Sekgosese Taxi Association and Others v Mamorobela and Others (250079/2025) [2026] ZALMPPHC 3 (5 January 2026)

78 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Interdict — Taxi Association — The Sekgosese Taxi Association sought an urgent interdict against former members of its executive committee to prevent them from operating in contravention of a court order suspending their elections. The court found that the elections held were unlawful and that the Interim Committee remained valid despite the new elections. The court upheld the applicants' right to seek protection against intimidation and unlawful actions by the respondents.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an urgent application brought in the High Court of South Africa, Limpopo Division, Polokwane, seeking interdictory relief arising from an internal governance dispute within a taxi association and the alleged continued exercise of authority by persons said to have been elected in contravention of an earlier court order.


The First Applicant was the Sekgosese Taxi Association, a juristic body acting in the interests of its members. The Second and Third Applicants (cited in a representative or official capacity) were members of the association’s Interim Committee, holding the positions of Deputy Chairperson and Secretary respectively. The principal opposition came from the First to Tenth Respondents, who were the individuals elected on 19 November 2025 to a purported new Executive Committee of the association and who thereafter acted as the governing committee. The Eleventh to Sixteenth Respondents included industry structures and public bodies (including South African National Taxi Council (Santaco) and the Capricorn District Taxi Council, and law enforcement), but they did not oppose the matter; no substantive relief was pursued against the Eleventh to Fifteenth Respondents.


The matter was enrolled on the urgent court roll for hearing on 30 December 2025. Oral argument was presented for both the Applicants and the First to Tenth Respondents, but no heads of argument were filed. Judgment was delivered on 5 January 2026.


The dispute concerned the lawfulness of the governance of the Sekgosese Taxi Association following the suspension of its constitution, the appointment of an Interim Committee, and the holding of elections for a new executive committee on the same day an earlier court order was issued interdicting elections and declaring any such election unlawful and illegitimate.


2. Material Facts


The court proceeded on the basis that the Sekgosese Taxi Association’s constitution had been suspended, with an internal appeal process pending regarding that suspension. The papers did not provide a complete history or reasons for the suspension, nor the status of the internal appeal, but the governance disruption was treated as the setting in which external structures intervened.


It was not in dispute that, following the suspension of the constitution, Santaco (Limpopo) and the Capricorn District Taxi Council intervened and appointed an Interim Committee for the association. The Second Applicant was appointed Deputy Chairperson, the Third Applicant Secretary, and one Michael Leshabane Treasurer. The court recorded that the full list of Interim Committee members and the exact appointment date were not provided, but the lawful establishment of the Interim Committee was common cause.


Santaco (Limpopo) and the Capricorn District Taxi Council scheduled elections for 19 November 2025 to establish a new Executive Committee to replace the Interim Committee. The Second and Third Applicants launched earlier proceedings seeking to suspend those elections pending finalisation of the internal appeal and related electoral documentation issues. On 19 November 2025, Naude-Odendaal J granted an order interdicting Santaco (Limpopo) and the Capricorn District Taxi Council from proceeding with elections pending determination of the appeal and the relevant election working document, and further declared the election of any new executive committee members unlawful and illegitimate given the suspended constitution and the “non-existent” election working document.


Despite that order, elections were convened on 19 November 2025, and the First to Tenth Respondents were elected to a purported new Executive Committee. From that point, the First to Tenth Respondents governed the association. The court recorded that it was unknown whether the elections occurred before or after the order was handed down on that day, and that the record did not establish whether the earlier application had been served on, or opposed by, Santaco (Limpopo) and the Capricorn District Taxi Council at the time.


The order of 19 November 2025 was later served by the Sheriff on 8 December 2025 on Santaco (Limpopo), the Executive Committee of Sekgosese, and the First to Tenth Respondents. Although the Applicants asserted that the order had been brought to the Respondents’ attention on the day it was issued, the court found there was no evidence attached to the founding affidavit substantiating that assertion.


The Third Applicant alleged that he had received threats of violence from an unknown person, and that similar threats had been received by another Interim Committee member. The Applicants suspected the threats emanated from the First to Tenth Respondents, particularly the Third Respondent, but the court ultimately assessed the evidentiary position as insufficient to ground interdictory relief on intimidation.


For purposes of authority, a resolution titled as a resolution of the Sekgosese Taxi Association taken at a meeting in December 2025 was attached to the founding papers. It reflected that the Interim Committee resolved to launch the urgent application and authorised the Deputy Chairperson (the Second Applicant) to depose to affidavits. The Applicants maintained that the Interim Committee remained the lawful structure because the elections were unlawful under the order of 19 November 2025.


3. Legal Issues


The court identified three central questions.


The first issue was whether the First Applicant (the association) was properly before the court, which required deciding whether the proceedings were authorised by a lawful governance structure given the contested status of the executive committee.


The second issue was whether the Second and Third Applicants had the necessary locus standi to launch the application on behalf of the association and to be joined as parties, in light of the Respondents’ challenge to their authority premised on the purported dissolution of the Interim Committee after the contested elections.


The third issue was whether, assuming standing and authority were established, the Applicants satisfied the requirements for an interdict, namely the existence of a clear right, an actual or reasonably apprehended injury, and the absence of an adequate alternative remedy. In addition, the court dealt with the extent to which relief relating to alleged intimidation and the proposed mechanism for contempt proceedings should be granted.


These issues involved questions of law (the effect and interpretation of the prior court order, and standing/authority), questions of fact (whether intimidation threats were established on the papers), and the application of legal standards to the facts (particularly the interdict requirements and urgency).


4. Court’s Reasoning


On authority and standing, the court approached the matter from the premise that taxi associations are ordinarily governed by their constitutions, but that in this case the association’s constitution had been suspended. In that context, and because it was common cause that the Interim Committee had been lawfully established by Santaco (Limpopo) and the Capricorn District Taxi Council, the court did not consider it necessary to examine the propriety of the Interim Committee’s formation beyond recognising its lawful status.


The court rejected the First to Tenth Respondents’ contention that the December 2025 resolution authorising the urgent proceedings was invalid because the Interim Committee had allegedly been dissolved by the elections held on 19 November 2025. Central to this conclusion was the court’s treatment of the order of 19 November 2025 as clear and operative. The court reasoned that, because the order expressly declared the election of any new executive committee members unlawful and illegitimate from that date, the committee elected on 19 November 2025 could not be treated as lawfully constituted and therefore could not dissolve the Interim Committee. The court further noted that the 19 November 2025 order was not challenged by rescission or appeal and that the time periods for doing so had expired, which the court treated as reinforcing the ongoing validity and effect of that order.


In response to the argument that the 19 November 2025 order was ambiguous and therefore not enforceable in the manner asserted by the Applicants, the court disagreed and characterised the wording as clear and unequivocal. It stated that, to the extent any party considered the order vague or ambiguous, that party bore a duty to seek variation, which had not been pursued.


The court also rejected the proposition that the 19 November 2025 order was not enforceable against the First to Tenth Respondents because they were not parties to the earlier proceedings. It reasoned that the elections were convened by Santaco (Limpopo) and the Capricorn District Taxi Council, and that the First to Tenth Respondents’ positions derived from an election the court had already declared unlawful and illegitimate. In this way, the unlawfulness of the election was treated as infecting the legitimacy of the positions obtained through it.


On the question of service and knowledge of the prior order, the court accepted that there was no evidence of service before early December 2025 and that service on the First to Tenth Respondents occurred on 8 December 2025. However, it reasoned that the service timeline would have been material primarily if the earlier order only operated as an interdict against conducting elections. Because the earlier order also included a declaration that any election of new executive members was unlawful and illegitimate, the court treated it as immaterial, for present purposes, that the Respondents only obtained formal notice in December; the unlawfulness was held to flow from the earlier court declaration itself.


The court considered the Applicants’ internal authorisation. It accepted the explanation that a quorum had been present when the resolution was taken and observed that it is not common practice for all members present to sign a resolution, finding it sufficient that organisational office-bearers signed. This supported the conclusion that the association was properly before court and that the Second Applicant was authorised to depose to and sign affidavits. The court further held that the Second and Third Applicants, as Interim Committee members, were interested parties and therefore had locus standi to participate.


Turning to the interdict requirements, the court held that the Applicants established a clear right. It reasoned that the association and its members were entitled to proper governance by a lawfully appointed committee, and that the Interim Committee members had the right to govern in that capacity until lawfully replaced. The court found that the First to Tenth Respondents violated those rights by constituting an unlawful executive committee and attempting to govern the association, thereby effectively seeking to oust the Interim Committee.


On harm, the court rejected the Respondents’ argument that the interdict would paralyse the association’s operations. It held that the existence of the Interim Committee meant governance could continue lawfully. The court accepted that the continued operation of an unlawfully constituted executive committee, particularly in contravention of a court order, was itself harmful, and further characterised the violation of court orders as harmful to the rule of law.


On alternative remedies, the court was not persuaded that internal dispute mechanisms, review proceedings, or declaratory relief constituted adequate alternatives in the circumstances, especially given that an operative court order already existed. The Respondents’ reliance on alternative remedies was not developed with sufficient explanation as to how they would be effective in light of the 19 November 2025 order.


In relation to intimidation and threats, the court found there was no evidence before it that the First to Tenth Respondents had made threats to the Applicants or Interim Committee members. On that basis, it declined to grant the interdictory relief aimed at restraining intimidation and threats of violence.


The court also declined to grant the prayer authorising the Applicants to approach court for contempt proceedings on the same or amplified papers. It reasoned that, if Respondents did not comply with the order, the Applicants already had the ability to approach court for contempt, making an additional authorisation order unnecessary.


Finally, the court addressed urgency. It held that applications involving disregard of court orders are inherently urgent because they implicate the rule of law and lawful regulation of affected members, and that ongoing unlawful governance could cause disorder.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted condonation for non-compliance with forms and service/time periods and enrolled the matter as urgent in terms of Rule 6(12).


It granted an interdict restraining the First to Tenth Respondents from operating or conducting, directly or indirectly, any of the affairs of the Sekgosese Taxi Association, including the collection of fees or monies from members, in accordance with the order dated 19 November 2025.


The court refused the relief relating to intimidation and threats due to a lack of evidence, and it did not grant the requested order specifically authorising contempt proceedings, holding that such a remedy remained available without such an order.


The First to Tenth Respondents were ordered to pay costs on an attorney and client scale, including counsel’s costs on Scale C.


Cases Cited


No cases were cited in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(12).


Held


The court held that the Sekgosese Taxi Association was properly before it and that the Second Applicant was duly authorised by a resolution of the lawfully constituted Interim Committee to institute the urgent proceedings. It further held that the Second and Third Applicants, as Interim Committee members, had locus standi as interested parties in the governance dispute.


The court held that the order of 19 November 2025 clearly declared the election of any new executive committee members unlawful and illegitimate, with the consequence that the First to Tenth Respondents’ claimed authority derived from the 19 November 2025 election was unlawful and could not displace the Interim Committee.


The court held that the Applicants met the requirements for interdictory relief in relation to governance of the association, but failed to establish a factual basis for relief relating to intimidation and threats. It granted urgent interdictory relief restraining the First to Tenth Respondents from conducting the association’s affairs and ordered punitive costs against them.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A court order interdicting elections and declaring any consequent election unlawful and illegitimate was treated as having clear operative effect, with the result that governance authority purportedly derived from the declared-unlawful election could not lawfully displace an existing lawful interim governance structure.


In interdict proceedings, an applicant must establish a clear right, an actual or reasonably apprehended injury, and the absence of an adequate alternative remedy. The court treated ongoing governance in contravention of an existing court order as constituting harm, including harm to lawful governance and the rule of law.


Authority to institute proceedings on behalf of a juristic association may be established by an internal resolution of the lawful governance structure. The court accepted that a resolution signed by appropriate office-bearers could be sufficient, and it assessed the challenge to authority by reference to whether the underlying governance structure was lawfully constituted.


Allegations of intimidation and threats require an evidentiary foundation on the papers for interdictory relief to be granted; mere suspicion without supporting evidence was treated as insufficient.


Applications involving alleged disregard of court orders were treated as inherently urgent due to their implications for the rule of law and orderly governance, supporting enrolment under Rule 6(12).

1
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
LIMPOPO DIVISION, POLOKWANE
CASE NO: 250079/2025
(1)
(2)
(3)
REPORT ABLE: YES/NO
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED.
2026/01/05 DATE ......................... SIGNATURE..
In the matter between:
SEKGOSESE TAXI ASSOCIATION
MOTHETA BEREA ALPHEUS N.O
NKOTOLANE MAROPENG ALPHEUS N. 0
and
WILSON MAMOROBELA
SEBOLA K DAVID
RAKHAKOLE MAJIYA COSTER
MOTAU NURSE
First Applicant
Second Applicant
Third Applicant
First Respondent
Second Respondent
Third Respondent
Fourth Respondent

MATHIPA GIDEON
MOTHABENG SENABA
MOHALE MD
RAMAREN MOPHO
MAPATHA M ISMAEL
LESHABANE S ZACHARIA
2
SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL TAXI COUNCIL
CAPRICORN DISTRICT TAXI COUNCIL
PROVINCIAL TAXI REGISTER: LIMPOPO PROVINCE
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT AND COMMUNITY
SAFETY: LIMPOPO
LIMPOPO PROVINCIAL REGULATORY ENTITY
AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES:- LIMPOPO
JUDGMENT
Fifth Respondent
Sixth Respondent
Seventh Respondent
Eighth Respondent
Nineth Respondent
Tenth Respondent
Eleventh Respondent
Twelfth Respondent
Thirteenth Respondent
Fourteenth Respondent
Fifteenth Respondent
Sixteenth Respondent

3
BURNETT. AJ
INTRODUCTION
[11
[2]
The matter was enrolled for hearing on the urgent court roll on Tuesday, 30
December 2025.
The First, Second and Third Applicants seek an interdict against the First to Tenth
Respondent as follows: -
[2.1] T hat t he First to Tenth Respondents be interdicted and restrained from
operating and/or conducting, either directly or indirectly, in any or all the
affairs of the First Applicant (Sekgosese Taxi Association), including
collection of fees and/or monies from the First Applicant (Sekgosese Taxi
Association), in contravention of the order of the Honourable Court on ,12
November 2025.
[2.2] T hat the F irst to Tenth Respondents be interdicted from either directly or
indirectly intimidating and/or advancing threats o f violence or death to the
Second and Third Applicants, as well as members of the Interim Committee.
[2.3] T hat in the event of the First to Tenth Respondents failing to comply with the
order in paragraphs 2 to 3 above, the Applicants be authorized to approach
this court with the same or amplified papers for an order of contempt of court
and committal of the First to Tenth Respondents to prison.
[2.4] T hat t he Sixteenth Respondent is directed to take all steps necessary to
ensure that no threats of violence or intimidation are carried out against t he

4
Second and Third Applicants, as well as the members of the Interim
Committee.
[3] There was no opposition filed on behalf of the Eleventh to the Sixteenth
Respondents and neither was there any appearance on their behalf. No relief is
sought against the Eleventh to the Fifteenth Respondents. Counsel appeared on
behalf of the First, Second and Third Applicants as well as for the First to the Tenth
Respondents and advanced oral arguments. Neither counsel filed Heads of
Argument.
BACKGROUND
[4] The appl icants' papers do not give a complete history of this matter; however it
appears as though there have been some governance issues within the Sekgosese
Taxi Association, which led to the suspension of its Constitution. There is no
information before this court as to the reasons why the Constitution was suspended.
There is an internal appeal process pending against the suspension of the
Sekgosese Taxi Association's Constitution. The status of this internal process is
unknown however it resulted in the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco:
Limpopo} and the Capricorn District Taxi Council intervening in the affairs of the
Sekgosese Taxi Association. An Interim Committee for the Sekgosese Taxi
Association was appointed. Save for being informed that the Second Applicant was
appointed the Deputy Chairperson of the Sekgosese Taxi Association, the Third
Applicant was appointed the Secretary and Michael Leshabane was appointed the
Treasurer, the court has not been provided with a full list of all the members of the
Interim Committee. The exact date that the Interim Committee was appointed is

[5]
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also unknown. It is, however, not in dispute that the Interim Committee was lawfully
established.
South African National Taxi Council (Santaco : Limpopo) and the Capricorn District
Taxi Council scheduled an election for a new Executive Committee for the
Sekgosese Taxi Association for 19 November 2025. The new Executive Committee
was to replace the Interim Committee. The Second and Third Applicant then
launched an application against the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco:
Limpopo) and the Capricorn District Taxi Council for, inter alia, an order to suspend
the e lections. The s uspension would operate until the appeal against the
suspension of the Sekgosese Taxi Association's Constitution was finalised.
[6] On 19 November 2025 the Honourable Madame Justice Naude-Odendaal handed
down an order, inter a/ia, as follows: -
[6.1] That the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco: Limpopo) and the
Capricorn District Taxi Council are interdicted and restrained from proceeding
with and/or conducting election of new members of the executive committee
of the Sekgosese Taxi Association, pending determination of the appeal on
the suspension of the Sekgosese Taxi Association's Constitution and the
South African National Taxi Council (Santaco): Limpopo's Election Working
Document.
[6.2] That the election of any new members of the Executive Committee of the
Sekgosese Taxi Association be and is hereby declared unlawful and
illegitimate, following the suspension and non-existent of the South African

6
National Taxi Council (Santaco}: Limpopo's Election Working Document and
Sekgosese's Constitution supposed to regulate the said elections.
[7] The South African National Taxi Council (Santaco: Limpopo) is the Eleventh
Respondent in this application and the Capricorn District Taxi Council is the Twelfth
Respondent. A copy of the application that gave rise to the order of 19 November
2025 has not been attached to the urgent application.
[8] On 19 November 2025, the same day that the aforesaid order was handed down,
the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco: Limpopo} and the Capricorn
District Taxi Council convened the elections that were sought to be interdicted and
the First to the Tenth Respondent in these proceedings were elected to the new
Executive Committee of the Sekgosese Taxi Association. The Executive
Committee, since their election, have been governing the Sekgosese Taxi
Association.
[9] It is unknown what time the elections were convened and if the elections were
finalised before the court order was handed down. It is also unknown whether the
application of 19 November 2025 was served on the South African National Taxi
Council (Santaco: Limpopo) and Capricorn District Taxi Council. and if so whether
they opposed the application and appeared in court on that day. All this would
become important in contempt proceedings, if such proceedings were to be
launched against the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco: Limpopo} and
Capricorn District Taxi.

7
[1 0] The order was served on the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco:
Limpopo}, the Executive Committee of the Sekgosese and on the First to Tenth
Respondent, by the Sheriff of the Court on 8 December 2025. The Second and
Third Applicants contend that the court order dated 19 November 2025 was brought
to the attention of the Respondents that same day, however there is no evidence of
this attached to the founding affidavit.
[11] The Third Applicant alleges that he has received threats of violence from an
unknown person. Threats have also been received by another member of the
Interim Committee, namely Michael Leshabane. The Second and Third Applicants
suspect that the threats emanated from the First to the Tenth Respondent and more
particularly, from the Third Respondent.
[12] The First t o the Tenth Respondent dispute, inter alia, that t he First, Second and
Third Applicant's authority to launch these proceedings. They also submit that the
requirements to obtain an interdict have not been met by the First, Second and Third
Applicants.
LEGAL QUESTIONS
[13] Is the First Applicant properly before this court?
[14] Do the Second and Third Applicants have the locus standi to launch the application
on behalf of the First Applicant?
[15] If the answer to the above questions is in the affirmative, have the First, Second and
Third Applicants met the requirements to obtain an interdict, namely: -

8
[15.1] There must be a clear right, which right has been violated.
[15.2] The violation of the right has caused harm to the bearer of the right, or
harm to the bearer is imminent.
[15.3] There is no other remedy available to the bearer of the right.
ANALYSIS
[16] Normally, a Taxi Association would be governed by its Constitution. The
Constitution would regulate, inter alia, the appointment of committee members and
how they must govern the association. However, in this case, the Constitution of
the Sekgosese Taxi Association has been suspended. As stated previously, the
exact date of the suspension and the reason therefore is unknown, however there is
an internal appeal process pending in relation thereto. It can be assumed that the
Executive Committee was also dissolved when the Constitution was suspended,
hence the need for an Interim Committee.
[17] It is not in dispute that the Interim Committee was properly formed by the South
African National Taxi Council (Santaco: Limpopo) and the Capricorn District Taxi
Council in absence of a valid constitution on their own. It is thus not necessary for
the court to delve further into this.
[18] The Second Respondent deposed to the Founding Affidavit on behalf of himself as
well as the First and Third Respondents. The Third Respondent has deposed to a
Confirmatory Affidavit in support of the Founding Affidavit. The Second Respondent
states in the Founding Affidavit that: -

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"I am duly authorized to depose to the affidavit by virtue of the resolution taken by
the executive committee of the First Applicant annexed hereto and marked "SEKTA
1".
[19] The Resolution attached to the Founding Affidavit and marked "SEKTA 1" is titled
"RESOLUTION OF THE SEKGOSESE TAXI ASSOCIATION TAKEN AT A
MEETING HELD ON THE DECEMBER 2025." In terms of the resolution, the
Interim Committee resolved, inter alia, to launch this application and it authorises the
Deputy Chairperson of the Association to depose to sign and depose to the affidavits
in respect thereof. The Second Respondent is the Deputy Chairperson.
[20] The First to the Tenth Respondents contend that the Resolution is invalid because
when the elections took place on 19 November 2025 and a new Executive
Committee was formed that day, it automatically dissolved the Interim Committee to
which the Second and Third Respondents were members of. The Second and
Third Applicant contend that the new Executive Committee is unlawful because of
paragraph 3 of the order which states: -
"That the election of any new members of the executive committee of the Sekqosese
Taxi Association be and is hereby declared unlawful and illegitimate, following the
suspension and non-existent of the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco):
Limpopo's Election Working Document and Sekgosese 's Constitution supposed to
regulate the said elections."
[21] The wording of the order is clear and unequivocal. The election of any new
members to the executive committee as of 19 November 2025 is unlawful and
illegitimate. This means that the new Executive Committee that was elected on~
November 2025, and any members subsequent thereto, is automatically unlawful
and illegitimate and accordingly it could not have dissolved the Interim Committee.

10
[22] This is further exacerbated by the fact that it is not in dispute that court order of 19
November 2025 is valid. There does not appear to be an application for the
rescission of the judgment, nor an appeal thereto. The dies for filing either of these
has expired. In absence of an application for rescission or an appeal, it is deemed
that the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco: Limpopo) and Capricorn
District Taxi Council accepted the court order. This means that they accept that
they may not proceed with conducting any elections of new members of the
executive committee for the Sekgosese Taxi Association for the time being, and that
the election of a new committee as of 19 November 2025 is unlawful and such
committee would be illegitimate. The First to the Tenth Respondent argues that the
order is ambiguous. To the extent that any interested party deemed the order to be
vague or ambiguous, a duty rested on the alleging party to bring the application for
the variation thereof. The First to Tenth Respondent have not done that. That being
said, and in any event, I cannot agree that the order is vague or ambiguous, on the
contrary, it is very clear.
[23] The First to the Tenth Respondents also contend that they were not parties to the
proceedings which emanated in the order dated 19 November 2025 and thus it is not
enforceable against them. This is not correct because the source of the elections, or
the convenor of the elections, were South African National Taxi Council (Santaco:
Limpopo} and Capricorn District Taxi Council. The First to the Tenth Respondents
were appointed because the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco:
Limpopo} and Capricorn District Taxi Council convened an unlawful election. The
elections were unlawful from the start and thus the result following therefrom was
also unlawful.

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[24] There is no evidence that the court order was served on the South African National
Taxi Council (Santaco: Limpopo} and Capricorn District Taxi Council before 4
December 2025. This would only have a bearing on the matter if the order only
contained relief pertaining to the interdict, namely: -
"That the South African National Taxi Council (Santaco: Limpopo) and the Capricorn
District Taxi Council are interdicted and restrained from proceeding with and/or
conducting election of new members of the executive committee of the Sekgosese
Taxi Association, pending determination of the appeal on the suspension of the
Sekgosese Taxi Association's Constitution and the South African National Taxi
Council (Santaco): Limpopo's Election Working Document."
[25] If the order only contained the above prayer, the South African National Taxi Council
(Santaco: Limpopo} and Capricorn District Taxi Council would only have been
interdicted and restrained from convening elections as at the date that the order
came to their knowledge, which appears to be on the date that it was served, being
8 December 2025. The saving grace for the Applicants is that the court order also
catered for a scenario that the elections had already been held, in which event those
elections are automatically deemed to be unlawful and illegitimate. It is thus
irrelevant that the court order only came to the First to the Tenth Respondents'
attention on 8 December 2025.
[26] The Interim Committee was entitled to convene a meeting on 19 December 2025
and pass the resolution referred to as Annexure "SEKTA 1 ". In the Replying
Affidavit deposed to by the Second Applicant, the Second Applicant confirms that a
quorum was present at the meeting which gave rise to the resolution being reached.
The Third Applicant has attested to this via a Confirmatory Affidavit attached to the
Replying Affidavit. There is nothing before this court to indicate that the Second and

Replying Affidavit. There is nothing before this court to indicate that the Second and
Respondent are not being truthful that a quorum was present at the meeting. It is

12
not common practice for all the members present at the meeting to sign a resolution.
It is sufficient for the chairperson and the secretary of an organization to sign it.
[27] I am satisfied that the First Applicant, i.e. the Sekgosese Taxi Association, is
properly before this court and that the Second Applicant was properly authorized to
sign the affidavits before this court. A current committee member will always be an
interested party. The Second and Third Applicants, as committee members, albeit
interim committee members, are interested parties to the proceedings and do
accordingly have the necessary locus standi to be joined as parties to the
proceedings.
[28] The First, Second and Third Applicants have established a clear right. The
Association is a juristic person acting on behalf of its members, which members
have a right to proper governance by a lawfully appointed committee. The Second
and Third Respondents are lawfully appointed members of an Interim Committee
and have a right to govern the First Applicant along with its o ther committee
members. The First to the Tenth Respondents have violated these rights by
constituting an unlawful Executive Committee and attempting to govern the First
Applicant. The First to the Tenth Respondent are effectively attempting to oust the
Interim Committee members, including the Second and Third Applicant from their
duties.
[29] The First to the Tenth Respondents contend that the First, Second and Third
Applicants will not suffer any harm if the interdict is not granted, however if they are
interdicted from governing the First Applicant (the Sekgosese Taxi Association). the
First Applicant's operation would become paralyzed. This argument cannot be

13
accepted because there is an Interim Committee that will govern for the time being.
There is nothing before this court to suggest that the Interim Committee will not fulfil
their duties. The mere fact that a new Executive Committee has be constituted
unlawfully and conducts operations in contravention to a court order is harmful. The
violation of a court order is harmful to the rule of law.
[30] There is no alternative remedy available to the First, Second and Third Applicants.
The First to the Tenth Respondent states that there are adequate alternative
remedies available to the Applicants, including internal dispute resolution
mechanisms, review proceedings and declaratory relief. The Respondents do not
expand on these forms of relief nor explain how the Applicants can utilise these
remedies having regard to the order that has already been handed down on 19
November 2025.
[31] There is no evidence before this court that First to the Tenth Respondents have
made any threats to any members of the Applicant or the Second and Third
Respondents and accordingly are not entitled to the relief that they seek in terms
thereof.
[32] If the First to the Tenth Respondents refuse to recognise and abide by this order, as
with the order of 19 November 2025, they have an automatic right to approach the
court for an order holding them in contempt of court. It is thus not necessary for this
court to grant an order in accordance with prayer 4 of the Notice of Motion.
[33] The First to the Tenth Respondents have refused to recognise and abide by the
court order dated 19 November 2015. Applications involving a disregard for court

14
orders are by their very nature urgent because it affects the rule of law. A society
that is allowed to disregard court orders is a society in disarray. The members of the
First Applicant, including committee members, deserve to be regulated lawfully and
any unlawful governance can cause disorder.
[34] In respect of the costs of the application; costs must follow the result.
ORDER
[35] I accordingly make the following order: -
[35.1] That the rules of the above Honourable Court pertaining to forms, service and
time periods be condoned and/or dispensed with, and the matter be heard as
one of urgency in terms of Rule 6 (12).
[35.2] That the First to the Tenth Respondents be interdicted and restrained from
operating and/or conducting, either directly or indirectly, any or all the affairs
of the First Applicant, including collection of fees and/or monies from
members of the First Applicant, in accordance with the order dated 19
November 2025.
[34.3] That the First to the Tenth Respondents be ordered to pay the costs of the
application on an attorney and client scale, with counsel's costs on Scale C.

15
APPEARANCES
BURNETT, E J
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT,
POLOKWANE; LIMPOPO DIVISION
FOR THE APPLICANT: - ADV. R MASIPA
INSTRUCTED BY: - MOKGOBU ATTORNEYS
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:- ADV. L NKOANA
INSTRUCTED BY:- N.J MORERO INC. ATTORNEYS
DATE OF HEARING: - 30 DECEMBER 2025
DATE OF JUDGMENT: - 5 JANUARY 2026