme. The second respondent, 155 York Street CC, owned the adjoining commercial property on which renovations were being undertaken.


As to the procedural history, the municipality initially delivered a notice to abide (13 March 2013) and later consented to parts of the relief sought (by email dated 14 March 2013). The second respondent opposed the relief. The application was heard on 26 March 2013 and judgment was delivered on 12 April 2013.


The general subject-matter concerned compliance with the Greytown Town Planning Scheme and the National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1977, particularly the requirements relating to parking provision (or contribution in lieu) and the legality of municipal approval in the face of non-compliance.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the applicants’ and second respondent’s commercial properties fell within the jurisdiction of the Umvoti Municipality and that the Greytown Town Planning Scheme governed and applied to the properties. The applicants’ locus standi to bring the application was not disputed.


The applicants observed that renovations were being carried out on the second respondent’s property and commissioned planning consultants (Corpolo ITS CC t/a Greene Land) to investigate the lawfulness of the building works. The applicants’ case was that the renovations and alterations were being undertaken pursuant to building plans approved by the municipality, but that the approval was in conflict with the Town Planning Scheme and the applicable regulatory framework.


A central factual premise relied upon by the court was the Town Planning Scheme’s requirement that, in a general commercial zone, off-street parking must be provided at a specified ratio (stated in the judgment as one off-street bay per 23 square metres of gross shop area), which (on the applicants’ version) meant the second respondent should have provided 19 off-street parking bays. The court accepted that the Town Planning Scheme was not inflexible because it provided an alternative mechanism: where on-site parking could not be provided, an owner could be required to make a cash contribution to a parking fund in lieu of providing bays, and this was an aspect to be considered when plans were approved.


On the facts as accepted, the second respondent did not make the payment contemplated by the scheme as a contribution in lieu of parking. The court also accepted the applicants’ contention that the municipality appeared not to have applied its mind to these provisions when approving the plans. The applicants had engaged the municipality through correspondence and meetings (including a letter to the municipal manager dated 7 December 2012, meetings thereafter, and further correspondence including 29 January 2013), but the issue remained unresolved.


The second respondent’s position was that it had submitted plans to the municipality’s town planning department and the plans were approved before building commenced. It contended that if it had been aware of the scheme requirements, it would have complied, and that it had been offered an opportunity by the municipality to do so. The second respondent also contended that it would suffer prejudice if relief were granted because it had secured a tenant (Ackermans). However, critically for the outcome, the second respondent conceded an irregularity in the sense of non-compliance with the Town Planning Scheme, and indicated an intention to seek relaxation of the rules and to contribute to the parking fund. The court treated this concession as materially altering the complexion of the dispute.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine were whether the applicants, as neighbouring owners/affected parties, had a sufficient interest to seek enforcement of the Town Planning Scheme and to challenge municipal approval; and whether the municipality’s approval of the building plans, in circumstances of non-compliance with the Town Planning Scheme’s parking requirements (including the absence of a contribution in lieu), amounted to illegal administrative action that could not be permitted to stand.


The dispute principally concerned the application of law to fact. The court was required to apply the governing planning framework and the principle that courts will not sanction illegality to the factual matrix of an approved plan alleged to be in conflict with the Town Planning Scheme. To the extent that there were factual disputes about prejudice and the tenant’s parking needs, the judgment treated the decisive consideration as the illegality conceded and the municipality’s failure to comply with its scheme, rather than a balancing of competing commercial conveniences.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter from two principal legal starting points: standing to enforce town planning compliance, and the imperative of legality and the rule of law in municipal decision-making.


On standing, the court accepted the view expressed by Plasket AJA in JDJ Properties CC and Another v Umngeni Local Municipality and Another 2003 JOL 29814 (SCA), namely that a landowner has a sufficient interest to clothe it with locus standi to enforce compliance with a town planning scheme. The court treated the facts in JDJ Properties as closely comparable and accepted that the applicants had a right to enforce the scheme, which supplied the necessary standing.


On legality, the court held that it was trite that courts cannot enforce or sanction illegal acts by a municipality. The judgment emphasised that the rule of law must be upheld irrespective of municipal ineptitude or failure to apply the Town Planning Scheme and to adhere to the National Building Regulations framework. In this context, the municipality’s conduct was assessed against the Town Planning Scheme provisions requiring either the provision of on-site parking or the alternative contribution mechanism, which the court accepted had not been properly considered when the plans were approved.


The municipality’s stance was significant: it had consented to the setting aside of the building plans and to the non-issuance of an occupation certificate until compliance. The court treated the second respondent’s acceptance that there was an illegality in the municipality’s actions as decisive. Although the second respondent proposed to regularise the position by applying for relaxation and contributing to the parking fund, the court found that this did not cure the unlawfulness of the existing approval. Once illegality was conceded, the defences advanced by the second respondent were regarded as falling away, and the court concluded that it was prohibited from sanctioning the municipality’s illegal approval.


In exercising its discretion as to the appropriate relief, the court granted review and interdictory orders aimed at preventing continued building works and occupation pending compliance with the applicable scheme and lawful approval.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court reviewed and set aside the decision of the Umvoti Municipality approving the building plans for renovations and/or alterations to the second respondent’s property at 117 Pine Street, Greytown.


The municipality was directed not to issue a completion and/or occupation certificate under section 14(1) of the National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1977 until the second respondent had complied with the Greytown Town Planning Scheme.


The second respondent was directed to cease forthwith any alterations, electrical installations, and/or building works of whatever nature at the premises until it had complied with the Greytown Town Planning Scheme. The second respondent was also directed not to allow any tenant to occupy the premises prior to the approval of the building plans by the municipality.


On costs, the court reserved the issue and adjourned it for argument, indicating that it wished the municipality to address why it should not bear the costs of the application in light of the evidence.


Cases Cited


JDJ Properties CC and Another v Umngeni Local Municipality and Another 2003 JOL 29814 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


National Building Regulations and Building Standards Act 103 of 1977 (including section 14(1)).


Local Government: Municipal Structures Act 117 of 1998.


Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984.


Ordinance 27 of 1949 (including section 40).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that neighbouring landowners had standing to enforce compliance with a town planning scheme and to challenge municipal approval of building plans that conflicted with that scheme. It held further that courts are not permitted to sanction or allow to stand illegal municipal conduct, and that the conceded non-compliance with the Greytown Town Planning Scheme rendered the municipality’s approval unlawful.


Accordingly, the municipal approval of the plans was reviewed and set aside, the municipality was interdicted from issuing an occupation/completion certificate pending compliance, and the second respondent was ordered to stop works and not to permit occupation pending lawful compliance and approval. The question of costs was reserved for later argument, with the municipality to be heard on why it should not bear the costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that an affected landowner has a sufficient and direct interest to confer locus standi to seek enforcement of a town planning scheme, including by challenging municipal approvals that undermine scheme requirements.


It also applied the foundational principle of legality: a court will not sanction, enforce, or permit the continuation of illegal administrative action by a municipality, and the rule of law must be upheld even where illegality results from municipal failure to apply the governing planning and building regulatory framework.


Finally, the judgment reflected that subsequent offers to regularise or cure non-compliance (such as proposed relaxation applications or contributions in lieu of parking) do not, without more, retrospectively validate an approval found to have been taken unlawfully at the time it was made.

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[2013] ZAKZPHC 70
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MAS Corporation (Pty) Ltd t/a MASCOR and Another v Umvoti Municipality and Another (2155/2013) [2013] ZAKZPHC 70 (12 April 2013)

IN
THE KWAZULU-NATAL HIGH COURT, PIETERMARITZBURG
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE
NO: 2155/2013
In
the matter between:
MAS
CORPORATION (PTY) LTD t/a
MASCOR
......................................................
First
Applicant
MECHANISED
AGRICULTURAL
SUPPLIES
(PTY)
LTD
................................................................................................
Second
Applicant
versus
THE
UMVOTI
MUNICIPALITY
..............................................................................
First
Respondent
155
YORK STREET
CC
.........................................................................................
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
12 April 2013
MBATHA
J
[1]
The First Applicant in this matter is MAS Corporation (PTY) LTD
trading as MASCOR, a company with Limited Liability duly registered

and incorporated in accordance with the Company Laws of the Republic
of South Africa, which has its registered office and its principal

place of business at 116 Voortrekker Street, Greytown, KwaZulu-Natal.
[2]
The Second Applicant is Mechanised Agricultural Supplies (PTY) LTD, a
company with limited liability duly registered and incorporated
in
accordance with the Company Laws of the Republic of South Africa,
which has its registered offices at 116 Boortrekker Street,
Greytown,
KwaZulu-Natal.
[3]
The First Respondent is The Umvoti Municipality, a Municipality duly
established in terms of the Local Government Municipal
Structures
Act, Act No.117 of 1998, of 1998 Voortrekker Street, Greytown,
KwaZulu-Natal.
[4]
The Second Respondent is 155 York Street CC,  a Close
Corporation duly registered and incorporated in accordance with the

Close Corporation Act No.69 of 1984, which has its registered office
and principal place of business at 40 Tenna Terrance, Reservoir

Hills, KwaZulu-Natal and conducts business at 117 Voortrekker Street,
Greytown.
[5](a)
The Applicants seek an interim order pending a review of the decision
of the First Respondent to approve certain building
plans in respect
of renovations and alterations to the immovable property of the
Second Respondent situated at 117 Pine Street,
Greytown,
KwaZulu-Natal.
(b)
That the First Respondent is hereby directed not to issue a
completion and/or occupation certificate to the Second Respondent
in
terms of Section 14(1) of the National Building Regulations and
Building Standards Act No.103 of 1977 prior to the Second Respondent

having complied with the Greytown Town Planning Scheme.
(c) That the Second
Respondent be and is hereby directed not to allow any tenant to
occupy the premises situated at 117 Pine Street,
Greytown,
KwaZulu-Natal, prior to the approval of the building plans by the
First Respondent.
(d)
That the Second Respondent be ordered to pay Application costs.
[6]
The First Respondent initially filed a Notice to Abide by the
decision of the Court on the 13
th
of March 2013. Later, it consented to the granting of the order in
terms of paragraph 2(a) and 2(b) of the Notice of Motion as
per email
dated the 14
th
of March 2013.
[7]
The Second Respondent is opposing the relief sought by the
Applicants.
SUMMARY
OF THE FACTS
[8]
The First Applicant conducts a business, a B.P Filling Station, a
Toyota Motor Vehicle dealership, a General Motors Vehicle
dealership
and a John Deere Tractor dealership.
[9]
The Second Applicant is the owner of the immovable property where the
First Applicant conducts its business.
The
Second Respondent is the owner of the immovable property, adjoining
the property of the First Applicant where the Second Respondent

conducts business.
[10]
The commercial properties fall within the jurisdiction of the First
Respondent.
[11]
The Applicants had noticed that there were renovations being carried
out in the Second Respondent’s property.  They
then
commissioned Corpolo ITS CC, trading as Greene Land, being
development consultants to investigate the lawfulness of the building

works being conducted in the Second Respondent’s property.
[12]
Section 40 of Ordinance 27 of 1949 states that the purpose of the
Town Planning Scheme to provide:

A
co-ordinated and harmonious development of the local authority area
or any area or areas situate thereon…in such a way
as will
most effectively tend to promote health, safety, order, amenity,
convenience and general welfare as well as efficiency
and economy in
the process of development...”
[13]
The Applicant state that such a Town Planning Scheme is binding on a
municipality, all other persons and organs of the State,
except in
certain circumstances.  The First Respondent is therefore
governed by the terms of its Greytown Town Planning Scheme
which was
adopted on the 14
th
of September 1954.  In this case the Applicants are stating that
the Respondents have not complied with the terms of the Town
Planning
Scheme in so far as it relates to the renovations and/or improvements
that are taking place at the Second Respondent’s
premises.
[14]
Briefly, the Second Respondent’s defence is that they had
submitted the plans to the First Respondent, whose Town Planning

Department approved them.  They had submitted the plans for
approval prior to commencing the building or making extensions
to the
commercial property.
EVALUATION
OF THE EVIDENCE
15.1
The
locus standi
of the Applicants to bring this application is not disputed. It is
also common cause that the Greytown Town Planning Scheme governs
and
is applicable to the commercial properties.
15.2
It is submitted that the Respondents have acted illegally in that the
building plans do not conform to the purpose for which
the scheme was
adopted.  The plans submitted by the Second Respondent to the
First Respondent are in direct conflict with
the scheme, as they do
not provide on-site parking.  This would impact negatively on
the business of the Applicants and other
businesses in the CBD.
This would impact on the accessibility to their business interests,
as this new building will increase
traffic and congestion in the
area.
15.3
It is further contended by the Applicants that the Second
Respondent’s plans do not comply with the National Building

Regulation and Standards Act and the Greytown Town Planning Scheme.
15.4
The Second Respondent’s property is zoned, a general commercial
zone in terms of the Greytown Town Planning Scheme. The
scheme
prescribes that parking shall be provided by the owner of the
immovable property being one off-street parking bays for every
23
square metres of gross shop area. The Second Respondent is supposedly
should have provided for 19 off parking bays. It is also
submitted
that the Second Respondent is unable to provide for such parking as
is there no space left for such a purpose in his
premises.
15.5
However, the Town Planning Scheme is not inflexible – it states
that in the event of the Second Respondent not being
able to provide
on-site parking, the Second Respondent shall contribute to a parking
fund by way of a cash payment in lieue of
the provision of on-site
parking. This aspect is considered at the time of the approval of the
plans.
15.6
Such payment was not made by the Second Respondent to the First
Respondent. The First Respondent appears not to have applied
their
minds to these provisions when they approved the Second Respondents
plans. The Applicants had called upon the First Respondent
to remedy
the situation but it failed to take any steps to rectify the
situation. This led to the Applicants to bring this application
to
Court.
15.7
It is contended by the Applicants that the Respondents acted
illegally and that if this situation is not remedied this would
cause
huge congestion on the on-street parking in the vicinity and this
will affect the business of the Applicant and will devalue
their
properties.
15.8
The Applicants addressed a letter to the Municipal Manager on the 7
th
of December 2012, a meeting with the Municipal Manager also
followed.  A further meeting with Mr Shaik took place also on

the 22
nd
of January 2013 regarding the building on the Second Respondent’s
property.  Again on the 29
th
of January 2013, a letter was addressed to the Municipal Manager.
The situation remained unresolved, despite the Applicant’s

efforts to engage with the First Respondent in particular.
16.1
The Respondent’s case is that the Applicants have not come to
Court with clean hands, even though they concede, that
there was an
irregularity in the non-compliance with the Town Planning Scheme.
16.2
They submit that the plans to the extensions of the building were
approved by the First Respondent.
16.3
Had they been aware of the requirements of the Scheme, they would
have complied with same and they have been offered an opportunity
to
do so by the First Respondent.
16.4
The Second Respondent further submits that should the Applicant be
offered the relief they seek, they will be prejudiced, in
that the
Second Respondent had already secured a tenant, Ackermans, for their
premises; whose clients do not need the parking bays
and this will
not prejudice the Applicants.
APPLICATION
OF LAW
[17]
Though the Second Respondent contends that this is not a class action
and there is no prejudice to other business interests
in the area.
The Court accepts the views of Plasket AJA in
JDJ
Properties CC and Another v Umngeni Local
Municipality
and Another
[1]
that a land owner has sufficient interest to clothe him with
locus
standi
in this matter. The facts of that case are almost similar to the
facts of this application. They have a right to enforce the scheme

and this gives them the required
locus
standi
.
[18]
It is also trite that the Courts cannot enforce illegal acts by the
Municipality. The rule of law must be upheld irrespective
of the
ineptitude or the failure of the Municipality to apply the Town
Planning Scheme and to adhere to the National Building Regulations.
[19]
The First Respondent, the Municipality, has consented to the setting
aside of the building plans and not granting the occupancy

certificate to the new tenant.
[20]
The Second Respondent’s acceptance that there is an illegality
in the actions of the First Respondent has changed the
entire
complexion of the case. The Second Respondent has indicated its
intention of applying for the relaxation of the Town Planning
Rules
and offering to make a contribution to the parking fund.
However, this does not cure the illegal action. With this
concession,
the defences raised by the Second Respondent fall away. I am
persuaded to accept that the actions of the First Respondent
were
illegal and against the rule of law. As stated in the JDJ case,
Courts are prohibited from sanctioning the illegal actions
of
Municipality. The application succeeds.
[21]
I therefore make the following order:
(a)
That the decision by the First Respondent to approve the building
plans in respect of renovations and/or alterations to the
immovable
property of the Second Respondent situated at 117 Pine Street,
Greytown, KwaZulu-Natal be and is hereby reviewed and
set aside.
(b)
The First Respondent be and is hereby directed not to issue a
completion and/or occupation certificate to the Second Respondent
in
terms of Section 14(1) of the National Building Regulations and
Building Standards Act No. 103 of 1977 prior to the Second Respondent

having complied with the Greytown Town Planning Scheme.
(c)
That the Second Respondent be and is hereby directed to forthwith
cease any alterations, electrical installations and/or any
building
works of whatever nature to the premises situated at 117 Pine Street,
Greytown, KwaZulu-Natal until it has complied with
the Greytown Town
Planning Scheme.
(d)
That the Second Respondent be and is hereby directed not to allow any
tenant to occupy the premises situated at 117 Pine Street,
Greytown,
KwaZulu-Natal, prior to the approval of the building plans by the
First Respondent.
COSTS:
(e)
I have reserved the issue of costs, as I want the First Respondent to
address this Court in the light of the evidence before
this Court,
why it should not bear the costs of the Application.  The issue
for costs is therefore adjourned to a date to
be arranged with the
Registrar, for argument on cost.
MBATHA
J
Date
of hearing: 26 March 2013
Date
of judgment: 12 April 2013
Counsel
for the Applicants: Adv Roberts SC
Instructed
by: Venn Nemeth & Hart Inc
281
Pietermaritz Street
PIETERMARITZBURG
First
Respondent’s Attorney: Garlicke & Bousfield Inc
7
Torsvale Crescent
LA
LUCIA
c/o
Ngcobo Poyo & Diedricks Inc
PIETERMARITZBURG
Counsel
for the 2
nd
Defendant: Mr A.S Seedat
Instructed
by: Shaheen Seedat & Company
10/12
First Floor, C.N.R House
Prince
Edward Street
DURBAN
[1]
2003
JOL 29814
(SCA).