Swartland Kelder (Pty) Ltd v Wine and Spirit Board and Others (6915/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 488 (24 October 2025)

58 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Administrative law — Review of administrative decisions — Application to review decisions approving wine labels under the Wine of Origin Scheme — Applicant, a registered trademark owner, challenged approvals on grounds of non-compliance with statutory requirements — Legal standing of applicant questioned — Mootness of dispute considered due to subsequent amendment of relevant provisions — Court held that the Wine and Spirit Board was only empowered to approve labels if the wine of origin expression appeared next to each instance of the production area indicated on the label — Decisions to approve specific wine labels reviewed and set aside, with costs awarded to the applicant.

Comprehensive Summary

Case Note


Swartland Kelder (Pty) Ltd v Wine and Spirit Board and Others (Case no 6915/2024); [2025] ZAWCHC — High Court of South Africa, Western Cape Division, Cape Town (24 October 2025)


Coram: Nuku J


Heard: 27 August 2025


Delivered: 24 October 2025


Reportability


The judgment is marked as not reportable. Nevertheless, it is of practical and doctrinal importance in several respects, particularly in the field of administrative law and statutory interpretation as applied to regulatory schemes governing agricultural products and consumer labelling. It clarifies the interpretation of the Wine of Origin Scheme prior to its 2025 amendment and the limits of administrative power under section 23(3) of the Scheme.


The judgment is also significant for its treatment of mootness in circumstances where a statutory scheme has been amended after the impugned decision but before judgment. The Court reaffirms the presumption against retrospectivity and underscores that the legality of administrative action must be assessed against the law as it stood at the time of the decision.


Further, the decision contributes to the jurisprudence on delay under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA). It confirms that for purposes of PAJA’s 180-day rule, the conclusion of an internal appeal process occurs when the decision is communicated to the affected party, not when it is made. This principle, coupled with the Court’s approach to locus standi for trademark proprietors affected by regulatory approvals, has practical implications for litigants navigating sectoral regulatory regimes.


Cases Cited


Mncwabe v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others; Mathenjwa v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others 2023 (11) BCLR 1342 (CC)


Legislation Cited


Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989


Liquor Products Amendment Act 8 of 2001


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 34


Regulations promulgated under the Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989 (including regulation 33(1) and Table 3)


Wine of Origin Scheme made under section 14(1) of the Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989 (as it read prior to the amendment published by GN R.6003 in Government Gazette 52342 of 20 March 2025)


Rules of Court Cited


None expressly cited


HEADNOTE


Summary


This application concerned the review and setting aside of decisions approving wine labels under the Wine of Origin Scheme established in terms of section 14(1) of the Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989. The central interpretive question was whether, under section 23(3) read with section 24 of the pre‑amendment Scheme, the Wine and Spirit Board (Board) could lawfully approve labels where the geographical production area (e.g. “Swartland”) appeared multiple times, but the “Wine of Origin”/“W.O”/“Wyn van Oorsprong” expression appeared only once elsewhere on the label.


The applicant, the proprietor of the registered trade mark SWARTLAND in class 33, contended that this contravened the Scheme because, subject to section 11(6) of the Act, the wine of origin expression had to appear immediately with each instance of the defined geographical name wherever it appeared on the label. It sought review of three approvals and of the Appeal Board’s dismissal of its internal appeal as out of time, together with a declarator on the proper interpretation of the Scheme, and substitution.


The Authority opposed on the grounds of mootness (given the 2025 amendment to section 23 and the annual nature of label approvals), lack of standing, undue delay, and on the merits of the interpretation. The Court rejected each preliminary point, upheld the applicant’s interpretation, reviewed and set aside the approvals and the appeal dismissal, granted declaratory relief, and declined substitution. Costs were awarded against the Authority on scale C for two counsel.


Key Issues


The first issue was whether the matter was moot, either because of the 2025 amendment to section 23 of the Scheme—which now permits the wine of origin expression to appear only once even if the production area appears multiple times—or because the winemakers would submit new approval applications annually. The Court held that the impugned decisions persisted in fact and law and had to be tested under the law as it stood at the time, thus the dispute remained live.


The second issue was locus standi. The Authority argued the applicant had no legal interest affected by the approvals. The Court held that the applicant’s registered trade mark could be diluted by approvals authorising use of “Swartland” without the accompanying wine of origin expression, and that this sufficed for direct and substantial interest, bolstered by section 34 of the Constitution.


The third issue concerned delay under section 7(1) of PAJA. The Authority claimed the 180-day period ran from the date of the Appeal Board decision, not its communication. The Court found that an internal appeal is “concluded” when communicated to the affected party, applying the Constitutional Court’s approach in Mncwabe. The application, served within 180 days of communication, was timeous.


Held


Held, on the interpretation of section 23(3) of the pre‑amendment Scheme, that the Board could approve a label only if each of the three independent requirements in section 23(3)(a)–(c) was met, and that compliance with section 24 (as required by section 23(3)(b)) demanded that the wine of origin expression appear immediately above, below or next to every instance of the defined geographical name wherever it appeared on the label, subject to section 11(6) of the Act.


Held, further, that the Authority’s reliance on section 23(4) to dilute the per‑instance requirement embedded in section 24 was misconceived, because section 23(3)(b) and section 23(3)(c) set discrete criteria. The 2025 insertion of section 23(4)(j), which now permits a once‑only appearance of the wine of origin expression, confirmed by contrast that this was not the legal position beforehand.


Held, moreover, that the matter was not moot, that the applicant had standing, and that the review was instituted within PAJA’s 180-day period because finality of the internal appeal attaches on communication to the affected party. The three label approvals and the Appeal Board’s dismissal of the appeal were reviewed and set aside. A declarator clarifying the pre‑amendment position was granted. Substitution was refused as unnecessary. Costs were awarded against the Authority, including two counsel on scale C.


THE FACTS


The applicant, Swartland Kelder (Pty) Ltd, is the proprietor of the registered trade mark SWARTLAND in class 33, encompassing wine. The regulatory landscape for wine labelling is governed by the Wine of Origin Scheme made under section 14(1) of the Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989. Section 11 of the Act prohibits the sale of liquor products unless prescribed particulars appear on labels in the prescribed manner. Sections 23 and 24 of the pre‑amendment Scheme, read with the Regulations (notably regulation 33(1) and Table 3), set out the content and manner of label indications, including origin claims.


Historically, the first respondent, the Wine and Spirit Board, approved labels under the Scheme. Following the Liquor Products Amendment Act 8 of 2001 and institutional changes effective in August 2023, the Wine Certification Authority took over the Board’s functions for label approvals. The present dispute concerns approvals granted by the Board in October 2021 of three labels that displayed “Swartland” as an origin area without the wine of origin expression immediately adjacent to each instance of “Swartland”: labels for Marelise Niemann Wines (“CAPE GARDEN 2020 SWARTLAND CHENIN BLANC”) and Trizanne Signature Wines (“DAWN PATROL CHENIN BLANC | 2021 SWARTLAND” and “DAWN PATROL CINSAULT ROSÉ | 2021 SWARTLAND”).


The applicant objected after discovering that approvals had issued notwithstanding what it contended was non‑compliance with section 24(2) and (6) of the Scheme. The Board defended its approach by invoking its interpretation of section 23(3)(c) read with section 23(4) and section 24, asserting that, provided the wine of origin expression appeared once in the same visual field as mandatory particulars, the origin area name could appear elsewhere on the label without the expression. The applicant prosecuted an internal appeal under section 22 of the Act. The Appeal Board (second respondent) dismissed the appeal as out of time.


The applicant launched review proceedings seeking to set aside the October 2021 approvals and the Appeal Board’s dismissal, obtain a declarator on the proper interpretation of the pre‑amendment Scheme, and, in the alternative, substitution refusing the approvals. Only the Authority opposed, contending mootness in light of the 2025 amendment to section 23 that now permits a once‑only wine of origin expression, lack of standing, undue delay under PAJA, and correctness of the Board’s interpretation on the merits.


THE ISSUES


The Court was required to determine, first, whether the matter had become moot because section 23 was amended in March 2025 to allow the wine of origin expression to appear only once where the origin area name appears multiple times, and also because new labels are approved annually. The question was whether the legality of the 2021 approvals still presented a live controversy.


Second, the Court had to decide whether the applicant had locus standi. The Authority argued that the approvals did not adversely impact any rights of the applicant, particularly where one producer had not printed the labels and another’s labels were for export. The Court had to assess whether the applicant’s interest as the owner of the SWARTLAND trade mark in class 33 sufficed to confer standing to challenge approvals that, it claimed, infringed or diluted the distinctive use of the term “Swartland” absent the wine of origin expression, subject to section 11(6) of the Act.


Third, the Court considered delay under section 7(1) of PAJA. The Authority argued that the 180-day period ran from the date the Appeal Board decided the internal appeal (11 September 2023), rendering the review late. The applicant maintained that the 180-day clock began on communication of that decision (10–12 October 2023), making service on 8 April 2024 timely. An ancillary issue concerned service initially effected on the dissolved Board via the Authority’s executive manager, followed by the Authority’s later joinder.


Finally, on the merits, the Court had to interpret the pre‑amendment Scheme: whether section 23(3), read contextually with section 24(2) and (6), empowered the Board to approve labels where the wine of origin expression appears only once, or whether, as the applicant argued, the expression had to appear immediately above, below or next to every instance of the defined geographical name wherever it appears on the label, subject to the statutory exception in section 11(6) of the Act.


ANALYSIS


On mootness, the Court held that the impugned approvals remained extant as facts and as legal acts. The legality inquiry had to be conducted against the legal framework in force when the decisions were made. The 2025 amendment to section 23 could not retrospectively validate or invalidate decisions taken in 2021, given the presumption against retrospective operation of legislation. The separate contention that the annual nature of label approvals rendered the dispute academic was rejected: new approvals would not cure or moot the lawfulness of the extant approvals under review.


On standing, the Court emphasised that the applicant approached the Court on the basis of its own legal interest as the proprietor of a registered trade mark, which could be diluted by administrative approvals allowing the use of “Swartland” without the required wine of origin expression. Without the Board’s approval, it would be unlawful for producers to use the geographical name in that manner. That sufficed for a direct and substantial interest in having the lawfulness of the approvals adjudicated. Section 34 of the Constitution underpinned the applicant’s right of access to court to protect its property interests, and the Authority’s narrow approach to standing was rejected.


On delay, the Court held that section 7(1)(a) of PAJA governed because an internal remedy was pursued, and that the 180-day period runs from the conclusion of the internal remedy upon communication of the decision to the affected party. Relying on the majority in Mncwabe, the Court reaffirmed that communication is central to finality. The Appeal Board’s decision was communicated on or about 10–12 October 2023, and the application issued and served on 8 April 2024 was therefore within the 180-day period. The Authority’s further point that initial service cited the dissolved Board rather than the Authority was given little weight: the Authority’s executive manager accepted service, the papers were in the Authority’s possession, and subsequent formal joinder on 23 August 2024 did not transform a timeous review into an out‑of‑time one.


Turning to the merits, the Court adopted a textual, contextual and purposive interpretation. Section 23(3) of the pre‑amendment Scheme established three separate approval gateways: section 23(3)(a) required compliance with the Act; section 23(3)(b) required compliance with section 24 of the Scheme; and section 23(3)(c) imported the additional constraints in section 23(4) on “any other word, expression, illustration or depiction.” These are discrete, cumulative requirements and compliance with one does not dilute the others. Section 24(2) required indication of the defined geographical name together with the wine of origin expression, and section 24(6) prescribed the manner of display, including adjacency and legibility requirements, within the same visual field as regulation 33(1) particulars.


Against the Scheme’s objects—to verify origin claims and promote confidence in them—the Court held that permitting multiple instances of the origin area name without the per‑instance adjacency of the wine of origin expression would undermine those objects. The Authority’s attempt to justify a “once‑only” expression by reference to section 23(4) was unsustainable because section 23(4) addressed other wording and depictions, not the specific origin‑indication requirements governed by section 24. The 2025 insertion of section 23(4)(j), explicitly allowing a once‑only wine of origin expression, confirmed that the pre‑amendment text did not previously permit that approach; the amendment changed the law rather than clarified an existing permission.


Accordingly, labels that displayed “Swartland” multiple times without an immediately adjacent wine of origin expression in each instance failed to comply with section 24. The Board therefore acted ultra vires in approving the labels, and the Appeal Board’s dismissal fell with the approvals. While the applicant sought substitution, the Court declined to substitute refusals because setting aside the approvals sufficed to deprive the producers of authorisation; there was no evident utility in remittal or substitution given the passage of time and the routine annual submission of labels for new harvests.


REMEDY


The Court granted a declarator that, under the pre‑amendment Wine of Origin Scheme (prior to GN R.6003 in Government Gazette 52342 of 20 March 2025), the Board and the Authority were only empowered to approve a wine label if the expression or abbreviation “W.O” / “WINE OF ORIGIN” / “WYN VAN OORSPRONG” appears next to each and every instance on the label where the production area is indicated, subject to section 11(6) of the Act.


The Court reviewed and set aside the Board’s decisions communicated on 10 November 2021 approving the following labels: Marelise Niemann Wines’ “CAPE GARDEN 2020 SWARTLAND CHENIN BLANC,” and Trizanne Signature Wines’ “DAWN PATROL CINSAULT ROSÉ | 2021 SWARTLAND” and “DAWN PATROL CHENIN BLANC | 2021 SWARTLAND.” It also reviewed and set aside the Appeal Board’s decision communicated on 12 October 2023 dismissing the section 22 appeal.


Substitution was refused as unnecessary in the circumstances. Costs were awarded against the Authority (fifth respondent), including the costs of two counsel on scale C, the Court finding the matter sufficiently complex to warrant senior and junior counsel.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


First, on mootness and temporal application, the Court reaffirmed the presumption against retrospectivity. The lawfulness of an administrative decision is assessed under the legal framework in force at the time of the decision. Subsequent amendments—here, the 2025 insertion of section 23(4)(j) into the Scheme—do not retroactively alter the legality of past decisions. The mere prospect of future, separate approvals does not render a challenge to extant approvals academic.


Second, on locus standi, a registered trade mark proprietor has a direct and substantial interest in challenging administrative approvals that authorise uses capable of diluting the trade mark’s distinctiveness or interfering with the statutory scheme’s protective function. Section 34 of the Constitution guarantees access to courts to protect such property interests. Sectoral approval regimes cannot be insulated from judicial review where they bear on private rights and the lawfulness of administrative action.


Third, on delay under PAJA, the 180-day period in section 7(1)(a) where internal remedies exist runs from the date on which the internal appeal is communicated to the affected party. Communication to the litigant is “central to the finality” of the decision, consistent with the Constitutional Court’s reasoning in Mncwabe. Service defects or misnomers that do not prejudice the administrator—especially where the decision-maker’s successor has the papers—do not convert a timely review into an out‑of‑time application.


Fourth, on statutory interpretation, section 23(3) of the pre‑amendment Scheme sets out three cumulative and discrete approval criteria. Compliance with section 24’s specific origin‑indication rules cannot be diluted by more general considerations under section 23(4). The text, context, and purpose of section 24(2) and (6) required that the wine of origin expression appear immediately above, below, or next to each instance of the defined geographical name wherever it appears on the label, subject to the exception in section 11(6) of the Act (addressing circumstances such as registered trade marks). The 2025 amendment allowing a once‑only expression is a substantive change rather than a codification of prior law.


Finally, the decision underscores the limits of administrative power in specialised regulatory contexts. Administrators must apply each independent statutory requirement; failure to satisfy any standalone criterion renders the approval ultra vires and susceptible to review and setting aside under PAJA.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)

JUDGMENT

Not Reportable
Case no: 6915/2024

In the matter between:
SWARTLAND KELDER (PTY) LTD APPLICANT
and
WINE AND SPIRIT BOARD
APPEAL BOARD
MARELISE NIEMANN WINES
TRIZANNE SIGNATURE WINES
WINE CERTIFICATION AUTHORITY
MINISTER OF AGRICULTURE
FIRST RESPONDENT
SECOND RESPONDENT
THIRD RESPONDENT
FOURTH RESPONDET
FIFTH RESPONDENT
SIXTH RESPONDENT

Neutral citation: Swartland Kelder (Pty) Ltd v Wine and Spirit Board and Others
(Case no 6915/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC … (24 October 2025)
Coram: NUKU J
Heard: 27 August 2025

Delivered: 24 October 2025
Summary: Administrative law – application to review and set aside decisions
approving wine labels under the Wine of Origin Scheme (the Scheme) established
by the Minister of Agriculture in accordance with s 14(1) of the Liquor Products
Act 60 of 1989 (LPA).

Declaratory relief - Mootness – whether the amendment of the provisions of s 23
of the Scheme made the dispute about the interpretation of that section moot, even
though the decisions being challenged were made before the amendment.

Locus standi – whether a registered trademark owner has standing to challenge a
decision to approve a wine label that may inf ringe on rights granted under Trade
Marks law.

Delay – whether the conclusion of an internal appeal occurs when the decision is
made or when it is communicated to the affected party.

Statutory Interpretation – whether the provisions of s 23(3) of the Scheme
empowered the Wine and Spirit Board, established in terms of s 2 of the LPA, to
approve a wine label only if the expression or abbreviation “ W.O” / “WINE OF
ORIGIN” / “ WYN VAN OORSPRONG ” appears next to each and every
instance on the label where the area of production of the wine is indicated, subject
to the provisions of section 11(6) of the Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989 (“the
Act”).


ORDER

It is ordered that:
(a) the first respondent and fifth respondent are only empowered in terms of the
Wine of Origin Scheme (prior to its amendment in terms of R.6003 in GG
52342 of 20 March 2025) to approve a wine label if the expression or
abbreviation “ W.O” / “WINE OF ORIGIN ” / “ WYN VAN
OORSPRONG” appears next to each and every instance on the label where
the area of production of the wine is indicated, subject to the provisions of
section 11(6) of the Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989 (“the Act”).

(b) The first respondent’s decisio ns, communicated to the applicant on 10
November 2021, to approve the following wine labels in terms of the Wine
of Origin Scheme under the Act, are reviewed and set aside:

(i) the third respondent’s “CAPE GARDEN 2020 SWARTLAND
CHENIN BLANC” label;

(ii) the fourth respondent’s “DAWN PATROL C INSAULT ROSÉ | 2021
SWARTLAND” label; and

(iii) the fourth respondent’s “DAWN PATROL CHENIN BLANC | 2021
SWARTLAND” label.

(c) The second respondent’s decision, communicated to the applicant on 12
October 2023, to dismiss the applicant’s appeal lodged in terms of section 22
of the Act against the first respondent’s decisions referred to in paragraph
(b) is reviewed and set aside;

(d) The fifth respondent is to pay the applicant’s costs, including the costs of
two counsel on scale C.
______________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT

_____________________________________________________________________

Nuku J
Introduction and factual background
[1] The controversy in this case centres on wine labelling. Wine labelling is
regulated under the Wine of Origin Scheme ( the Scheme ), which the fifth
respondent, the Minister of Agriculture (Minister), established under section 14(1)
of the Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989 (LPA).

[2] The first respondent, the Wine and Spirit Board (the Board), was previously
responsible for approving wine labels under the Scheme. This remained the case
until the LPA was amended by the Liquor Products Amendment Act 8 of 2001
(the Amendment Act), which led to the creation of the fifth respondent, the Wine
Certification Authority ( the Authority), in August 2023. The Authority now
handles wine label approvals and has taken over the Board's role, as the Board
made the decisions that feature in this litigation.

[3] The origin of the requirement for regulating wine labels can be traced back
to s 11(1) of the LPA, which prohibits the sale of liquor products in a container
unless certain prescribed particulars are indicated on the label in th e prescribed
manner. The general requirements for the prescribed particulars to be shown on

wine container labels are outlined in Part 2 of the Regulations promulgated under
the LPA (Regulations), as well as sections 23 and 24 of the Scheme.

[4] The objects of the Scheme include verifying the accuracy of certain claims
related to the wine's origin and instilling confidence in such claims. To achieve
these objects, s 24(2) of the Scheme requires wine labels to specify the geographic
area from where the wine originates, along with the phrase or abbreviation ‘W.O/
WINE OF ORIGIN / WYN VAN OORSPRONG’ ( the wine of origin
expression).

[5] Section 24(6) explains how the details specified under s 24(2) must appear
on the labels, with subsection 24(6)(a) stating t hat these details must be displayed
on one or more labels permanently affixed to the relevant container within the
same visual field as the details mentioned in regulation 33(1) of the Regulations.

[6] Swartland is one of the wine -producing regions. When a wi ne producer
wants to indicate that their wine is from Swartland, they can include Swartland on
the label along with the wine of origin expression displayed in the manner
prescribed by subsection 24(6)(a).

[7] There is a narrow exception for the applicant that allows the use of
Swartland on wine labels without the wine of origin expression, in certain
circumstances, because the applicant owns the registered trademark
SWARTLAND in class 33 for products including wine.

[8] To comply with section 24(2) and (6), wine producers planning to sell their
wine in containers, and who are subject to the Scheme, must submit their labels for
approval by the Authority before attaching them to the containers. Before the
amendment o f the LPA mentioned above, applications were submitted to the
Board.

[9] At some point, the applicant realized that the Board had approved wine
labels that did not comply with the provisions of the Scheme and the LPA. Its legal
representatives addressed the i ssue with the South African Wine Industry
Information and Systems ( SAWIS), which the Board had contracted to handle
some of its daily operations.

[10] The Board responded, disputing that it had approved wine labels that did not
comply with the provisions of th e Scheme and the LPA. It referenced s 23 of the
Scheme, which it claimed ‘… allows for the use on a label of the appropriate name
of an origin area without the expression “Wine of Origin” or “W/O” as long as
such name and such expression are also used on a label within the same field of
vision as any other mandatory particulars, both in terms of the Wine of Origin
scheme and in terms of the Regulations.’ In a subsequent letter, the Board clarified
that its position was based on its interpretation of s 23(3) (c) read with s 23(4)(c)
and s 24(1)(c) of the Scheme.

[11] On 10 November 2021 , at the request of the applicant, the Board provided
copies of three labels it had approved in October 2021. One of them was in respect
of the third respondent’s “Momento GRENACHE NOIR SWARTLAND 2020 ”.
The remaining two were in respect of the fourth respondent’s “DAWN PATROL

CHENIN BLANC | 2021 SWARTLAND” and “DAWN PATROL CINSAULT ROSÉ |
2021 SWARTLAND”.


[12] Noting that the three labels were approved despite the lack of the wine of
origin expression next to Swartland, the applicant appealed the decision to approve
these labels under s 22 of the LPA (s 22 Appeal ). The second respondent
dismissed the s 22 Appeal, stating that the applicant had filed its appeal outside the
prescribed timeframes.

[13] The applicant turned to this Court seeking the review and setting aside of the
decisions to approve the three wine labels mentioned above, as well as the second
respondent’s decision to dismiss its appeal (the review relief ). The applicant also
seeks an order substituting these decisions with an order refusing to approve the
third and fourth respondents’ wine labels (the substitution relief).

[14] Noting that the main point of disagreement with the Board was whether it is
permissible to use the name of the production area, in this case Swartland, without
referencing the wine of origin expression when the name of the production area
appears multiple times on a label, the applicant also seeks a declaratory order that
the Board was only authorized, under the Scheme, to approve a wine label if the
wine of origin expression appears directly above, below, or next to each instance
where the name of the production area of the wine is indicated, subject to the
provisions of s 11(6) of the LPA (the declaratory relief).

[15] Only the authority opposes the application, and it does so on various
grounds. The first ground of opposition, which was only raised in the Au thority’s
heads of argument, is that the application has become moot because (a) the
Minister has amended s 23 of the Scheme by inserting a provision stating that,
where the name of the production area of wine appears multiple times on a label, it
is sufficient if the wine of origin expression appears once, and (b) the winemakers
submit new applications for approval of labels for each new annual harvest.


[16] The second ground of opposition is that the applicant lacks the legal
standing to bring these proceedings. This is because (a) the decision to approve the
third and fourth respondents’ wine labels did not negatively impact the applicant’s
rights, (b) the fourth respondent did not proceed to print any copies of the approved
wine labels, (c) the third resp ondent’s wines with the approved labels can only be
exported since the third respondent is registered as an exporter of wine rather than
a wine trader, (d) the applicant did not claim to have experienced any prejudice due
to the approval of the wine labels , and (e) the approved labels complied with the
applicable provisions of the LPA, Regulations, and the Scheme.


[17] The third ground of opposition is that the applicant delayed in bringing the
review application. The allegation is that the applicant should have brought the
review within 180 days from the date the appeal was concluded, which is 11
September 2023. Instead, the applicant brought the appeal on 8 April 2024, which
is outside of the statutory prescribed timeframe of 180 days. To compound the
delay, it was also asserted that the applicant effectively brought the review on 23
August 2024 after the joinder of the Authority as a party to the application.

[18] Finally, the fourth grou nd of opposition on the merits concerns the
interpretation of the relevant provisions of the Scheme, specifically whether the
Scheme authorised the Board to approve the use of the wine of origin expression
only once when the name of the production area appears multiple times on a wine
label. I will address each of these grounds of opposition below, starting with the
issue of mootness.

Mootness
[19] The Board derived its authority to approve wine labels from s 23 of the
Scheme, and of relevance to this application are subsections ( 1) and ( 3), which
read as follows at the relevant time:

‘(1) No person shall affix a label to a container of wine intended for certification unless the
board has approved such label for use in connection with the wine concerned.

(2)…

(3) Such application shall be approved only if the board is of the opinion that-

(a) the applicable particulars required by the Act are indicated on the labels
concerned in the manner required by the Act;

(b) the applicable particulars referred to in section 24 of this Scheme are indicated on
the labels concerned in the manner required in that section; and

(c) any other word, expression, illustration or depiction on the labels concerned
complies with the requirements set out in subsection (4).’

[20] In its amended form, s 23 of the Scheme now has a new provision
(subsection (4)(J)) which reads as follows: ‘It may, if the particulars required in
terms of regulation 24(2) have been indicated on ce as set out in regulation 24(6),
be the name of the geogra phical unit, region, district or ward concerned, with or
without the expression “wine of origin” or “wyn van oorsprong ” or the
abbreviation "W.O”’.

[21] As mentioned earlier, s 24(2) of the Scheme outlines the details that must be
indicated on the wine labels, with s 24(6) specifying how these should be
displayed. These provisions, in the relevant parts, read:

‘(2)(a) The following particulars shall be indicated on the labels of the containers of a
wine of origin:

(i) the name under which the geographical unit, region, district or ward
concerned defined;

(ii) the expression “wine of origin” or “wyn van oorsprong” or the
abbreviation “W.O”…

(b) the expression or abbreviation referred to in paragraph (a)(ii) shall be indicated
immediately above or below or next to the defined name of the region, district, or
ward concerned. …

6 Subject to the provisions of subsection (7) , the particulars that must be indicated in terms
of subsection (2) must be –

(a) indicated on one or more labels permanently attached to the relevant container within
the same field of vision as the particulars stated in regulation 33(1) of the Regulations
issued under this Act;

(b) clearly distinguishable from any other particulars, illustrations or representations on
the relevant label;

(c) indicated in letters-

(i) which are the same colour, type and size in each particular instance;

(ii) which appear on a uniform and clearly contrasted background;

(iii) which are clearly legible;

(iv) which are permanently printed; and

(v) of which the minimum vertical height, depending on the capacity of the
container concerned, must be as specified in column 2, 3 or 4 of Table 3
opposite that particular detail.’

[22] The amendment of s 23 of the Scheme was part of the amendments
published in the Government Gazette number GG52432 of 20 March 2025, after
all the documents had been filed. The result is that the amendment was not
discussed in the papers.

[23] I did not, howeve r, understand the Authority to be suggesting that the
decisions made by the Board before the amendment of s 23 would be affected by
the amendment. If that was the argument, it would undoubtedly be an
unsustainable one that is at odds with the presumption a gainst retrospective
amendment legislation.

[24] The Authority's argument was not well expressed, making it difficult to
follow. In one sentence, it was claimed that declaratory relief is moot because the
challenge to the Board's decisions does not involve ‘an existing or living
controversy’. The confusing part is why the declaratory relief should be dismissed
if the challenge to the Board’s decisions no longer presents a live controversy,
rather than the review relief.

[25] However, the argument that challenging the Board’s decisions does not
involve an existing controversy is factually incorrect because the Board’s decisions
exist both in fact and law. This, on its own, answers the mootness question
regarding the review relief and should resolve the debate on whether the
application should be dismissed on the grounds of mootness.

[26] To the extent that the Authority’s argument was that t here is no point in the
declaratory relief due to the amendment of s 23 of the Scheme, while there may be
some merit in that argument, the need to consider the declaratory relief arises from
its role in addressing the fundamental issue of whether the Board was competent to
act as it did.

[27] Relative to the review relief, it was submitted on behalf of the Authority that
the review relief has become moot because the third and fourth respondents will
submit new applications for wine label approval with each new annual harvest.

[28] While it is true that the third and fourth respondents will be submitting new
applications, a decision on those applications does not affect the decisions the
applicant is challenging in these proceedings.

[29] Having considered all the above, I conclude there is no merit to the
mootness point. To recap, the decisions made by the Board exist as a matter of fact
and law. The resolution of the dispute regarding the decisions to approve the labels
depends on a legal question that relates to the Board's authority to approve the
labels, and that is the central issue in the declaratory relief. I now turn to the
second ground of opposition, the legal standing issue.

Locus Standi
[30] The applicant approaches this Court based on its own interest because it is
the registered owner of the trademark SWARTLAND, which could be diluted by
the use of Swartland without the wine of origin expression on the wine labels.

[31] The Board, regarding the decisions the applicant is contesting in these
proceedings, approved the use of Swartland without the wine of origin expression
on the wine labels. However, without such approval, it would be illegal to use
Swartland on the wine labels without including the wine of origin expression.

[32] The fact that the applicant’s intellectual property may be affected by a
decision made by the Board is, in my view, sufficient to give the applicant the
necessary legal standing to have such a dispute resolved by a competent tribunal.

[33] The Authority’s challenge to the applicant’s standing, however, goes back to
the availability of the s 22 Appeal to the applicant. It argues that the s 22 Appeal is
not available to the applicant because the applicant’s interests did not exist when
the Board made the decisions.

[34] The Board raised the same argument in the s 22 Appeal, and the second
respondent dismissed it. I should also note that the applicant’s right to seek relief
from a competent tribunal to protect its rights comes from the Bill of Rights,
especially s 34 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 ( the
Constitution). To suggest tha t there is nothing the applicant can do when faced
with a decision by an administrator that could affect its property is hard to
understand.

[35] In any case, whether the s 22 Appeal is available to the applicant or not is
not necessary to determine because t he applicant is seeking a review, not a s 22
appeal, in this Court. What is relevant to establish legal standing is whether the
applicant has an interest worth protecting in the proceedings involved. In my view,
the applicant has established the necessary standing to bring these proceedings, and
the locus standi ground of opposition has no merit. The next topic I deal with
relates to the delay.

Delay
[36] The second respondent's decision regarding the s 22 Appeal, dated 11
September 2023, was received by the applicant almost a month later, on 10
October 2023. The application was issued on 8 April 2024 and personally served
on the same date upon Mrs Olivia Poonah (Ms Poonah ), the deponent to the

Authority’s answering affidavit. Ms Poonah is the Authority’s executive manager ,
the same position she held with the Board before its dissolution.

[37] The Authority's primary complaint is that the application was ser ved on 8
April 2024, outside the 180 -day limit specified by section 7 of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 ( PAJA). This argument is based on the
Authority's position that the relevant time frame should be calculated according to
s 7(1)(a) of PAJA, rather than s 7(1)(b), as the applicant seems to have done.

[38] Section 7(1)(a) applies when there are internal remedies and states that the
180 day period begins from the date the internal remedies are concluded. Section
7(1)(b), on the othe r hand, applies when there are no internal remedies and states
that the 180 day period is calculated from the date the party concerned (a) was
informed of the administrative action, (b) became aware of the action and its
reasons, and (c) could reasonably have become aware of the action and its reasons.

[39] The applicant takes no issue with the fact that the relevant time period is the
one specified in s 7(1)(a) of PAJA and asserts that the application was instituted
timeously. This is because, contrary to the Authority's suggestion, the date when
the s 22 Appeal was finalized is not the dat e indicated on the s 22 Appeal decision
but instead the date it was communicated to the applicant.

[40] The applicant’s counsel, in this regard, referred this Court to a decision of
the Constitutional Court in Mncwabe1 where Majiedt J, writing for the majority
and after referring to several decisions of that Court and the Supreme Court of
Appeal, concluded that ‘ The law is therefore clear that communication of a
decision to an affected party is central to the finality of that decision.’

[41] The applicant’s argument has merit, and the Authority could point to no
authority supporting its argument that the finality of a decision occurs when that
decision is made, as opposed to when it is communicated to the concerned party. In
this case, the decision was communicated to the applicant on 12 October 2023, and
an application served on 8 April 2024 was therefore instituted well within the 180
days.

[42] The Authority’s secondary argument relate s to the fact that the Board had
already been dissolved when the application was served on Mrs. Poonah, and the
Board, instead of the Authority, was cited as the respondent. The argument ,
therefore, is that the application was effectively instituted agains t the Authority on
23 August 2024 when the Authority was formally joined as a respondent.

[43] The applicant’s response to this argument is that although the Authority was
formally joined as a respondent in August 2024, it had the papers in its possession
since 8 April 2024, when Mrs. Poonah accepted service on behalf of the Board.
Therefore, it was argued, Mrs. Poonah cannot complain about the late institution of
the application since she had the papers all along.

1 Mncwabe v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others; Mathenjwa v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others 2023 (11) BCLR 1342 (CC) at para [53]

[44] It is unclear to me whether the Authority advanced this argument with any
measure of seriousness. I say this because, in its heads of argument, the Authority
states that the ‘miscalculation as well as the applicant’s delay are exacerbated by
the fact that the second review application was not launched against the Authority
but against a non-existing Board.’

[45] Thus, I remain uncertain whether the point being made is that the failure to
initially join the Auth ority as a party is being presented as a proper ground for the
delay complaint, or if it is only being used as a factor to suggest that it made the
situation worse.

[46] Regardless of the point the Authority seeks to make, Mrs. Poonah cannot be
the one to complain about the delay when she had the papers from the date they
were timely issued and served, even though they cited the Board instead of the
Authority.

[47] What is more concerning is Mrs. Poonah's suggestion that the Authority
would have opposed any applic ation for condonation of the late filing if one had
been submitted. When you consider this alongside the provisions of PAJA that
allow administrators to approve late reviews to prevent the need for a formal
condonation application, the Authority’s cynicism is illogical. It could lead to
wasteful expenditure for the Authority in litigating just for the sake of litigating or
because it can afford to do so. Ultimately, there is no merit to the delay ground of

opposition. It now remains to consider the merits o f the application, starting with
the interpretation issue.

The interpretation of the relevant provisions of the Scheme, specifically
whether the Scheme authorised the Board to approve wine labels using the
wine of origin expression only once when the name of the production area
appears multiple times on a wine label

[48] Of relevance to the interpretation issue are the provisions of section 23 of the
Scheme before it was amended by adding subsection (4)(J). The applicant argues
that, in its unamended form, s 23 required the Board to consider three specific and
separate requirements before approving wine labels. These requirements are
outlined in subsections (3)(a), (b), and (c), which refer to the criteria prescribed in
(a) the LPA, (b) s 24 of the Scheme, and (c) subsection 23(4) of the Scheme.

[49] Since these requirements ar e separate and distinct, the argument is that the
Board c ould not rely on a requirement specified in subsection 23(3)(c) when
determining whether the wine labels meet the criteria outlined in subsection
23(3)(b). This is because subsection 23(3)(b) relates solely to the requirements in s
24 of the Scheme, while subsection 23(3)(c) pertains to the criteria in subsection
23(4), which are unrelated to the requirements under s 24 of the Scheme.
Furthermore, the criteria under subsection 23(3)(a), it was argued, are irrelevant to
the consideration of the criteria under subsection 23(3)(b) because the former
concerns the requirements prescribed under the LPA, whereas the latter is limited
to the criteria specified under s 24 of the Scheme.

[50] There is merit in the applicant’s argument. First, as previously mentioned,
the regulation of wine labelling is based on s 11(1) of the LPA, which prohibits the
sale of liquor products in a container unless specific required details are clearly
indicated on the label in the prescribed manner. Furthermore, under s 23(1) of the
LPA, contravening or failing to comply with the provisions of s 11(1) constitutes
an offence. According to s 23(2), a person convicted of such an offence may face a
fine of up to R8 000 or imprisonment for up to two months on a first conviction.
Therefore, in my view, subsection 23(3)(a) of the Scheme aims to ensure that the
approved wine labels do not violate the provisions of the LPA in general terms.

[51] Regarding the requirements unde r subsection 23(3)(b) of the Scheme,
recourse is only available t o s 24 of the Scheme, which explicitly addresses label
indications. In this context, subsections 24(2) and (6) of the Scheme are
particularly relevant to wine labelling that indicates the win e's origin, and I have
included these provisions in paragraph [2 1] above. These provisions outline what
information must be displayed on a wine label and how that information should be
displayed.

[52] The requirements under s 24 of the Scheme, which relate to indicating the
origin of wine, also align with the objects of the Scheme as outlined in s 3 of the
Scheme, that is, to confirm the correctness of certain indications in connection with
the origin of the wine and to create confidence in such indications. Requiring the
use of the name of a production area only if the wine of origin expression
accompanies it promotes those objects. Conversely, allowing the use of the name
of a production area without it being accompanied by the wine of origin expression
does not align with the objects of the Scheme.

[53] Subsection 23(4), before it was amended, referred only to subsection
23(3)(c) and specified the requirements related to the words, expressions,
illustrations, or depictions mentioned in subse ction 23(3)(c). In other words, these
two subsections only referenced each other and not the other parts of the Scheme.

[54] Therefore, the interpretation proposed by the Authority is not supported by
the text, context, or purpose of the Scheme and the LPA. Th is is made even clearer
after the amendment of section 23 of the Scheme through the addition of
subsection 23(4)(J), which explicitly states that including the wine of origin
expression may not be necessary each time the name of the production area
appears, when it appears more than once on a wine label.

[55] Before the amendment, one would have needed to impermissibly distort the
language used in the provision to reach the interpretation proposed by the
Authority. In my view, that would go far beyond interpre tation and could even be
seen as divination or legislating.

[56] On the proper interpretation of the relevant provisions of the LPA and the
Scheme, the Board was only authorized to approve labels that met all the
requirements of s 23(3) (a)-(c). Conversely, it lacked the authority to approve wine
labels that failed to meet any of these standalone requirements.

[57] A wine label that displayed the name of a production area but did not
include the wine of origin expression, in every instance where the name of the

production area appears multiple times on a label, did not comply with the
provisions of s 24 of the Scheme. Therefore, the Board could not lawfully approve
it, and the decisions made by the Board to approve the third and fourth
respondents’ wine labels cannot stand. The same applies to the second
respondent’s decision to di smiss the s 22 Appeal. As a result, the application to
review and set aside those decisions must succeed, and an order to that effect will
be issued.

[58] The applicant also requested a substitution order refusing the approval of the
third and fourth respondents’ wine labels. Once a review order is granted, which
overturns the decisions approving these labels, the third and fourth respondents
cannot rely on those approvals to justify their use. This is because they will no
longer have the authorization to use the labels.

[59] The third and fourth respondents have also not participated in these
proceedings, and there is no indication that they intend to have the decisions
referred back for reconsideration. If anything, t he indications are that the passage
of time may have caused them to no longer need to have their applications
determined based on what the Authority says that the wine-producers often have to
apply annually for the approval of wine labels in respect of each annual harvest.

[60] Having considered everything above, I believe that neither a substitution
order nor a remittal order is needed. Under the circumstances, only the order
reviewing and setting aside the Board’s decisions will be issued.

[61] The conclusion on the interpretation of the provisions of the Scheme
convinces me to grant the declaratory relief, mainly because of the practical effect
it has had on the case. Despite the amendment of s 23 of the Scheme, the matter
had to be decided based on how that section read when the Board made its
decisions. An order following prayer 3 of the amended notice of motion will
accordingly be granted.

Costs
[62] The applicant has been successful, and the costs should be awarded
accordingly. The applicant employ ed two counsel, and in my opinion, the
complexity of the matter justified the employment of two counsel. Costs for two
counsel will thus be awarded on scale C.

Order
[63] As a result, the following order shall issue:

(a) It is ordered that the first respondent an d fifth respondent are only
empowered in terms of the Wine of Origin Scheme (prior to its amendment
in terms of R.6003 in GG 52 342 of 20 March 2025) to approve a wine label
if the expression or abbreviation “ W.O” / “WINE OF ORIGIN ” / “ WYN
VAN OORSPRONG” appears next to each and every instance on the label
where the area of production of the wine is indicated, subject to the
provisions of section 11(6) of the Liquor Products Act 60 of 1989 (“the
Act”).

(b) The first respondent’s decisions, communi cated to the applicant on 10
November 2021, to approve the following wine labels in terms of the Wine
of Origin Scheme under the Act, are reviewed and set aside:

(i) the third respondent’s “CAPE GARDEN 2020 SWARTLAND
CHENIN BLANC” label;

(ii) the fourth respondent’s “DAWN PATROL CINSAULT ROSÉ | 2021
SWARTLAND” label; and

(iii) the fourth respondent’s “DAWN PATROL CHENIN BLANC | 2021
SWARTLAND” label.

(c) The second respondent’s decision, communicated to the applicant on 12
October 2023, to dismiss the applicant’s appeal lodged in terms of section 22
of the Act against the first respondent’s decisions referred to in paragraph
(b) is reviewed and set aside;

(d) The fifth respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs, including the
costs of two counsel on scale C.


_____________________________
LG NUKU
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT


Appearances

For the applicant: A R Sholto-Douglas SC and M de Beer
Instructed by: Werksmans Attorneys, Cape Town

For the fifth respondent: W H (Sakkie) Van Staden SC and Dr S Gardiner
Instructed by: Feenstra Inc Attorneys, Stellenbosch
C/O: Bailey Hayes Inc, Cape Town


For the first to fourth
and sixth respondents: No appearance