South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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Last Updated: 4 September 2004
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPORTABLE
CASE NO 41/2003
In the matter between
OUDEKRAAL ESTATES (PTY) LIMITED
Appellant
and
THE CITY OF CAPE
TOWN First Respondent
THE MINISTER OF
LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
PLANNING, WESTERN
CAPE Second Respondent
THE SOUTH
AFRICAN HERITAGE RESOURCES AGENCY Third
Respondent
SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL PARKS
Fourth
Respondent
________________________________________________________________________
CORAM: HOWIE P, CAMERON, BRAND, NUGENT JJA AND SOUTHWOOD AJA
________________________________________________________________________
Date Heard: 17 February 2004
Delivered: 28 May 2004
Summary: Administrative decision – whether validly taken - consequences of invalidity.
________________________________________________________________________
J U D G M E N T
________________________________________________________________________
HOWIE P and NUGENT JA
[1] This appeal
raises important questions for the rule of law. It raises the question whether,
or in what circumstances, an unlawful
administrative act might simply be
ignored, and on what basis the law might give recognition to such acts.
[2] The appellant company is the owner of undeveloped land (Erf 2802 Camps
Bay) on the slopes of the Twelve Apostles on the Atlantic
seaboard of the Cape
Peninsula, adjacent to the suburb of Camps Bay. Its immediate predecessor in
title secured the laying out and
approval of the land as a township in terms of
the Townships Ordinance 1933 of 1934 (Cape) (‘the
Ordinance’).[1] The township
establishment process involved, among other things, the then provincial
Administrator’s grant of permission to
establish the township, an
endorsement on the title deed to the land by the Registrar of Deeds to the
effect that it had been laid
out as a township, and the opening in the deeds
office of a township register. The Administrator granted permission, subject to
certain
conditions, in 1957, the other formalities were carried out, and the
official notification in the Provincial Gazette of the township
as approved
occurred in 1962. It has since been referred to as Oudekraal
Township.
[3] The appellant bought the land in 1965. The only material step
it has taken to develop a township on the land consisted in the
submission in
1996 to the relevant local authority (the Cape Metropolitan
Council)[2] of an application for
approval of an engineering services plan. The response from the local authority
was that the plan could not
be approved because the development rights had
lapsed.
[4] In correspondence between the respective attorneys for the
appellant and the local authority it emerged that the latter’s
stance was
based on the alleged failure by the township applicant to comply timeously with
two requirements of the Ordinance. One
was to lodge a general plan of the
proposed township with the Surveyor-General for approval. The other was to lodge
the general plan
as approved by the Surveyor-General with the Registrar of
Deeds. For each lodgement a time limit was prescribed and in each case
the
Administrator was empowered to determine a further period for
compliance.[3] Also in each case, if
an applicant failed to comply within the prescribed or extended period, the
Ordinance provided that the Administrator’s
permission to establish the
township would ‘be deemed to have
lapsed’.[4] In respect of each
lodgement an extension of time for compliance was granted by the Administrator.
(In the case of lodgement with
the Surveyor-General there were three
extensions.) Each such extension was granted only after expiry of the prescribed
period. The
Cape Metropolitan Council’s contention that lapsing had
occurred was based on the proposition that the Administrator’s
extensions
after the respective prescribed periods were ultra vires. (It was also
asserted in any event that the lodgements were not effected within the
respective extended periods but we have assumed
in the appellant’s favour
that the lodgements were within the extended periods.)
[5] Timeously lodged
or not, a general plan as required by the Ordinance was approved by the
Surveyor-General and, with other documentation
specified in the
Ordinance,[5] duly acted upon by the
Registrar of Deeds. It was designated General Plan T.P. 1781 L.D.
[6] The
appellant did not immediately turn to law to challenge the refusal to approve
the engineering services plan. Instead it attempted
certain political
initiatives to summon support for the township’s development but to no
avail.
[7] Eventually, in September 2001, the appellant applied to the Cape
High Court for declaratory relief. In the notice of motion,
as amended later,
three declarations were sought. The first two, broadly summarised, were to the
effect that the extensions of time
granted by the Administrator were intra
vires and that the lodgement and approval of the general plan, its
incorporation in the Deeds Registry records and every subsequent act
involved in
the establishment and approval of the township were all intra vires and
of full force and effect. The third read as follows:
‘Declaring, in
addition and in any event, that the Applicant’s development rights over
Oudekraal Township (General Plan
T.P. 1781 L.D.), on Erf 2802 Camps Bay in the
Municipality of Cape Town, Western Cape Province (previously known as Portion 7
of
Cape Farm 902), notification of the approval of which was published in the
Provincial Gazette on 19 January 1962, under Public Notice
59 of 1962, are of
full force and effect, and that the Applicants have the right to subdivide the
aforementioned land in accordance
with General Plan T.P. 1781
L.D.’
[8] The respondents in the court below and on appeal are these.
The first respondent is City of Cape Town which came into being in
1998 as the
single successor in law to both the erstwhile City of Cape Town Municipality and
the Cape Metropolitan Council.[6]
(For convenience we shall refer to the first respondent as the City
Council.)
[9] The second respondent is the Minister of Local Government and
Development Planning, Western Cape, being in law the successor of
the erstwhile
Administrator and having the power to perform certain duties in relation to
conditions imposed, inter alia, in terms
of the
Ordinance.[7]
[10] The third
respondent is the South African Heritage Resources Agency which was established
under the National Heritage Resources Act, 25 of
1999.[8] In terms of that
Act[9] its function is to co-ordinate
the management of what is called ‘the national estate’ which
includes places of cultural
significance, historical graves and sites of
significance to the history of slavery in South
Africa.[10] It was joined because of
its ‘potential interest’ in the matter but no relief was sought
against it.
[11] The fourth respondent is South African National Parks
(formerly the National Parks Board) established under the National Parks
Act 57
of 1976. It is a corporate body and owns land adjoining the appellant’s
land.[11] It was similarly joined
for its potential interest in the matter.
[12] The appellant’s
application, which was opposed by all the respondents save for the second, was
dismissed. The court’s
judgment, given by Davis J, Veldhuizen J
concurring, is reported in 2002 (6) SA 573 (C). Essential to its decision was
the finding that the Administrator’s extensions of time were invalid (at
587E-F). The
court went on to say that the grant of the relief sought by the
appellant would have the effect of proclaiming that an illegal action
had
somehow evolved into a legal decision and that would undermine the principle of
legality. Taking that into account and, amongst
other things, the fact that the
existence of various Muslim burial sites on the land had not been properly
considered when the establishment
of the township was approved (an issue that we
deal with more fully below) the court exercised what it took to be its
discretion
to permit a collateral challenge by the City Council to the validity
of the Administrator’s actions, and it refused to grant
the declaratory
relief. Leave to appeal was refused by the learned judges but granted by this
court. The appeal is opposed by the
first, third and fourth
respondents.
[13] In the view that we take of the case it is not necessary to
decide whether the extensions of time that were granted by the Administrator
were lawful. In our view the matter can properly be decided by focusing on the
Administrator’s grant of the application to
establish Oudekraal Township.
That was not an issue that was relied upon by the Cape Metropolitan Council
initially when it refused
to consider the engineering services plan. It was
first pertinently raised by the fourth respondent (South African National Parks)
in these proceedings and was adopted by the City Council. Because of its
centrality to the establishment of the township it has
a crucial bearing on the
third declarator, which is the central relief that was sought by the appellant.
[14] The evidence reveals that at various places on the land in question
there are in all more than twenty graves. They have special
religious and
cultural significance to the members of Cape Town’s Muslim community. Two
of the graves are kramats. A kramat
is the grave of somebody who, among
adherents of the Islamic faith, is regarded as having attained, through
conspicuous piety, ‘an
enlightened spiritual situation’. Such person
having thus been a ‘friend of God’, the spirit of God is to be found
at the site.
[15] The kramats and other graves on the land are also important
cultural symbols in the Muslim community of its history in the Western
Cape
going back to the era of slavery. Many of the graves are those of escaped slaves
and some of the kramats are the burial sites
of spiritual leaders of the
community during those times. It is believed by followers of the faith that by
spending time at these
sites they can enhance their own spirituality. One of the
kramats on the land encompassed by the approved township is that of Sayed
Jaffer. Thousands visit it each year. Moreover, the indications are that the
kramats generally have been visited regularly since
before the end of the
nineteenth century. In the circumstances, access to the kramats is of great
importance to the Muslim people
of Cape Town.
[16] The engineering services
plan put before the Cape Metropolitan Council in 1996 reflects the details of
General Plan T.P. 1781
L.D. (hereafter ‘the general plan’) as well
as the location of the graves and the two kramats. As explained by counsel
for
the third respondent during argument – and these intimations were not
contradicted or queried – the position is this.
The kramat of Sayed Jaffer
was one of a number of graves more or less in the centre of a large erf destined
for a school. The other
kramat was among another group of graves spread over
what were intended to be three adjoining residential erven. Other proposed
residential erven had single graves within their boundaries. Finally, one of the
graves was directly in the path of a proposed public
road.
[17] The general
plan shows none of the graves. What has been found of the documentation
comprising or accompanying the township
application makes no reference to them
either. Nor do the conditions which were imposed by the Administrator when
granting the application.
The township application papers included a plan
(numbered 16/A1/36/A) which accorded in all material respects with the
subdivision
and configuration of the general plan. If the presence of the graves
was known to the officials concerned they would have seen with
no difficulty
what impact implementation of the plan would have on the existence and physical
integrity of the burial sites.
[18] Among the papers relating to the
application is a copy of a document reading as follows:
‘EXTRACT FROM
THE MINUTES OF A MEETING HELD ON THURSDAY THE 22ND DECEMBER,
1955.
(6) Oudekraal Township.
The Board inspected the township on
the 22nd December 1955.’
The reference to the Board in the
document is a reference to the Townships Board constituted under s 2 of the
Ordinance whose task
it was under s 11 to make recommendations to the
Administrator whether to grant or refuse a township
application.[12]
[19] There is an
affidavit in the record by the appellant’s attorney, Mr Koumbatis, in
which he submits that the existence of
kramats and graves on the land would have
been readily apparent on the occasion of the Board’s inspection. The
suggested inference,
we perceive, is that the existence of the graves must have
been present to the minds of the Board and, consequently, the Administrator.
In
our view that inference cannot necessarily be drawn. The extract from the
minutes does not indicate what was inspected or observed.
The reference to
‘the township’ is meaningless. There was none in existence. But Mr
Koumbatis’s submission carries
an important concession, namely, that the
kramats and graves are indeed readily visible features of the relevant
landscape. The importance
of that consideration is that a land owner applying
for permission to establish a township at that time was required to complete
a
form detailing, among other things, all relevant physical features of the land
to be developed. A copy of the form used in this
instance is part of the record.
It shows that the applicant’s response read thus: ‘See plans and
reports attached’.
The attachments are not part of the record, hence the
submission on behalf of the appellant that one would not be justified, without
having all the documentation submitted in the township application or considered
by the Board and the Administrator, in concluding
that the graves and kramats
were overlooked or ignored. Although press publication advertised the
application no objections appear
to have been elicited.
[20] On the evidence
we are unable to reach any conclusions other than the following. The first is
that the applicant for the township
made no reference to the graves with the
result that all the officials concerned, and particularly the Administrator,
were ignorant
of their existence. The second, in the alternative, is that if
their existence was known it was ignored. There simply is no other
realistic
inference notwithstanding that not all the relevant documents are
available.
[21] The first conclusion reflects a more likely state of affairs
than the second. We say so because it has always been an offence
at common law
to desecrate a grave: Joubert (ed) The Law of South Africa 1st
reissue vol 20 part 2 at 279 para 324. It is unlikely that that was not known to
the officials concerned who constantly dealt with
matters of land rights.
[22] At the time of the Administrator’s grant of approval there was no
provincial exhumation legislation in the then Cape Province.
Subsequently the
Exhumations Ordinance of 1980[13]
came into force but it made provision for exhumation only in a cemetery. Of
note, however, is that s 4 validated exhumation effected
pursuant to a permit
issued by the Administrator before the commencement of the Ordinance. That
section does not speak of exhumations
specifically from a grave but if it is an
indication of a previously existing unlegislated procedure whereby the
Administrator would
grant ad hoc permits for exhumation it is significant
that if the officials concerned knew about the graves no condition was attached
to the Administrator’s
permission for Oudekraal township requiring
application for such permits in this case. Township applications had to be
considered
by the Provincial Secretary, then by the Townships Board and finally
by the Administrator.[14] It would
be extraordinary if the need for some provision to cater for the presence of the
graves escaped them all if they knew of
them. The Surveyor-General (or his
surrogate) and the Registrar of Deeds of Cape Town were members of the Townships
Board (see s
2 of the Ordinance). Had they and the Administrator been aware of
all the relevant facts it is probable that it would have been required
that the
general plan be drawn excising the graves and kramats or with conditions for
their preservation being imposed. The Administrator
had the power to amend
conditions even after the grant of his
permission[15]. There was therefore
by inference no realisation of the need for appropriate conditions even
belatedly. Of course, it is irrelevant
how easily the position could have been
rectified then. What the appellant wants now is a declarator that its township
rights are
in all respects enforceable, without any qualification, reservation
or amendment.
[23] The deponent to the founding affidavit said:
‘I
understand that there are no kramats and shrines on [the land].’
If
this curious, and unexplained, statement was made in ignorance it could arguably
have been that the township applicant was himself
equally ignorant, thereby
leading to the resulting omission of this aspect from the application papers and
the failure of the relevant
officials to consider it.
[24] There can be no
doubt, however, that the presence on the land of religious and cultural sites of
particular significance to a
sector of the Cape Town community was a factor that
should properly have been taken into account and evaluated, also on
pre-Constitutional
principles, in coming to the decision whether to permit the
establishment of a township.
[25] Whether the Administrator, as the
ultimate decision maker, was ignorant of the graves and kramats or not, the
inescapable conclusion
must be that he either failed to take account of material
information because it was not all before him or if, in the unlikely event
that
it was before him, that he wrongly left it out of the reckoning when he should
have taken it into account. In either situation
his decision to lend approval on
the terms he granted was
invalid.[16] It was, in addition, in
either event ultra vires for the reason that it permitted subdivisions
and land use in criminal disregard for the graves and kramats. It would be
impossible
to avoid desecration or violation if one were to make a road over a
grave site or to build over it.
[26] For those reasons it is clear, in our
view, that the Administrator’s permission was unlawful and invalid at the
outset.
Whether he thereafter also exceeded his powers in granting extensions
for the lodgement of the general plan thus takes the matter
no further. But the
question that arises is what consequences follow from the conclusion that the
Administrator acted unlawfully.
Is the permission that was granted by the
Administrator simply to be disregarded as if it had never existed? In other
words, was
the Cape Metropolitan Council entitled to disregard the
Administrator’s approval and all its consequences merely because it
believed that they were invalid provided that its belief was correct? In our
view it was not. Until the Administrator’s approval
(and thus also the
consequences of the approval) is set aside by a court in proceedings for
judicial review it exists in fact and
it has legal consequences that cannot
simply be overlooked. The proper functioning of a modern state would be
considerably compromised
if all administrative acts could be given effect to or
ignored depending upon the view the subject takes of the validity of the act
in
question. No doubt it is for this reason that our law has always recognized
that even an unlawful administrative act is capable
of producing legally valid
consequences for so long as the unlawful act is not set aside.
[27] The
apparent anomaly (that an unlawful act can produce legally effective
consequences) is sometimes attributed to the effect
of a presumption that
administrative acts are valid, which is explained as follows by Lawrence Baxter:
Administrative Law 355:
‘There exists an evidential presumption
of validity expressed by the maxim omnia praesumuntur rite esse acta; and
until the act in question is found to be unlawful by a court, there is no
certainty that it is. Hence it is sometimes argued
that unlawful administrative
acts are ‘voidable’ because they have to be annulled.’
At
other times it has been explained on little more than pragmatic grounds. In
Harnaker v Minister of the Interior 1965 (1) SA 372 (C) Corbett J said at
381C that where a court declines to set aside an invalid act on the grounds of
delay (the same would apply
where it declines to do so on other grounds)
‘in a sense delay would . . . “validate” the
nullity’.
Or as Lord Radcliffe said in Smith v East Elloe Rural
District Council [1956] UKHL 2; [1956] AC 736 (HL) 769-70:
‘An [administrative]
order...is still an act capable of legal consequences. It bears no brand of
invalidity upon its forehead.
Unless the necessary proceedings are taken at law
to establish the cause of invalidity and to get it quashed or otherwise upset,
it will remain as effective for its ostensible purpose as the most impeccable of
orders.’
[28] That has led some writers to suggest that legal validity
(or invalidity) in the context of administrative action is never absolute
but
can only be described in relative terms. In Wade: Administrative Law 7 ed
by H.W.R. Wade and Christopher Forsyth at pages 342-4 that view is expressed as
follows:
‘The truth of the matter is that the court will invalidate an
order only if the right remedy is sought by the right person in
the right
proceedings and circumstances. The order may be hypothetically a nullity, but
the court may refuse to quash it because
of the plaintiff’s lack of
standing, because he does not deserve a discretionary remedy, because he has
waived his rights,
or for some other legal reason. In any such case the
‘void’ order remains effective and is, in reality, valid. It
follows
that an order may be void for one purpose and valid for another; and
that it may be void against one person but valid against another...
‘Void’ is therefore meaningless in any absolute sense. Its meaning
is relative, depending upon the court’s willingness
to grant relief in any
particular situation.’
[29] In our view the apparent anomaly –
which has been described as giving rise to ‘terminological and conceptual
problems
of excruciating
complexity’[17] – is
convincingly explained in a recent illuminating analysis of the problem by
Christopher Forsyth.[18] Central to
that analysis is the distinction between what exists in law and what exists in
fact. Forsyth points out that while a
void administrative act is not an act in
law, it is, and remains, an act in fact, and its mere factual existence may
provide the
foundation for the legal validity of later decisions or acts. In
other words
‘... an invalid administrative act may, notwithstanding its
non-existence [in law], serve as the basis for another perfectly
valid decision.
Its factual existence, rather than its invalidity, is the cause of the
subsequent act, but that act is valid since
the legal existence of the first act
is not a precondition for the
second.’[19]
It follows
that
‘[t]here is no need to have any recourse to a concept of
voidability or a presumption of effectiveness to explain what has happened
[when
legal effect is given to an invalid act]. The distinction between fact and law
is enough.’[20]
The author
concludes as follows:
‘[I]t has been argued that unlawful
administrative acts are void in law. But they clearly exist in fact and they
often appear
to be valid; and those unaware of their invalidity may take
decisions and act on the assumption that these acts are valid. When this
happens
the validity of these later acts depends upon the legal powers of the second
actor. The crucial issue to be determined is whether that second actor has
legal power to act validly notwithstanding the invalidity of the
first act.
And it is determined by an analysis of the law against the background of the
familiar proposition that an unlawful act is
void’[21] (our
emphasis).
[30] Lord Hoffmann drew the same distinction in Regina v Wicks
1998 AC 92 (HL) when he said the following at 117A-C:
‘[T]he
statute may upon its true construction merely require an act which appears
formally valid and has not been quashed by
judicial review. In such a case,
nothing but the formal validity of the act will be relevant to an issue before
the justices.
[31] Thus the proper enquiry in each case – at least at
first – is not whether the initial act was valid but rather whether
its
substantive validity was a necessary precondition for the validity of consequent
acts. If the validity of consequent acts is
dependent on no more than the
factual existence of the initial act then the consequent act will have legal
effect for so long as
the initial act is not set aside by a competent
court.
[32] But just as some consequences might be dependent for validity
upon the mere factual existence of the contested administrative
act so there
might be consequences that will depend for their legal force upon the
substantive validity of the act in question. When
construed against the
background of principles underlying the rule of law a statute will generally not
be interpreted to mean that
a subject is compelled to perform or refrain from
performing an act in the absence of a lawful basis for that compulsion. It is
in those cases – where the subject is sought to be coerced by a public
authority into compliance with an unlawful administrative
act – that the
subject may be entitled to ignore the unlawful act with impunity and justify his
conduct by raising what has
come to be known as a ‘defensive’ or a
‘collateral’ challenge to the validity of the administrative
act.[22] Such a challenge was
allowed, for example, in Boddington v British Transport
Police,[23] in which the
defendant was charged with smoking a cigarette in a railway carriage in
contravention of a prohibitory notice posted
in the carriage pursuant to a
byelaw. The House of Lords held that the defendant was entitled to seek to
raise the defence that
the decision to post the notice (which activated the
prohibition in the byelaw) was invalid because the validity of the decision
was
essential to the existence of the offence. (It happened that the decision to
post the notice was held to be valid but that is
not material for present
purposes). At 153H-154A Lord Irvine LC said the following:
‘It would
be a fundamental departure from the rule of law if an individual were liable to
conviction for contravention of some
rule which is itself liable to be set aside
by a court as unlawful. Suppose an individual is charged before one court with
breach
of a byelaw and the next day another court quashes that byelaw –
for example, because it was promulgated by a public body which
did not take
account of a relevant consideration. Any system of law under which the
individual was convicted and made subject to
a criminal penalty for breach of an
unlawful byelaw would be inconsistent with the rule of law.’
And at
160 and 161 he went on to say the following:
‘[160C-G] However, in
every case it will be necessary to examine the particular statutory context to
determine whether a court
hearing a criminal or civil case has jurisdiction to
rule on a defence based upon arguments of invalidity of subordinate legislation
or an administrative act under it. There are situations in which Parliament may
legislate to preclude such challenges being made,
in the interest, for example,
of promoting certainty about the legitimacy of administrative acts on which the
public may have to
rely ... [161C-D] However, in approaching the issue of
statutory construction the courts proceed from a strong appreciation that
ours
is a country subject to the rule of law. This means that it is well recognised
to be important for the maintenance of the rule
of law and the preservation of
liberty that individuals affected by legal measures promulgated by executive
public bodies should
have a fair opportunity to challenge these measures and to
vindicate their rights in court proceedings.’
As Lord Steyn pointed
out at 173A-B:
‘Provided that the invalidity of the byelaw is or may be
a defence to the charge a criminal case must be the paradigm of collateral
or
defensive challenge.’
Dealing with an earlier decision of the
Divisional Court that precluded a collateral challenge to the procedural
validity of subordinate
legislation in criminal
proceedings[24] he went on to say
the following at 173E-G:
‘My Lords, with the utmost deference to
eminent judges sitting in the Divisional Court I have to say the consequences of
Bugg’s case are too austere and indeed too authoritarian to be
compatible with the traditions of the common law. In Eshugbayi Eleko v
Government of Nigeria [1931] A.C. 662, a habeas corpus case, Lord Atkin
observed, at p 670, that “no member of the executive can interfere with
the liberty or property
of a British subject except on condition that he can
support the legality of his action before a court of justice.” There
is
no reason why a defendant in a criminal trial should be in a worse position.
And that seems to me to reflect the spirit of the
common law.’
[33] So, too, is it implicit in the decision in National Industrial
Council for the Iron, Steel, Engineering & Metallurgical Industry v
Photocircuit SA (Pty) Ltd and
Others[25] that the coercive
powers that the industrial council purported to assert were dependent for their
validity upon the lawful establishment
of the council and hence were subject to
collateral challenge when they were sought to be
enforced.[26]
[34] Forsyth
explains it as
follows:[27]
‘... only
where an individual is required by an administrative authority to do or
not to do a particular thing, may that individual, if he doubts the lawfulness
of the administrative
act in question, choose to treat it as void and await
developments. Enforcement proceedings will have to be brought by the
administrative
authority involved; and the individual will be able to raise the
voidness of the underlying administrative act as a defence.’
[35] It
will generally avail a person to mount a collateral challenge to the validity of
an administrative act where he is threatened
by a public authority with coercive
action precisely because the legal force of the coercive action will most often
depend upon the
legal validity of the administrative act in question. A
collateral challenge to the validity of the administrative act will be
available,
in other words, only ‘if the right remedy is sought by the
right person in the right
proceedings’.[28] Whether or
not it is the right remedy in any particular proceedings will be determined by
the proper construction of the relevant
statutory instrument in the context of
principles of the rule of law.
[36] It is important to bear in mind (and in
this regard we respectfully differ from the court a quo) that in those
cases in which the validity of an administrative act may be challenged
collaterally a court has no discretion to allow
or disallow the raising of that
defence: the right to challenge the validity of an administrative act
collaterally arises because
the validity of the administrative act constitutes
the essential prerequisite for the legal force of the action that follows and
ex hypothesi the subject may not then be precluded from challenging its
validity.[29] On the other hand, a
court that is asked to set aside an invalid administrative act in proceedings
for judicial review has a discretion
whether to grant or to withhold the
remedy.[30] It is that discretion
that accords to judicial review its essential and pivotal role in administrative
law, for it constitutes the
indispensable moderating tool for avoiding or
minimizing injustice when legality and certainty collide. Each remedy thus has
its
separate application to its appropriate circumstances and they ought not to
be seen as interchangeable manifestations of a single
remedy that arises
whenever an administrative act is invalid.
[37] In our view that analysis
of the problems that arise in relation to unlawful administrative action
recognizes the value of certainty
in a modern bureaucratic state, a value that
the legislature should be taken to have in mind as a desirable objective when it
enacts
enabling legislation, and it also gives proper effect to the principle of
legality, which is fundamental to our legal order. (Fedsure Life Assurance
Ltd & Others v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council &
Others [1998] ZACC 17; 1999 (1) SA 374 (CC) paras 56, 58 and 59; Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA & Another: In re Ex Parte President of the
Republic of South Africa & Others
[2000] ZACC 1; 2000 (2) SA 674 (CC) para 50). While
the legislature might often, in the interests of certainty, provide for
consequences to follow merely from the
fact of an administrative act, the rule
of law dictates that the coercive power of the state cannot generally be used
against the
subject unless the initiating act is legally valid. And this case
illustrates a further aspect of the rule of law, which is that
a public
authority cannot justify a refusal on its part to perform a public duty by
relying, without more, on the invalidity of the
originating administrative act:
it is required to take action to have it set aside and not simply to ignore it.
[38] It will be apparent from that analysis that the substantive validity or
invalidity of an administrative act will seldom have
relevance in isolation of
the consequences that it is said to have produced – the validity of the
administrative act might
be relevant in relation to some consequences, or even
in relation to some persons, and not in relation to others – and for
that
reason it will generally be inappropriate for a court to pronounce by way of
declaration upon the validity or invalidity of
such an act in isolation of
particular consequences that are said to have been produced.
[39] The City
Council’s reliance upon a collateral challenge to the validity of the
Administrator’s decisions in the present
case was, in our view, misplaced.
The approval of the township was, in truth, no more than a permission to the
land owner to develop
the land in a particular way (which would otherwise be
prohibited by the Ordinance) that took effect once the various steps prescribed
by the Ordinance had been complied with (i.e. once the approval had been
granted, the various officials had performed their respective
functions, and the
approval had been notified in the Provincial Gazette.) On a proper construction
of the Ordinance the validity
of each of those steps was not dependent on the
legal validity of the Administrator’s approval but merely upon the fact
that
it was given. The legislature could not have expected the Surveyor-General
first to satisfy himself that the Administrator’s
approval was valid
before he approved the general plan. It also could not have intended the
Registrar of Deeds first to satisfy himself
that the approval was valid before
he opened a township register. And it could not have expected the township owner
and the public
at large to enquire into the validity of the
Administrator’s approval before they relied upon the notification in the
Provincial
Gazette that the township had been approved. In our view the
functionaries were authorized to act as they did merely upon the fact
of the
Administrator’s approval and their acts were accordingly lawful. The
effect of the notification of the approval in
the Gazette, which was the final
step in the process, was that the owner of the land was permitted to exercise
the ordinary rights
of an owner to develop the land, provided, of course, that
the development was in accordance with the approval and did not conflict
with
other restrictions. (We might add that in our view the Surveyor-General and the
Registrar of Deeds were similarly authorised
by the Ordinance to act upon the
extensions that were granted by the Administrator for the lodgement of the
general plan even if
those extensions were invalid and their conduct in doing so
was thus authorised.) In the form in which the matter comes before us
the
invalid administrative act that is in issue is not sought to be applied
coercively by a public authority or to provide the foundation
for coercive
action against the subject and hence no rule of law considerations militate
against the construction that we have given
to the legislation.
[40] It
follows that for so long as the Administrator’s approval (and the
extensions) continues to exist in fact the township
owner has been permitted to
develop the township and the Cape Metropolitan Council was not entitled simply
to ignore that when deciding
whether or not to carry out its public functions.
The statutory duties that are imposed upon a local authority to consider plans
of that nature were not canvassed before us, but there was no suggestion that
the relevant legislation that imposes any such duties
falls to be construed as
doing so only if the approval of the township was substantively valid.
[41] But it does not follow that the appellant was entitled to the
declaratory relief that it sought. On the contrary, in our view
it was
correctly refused, for two reasons in particular.
[42] The first relates to
only a portion of the third declaratory order and it arises independently of the
issues that have been dealt
with thus far in this judgment. Amongst other
things the appellant sought a declaration that it ‘has the right to
subdivide
the ... land in accordance with [the general plan that has been
registered].’ Clearly it is not entitled to proceed with the
development
of the land in accordance with that general plan. The exploitation of property
rights is always constrained by such laws
as exist at the time that they are
sought to be implemented. We have already drawn attention to the fact that the
layout of the
township as depicted on the general plan contemplates the
development of residences and roads on various burial sites. Even if the
township had been lawfully established we have little doubt that the development
of the land in accordance with the existing general
plan is constrained by the
protection that is afforded to cultural and religious practices by s 31 of the
Bill of Rights. In any
event the burial sites are protected against disturbance
by s 36(3) of the National Heritage Resources Act 25 of 1999, quite apart from
the common law constraint. On those grounds alone the appellant was not
entitled to that portion of the relief
that it sought and persisted in before
us.
[43] But the second reason is more fundamental and goes to the heart
of what the appellant sought to achieve in this application.
In prayers 1 and 2
the appellant sought declarations that the extensions by the Administrator of
the periods for the lodgement of
the general plan with the Surveyor-General and
with the Registrar of Deeds respectively were lawful. Those prayers sought to
meet
and overrule the resistance of the Cape Metropolitan Council on the basis
that it gave for refusing to consider the appellant’s
engineering services
plan. The question whether the Administrator’s approval was invalid for
disregard of the existence of
the burial sites had not arisen when the Notice of
Motion was first drafted and none of the prayers was directed specifically to
that issue. That issue – and, indeed, any other ground upon which the
lawful establishment of the township might be challenged
– was sought to
be catered for by prayer 3 in the omnibus form into which it was amended. In
that prayer (quoted in paragraph
7 above) the appellant sought an
undifferentiated declaration that its ‘development rights ... are of full
force and effect.’
[44] The rather vague term ‘development
rights’ was used to encompass all the consequences that generally follow
from
the lawful establishment of a township. In the form in which the relief
directed at them is sought the term takes no account of
whether those
consequences are dependent for their legal effect upon the factual existence of
the approval of the township, or whether
they are dependent upon the substantive
validity of the approval. What was sought by the appellant, in effect, was an
order declaring
that all the ordinary consequences that follow upon the lawful
establishment of a township are not open to any challenge. The attempt
to
obtain relief in this all-embracing and undifferentiated form was, we think,
wholly misdirected.
[45] We have already observed that it will generally be
inappropriate to make such a declaration in a vacuum. Perhaps the appellant
might have been entitled to a declaration in general terms that the
Administrator’s approval and the subsequent acts of the
Surveyor-General
and the Registrar of Deeds existed in fact and that any consequences that were
dependent merely upon the existence
of those facts were of full force and
effect. And perhaps the City Council in those circumstances would be obliged to
consider the
engineering services plan that was submitted for approval and the
appellant was entitled to a declaratory order to that effect. (We
have already
observed that the City Council’s statutory powers and obligations in that
regard were not canvassed in these proceedings
and we are not in a position to
decide whether that is so.) But the appellant did not confine the relief that
it sought in that
way, either in the court a quo or before us. It
persists in seeking a declaration that has the effect of declaring unassailable
all the consequences that generally
follow from the lawful establishment of a
township. Clearly it is not entitled to that relief. Bearing in mind that the
approval
of the township was invalid at the outset all the consequences of the
approval clearly cannot be said to be unassailable.
[46] One of those
consequences is that the invalid approval is liable to be set aside in
proceedings properly brought for judicial
review. It is not open to us to
stifle the right that any person might have to bring such proceedings, or to
pre-empt the decision
that a court might make if it is called upon to exercise
its discretion in that regard. That is not a remote and academic prospect,
bearing in mind that the approval was invalid. No doubt a court that might be
called upon to exercise its discretion will take account
of the long period that
has elapsed since the approval was
granted,[31] but the lapse of time
in itself will not necessarily be decisive: much will depend upon a balancing of
all the relevant circumstances,[32]
including the need for finality,[33]
but also the consequences for the public at large, and, indeed for future
generations, of allowing the invalid decision to stand.
In weighing the question
whether the lapse of time should preclude a court from setting aside the invalid
administrative act in question
an important – perhaps even
decisive[34] – consideration
is the extent to which the appellant or third parties might have acted in
reliance upon it. On the material
that is before us it is by no means clear
that the appellant – or any third party for that matter – has in
fact acted
in reliance on the approval notwithstanding the elapsing of some
forty years.
[47] We have drawn attention to the fact that the land remains
undeveloped. The only transaction that has occurred since the township
was
approved is the purchase of the land by the appellant. The appellant does not
allege that it purchased the land in reliance
on the fact that the township had
been established. On the contrary, the deponent to the founding affidavit
suggests that it was
the location of the land, rather than the approval of the
township, that caused the land to be purchased. At the time of the purchase
the
appellant was controlled by the deponent’s father who, according to the
deponent, held the view that ‘land that is
close to, or on the slopes of
Table Mountain is valuable land and should be acquired if and when
possible.’ There is a suggestion
in the papers that a premium was paid on
the purchase price of the property because a township had been approved, in
comparison with
the prices that were paid by related companies, also controlled
by the depondent’s father, for adjoining properties. This
suggestion is
discounted by the contents of a contemporaneous letter written by the
deponent’s father to a fellow prospective
township developer, in which he
said that his practice was, for tax reasons, to assign a larger portion of the
overall price paid
for a parcel of land to that piece of land in the parcel that
he intended to develop first. In the present case that would have
been the land
that is now in issue. Nor does the deponent’s father appear to have had
any intention of developing the land
in accordance with the approval that was
granted because he was ‘also of the view that the single residential grid
layout of
the township on Portion 7 which he had acquired had already become
outdated since being approved.’ (Portion 7 was the land
now under
consideration.) It is difficult to see in those circumstances in what way the
appellant, or any other person for that
matter (other than the functionaries who
played a role in the establishment process), can be said to have placed reliance
on the
Administrator’s approval in the time since it was granted.
[48] Of course, s 7 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
prescribes a period of 180 days for the institution of proceedings for judicial
review in terms of that Act, but it is by no means
certain that that legislation
applies to the administrative act that is now in issue, or that it is exhaustive
of the remedy of judicial
review.
[49] But these are all matters upon
which we are not called upon to express any final view (and we do not do so). We
mention them
merely to highlight that there is a real prospect that a court
might yet be called upon to set aside the Administrator’s approval
in
proper proceedings for judicial review. Whether it would be appropriate to set
aside the approval was not canvassed in the present
case, but the appellant is
not entitled to a declaratory order that pre-empts such proceedings, or that
pre-empts an attack upon
any other consequences of the approval that might
depend upon its substantive validity, if there are any. Indeed, once it is
clear,
as we have found, that the Administrator’s approval was invalid, it
follows inexorably that the appellant was not entitled
to a declaratory order in
terms as wide as prayer 3. In the absence of a request by the appellant, both
in the court a quo and in this court, for relief in more limited terms,
that prayer was properly refused. Prayers 1 and 2 were little more than
precursors
to the relief that was sought in prayer 3. Because of the view that
we have taken of the matter the issues that are dealt with by
those prayers have
become irrelevant and they should also not be granted.
[50] There is one
more matter that needs to be dealt with. The fourth respondent (South African
National Parks) submitted that in
any event the Administrator’s approval
came to an end after it was granted. That submission has no merit and we will
deal
with it briefly. One of the conditions of establishment required the owner
to reserve a specified portion of land as a commonage
for the benefit of any
future local authority. The condition went on to provide that
‘. . .
[the commonage] will be transferred to the trustees appointed by the
Administrator for the future urban local authority;
the said land to be regarded
as reserved land as referred to in section 21 of Ordinance No. 33 of 1934 and to
be transferred prior
to the transfer of any land in the said . . .
Township’
Section 21(1) of the Ordinance provided that before the
transfer of any erf in an approved township was registered in the deeds registry
the owner had to transfer any land reserved as commonage to trustees appointed
by the Administrator in trust for any local authority
that might thereafter be
constituted for the township, or to the local authority itself if one already
existed. When the land that
is now in issue was sold and transferred to the
appellant the commonage was simultaneously sold and transferred to an associated
company of the appellant. It was submitted on behalf of the fourth respondent
that the effect of the transfer of the commonage to
a private owner instead of
to the Administrator in trust, as required by the conditions of establishment,
was that ‘any approval
for the establishment of [the township] which may
have existed prior to [that date] would, as a matter of law, have come to an end
at that time.’ (The quotation is from the heads of argument.) There is no
suggestion that the appellant, as successor to the
initial owner, would not be
able to fulfil the obligation to transfer the commonage were it to be called
upon to do so. On the contrary
the commonage is held by an associated company
and there is every reason to believe that the appellant will be capable of
fulfilling
that obligation. In the circumstances we see no grounds upon which
the act of transferring the commonage somehow brought the approval
to an end.
[51] The appeal is dismissed with costs including the costs occasioned by
the employment of two counsel.
CT HOWIE
PRESIDENT: SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
RW NUGENT
JUDGE: SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
CAMERON
JA: )
BRAND JA: ) CONCUR
SOUTHWOOD AJA: )
[1] The Ordinance came into force
on 1 January 1935 and was repealed in 1985 by the Land Use Planning Ordinance 15
of 1985 (Cape).
There were various amendments over the years. Its provisions
pertinent to this case are cited below as they read at the various
times that
are relevant.
[2] At the time of
the Administrator’s grant of permission the local authority within whose
area the land was situate was the
Cape Divisional Council, established under the
Divisional Councils Ordinance 15 of 1952. In 1996 it fell under the jurisdiction
of
the Cape Metropolitan Council, the successor to the Divisional
Council.
[3] Section 19(1)
provided for twelve months for the lodgement of the general plan with the
Surveyor-General and section 20(1) allowed
three months for lodgment with the
Registrar of Deeds.
[4] Section
19(3) and section 20(3).
[5] In
terms of s 20(1) lodgement was required of the general plan and a diagram of the
land, a copy of the conditions, if any, on
which the Administrator granted the
application and the title deed by which the land was
held.
[6] The relevant enactment
was the Local Government: Municipal Structures Act, 117 of
1998.
[7] The power is conferred
by s 39 of the Land Use Planning Ordinance (see footnote
1).
[8] Section
11.
[9] Section
13(1)(b).
[10] Section 3(2)(a),
(g) and (h).
[11] The adjoining
land falls within the Cape Peninsula National Park which was proclaimed in terms
of s 2B(1) of the National
Parks
Act.
[12] Section
18(1)
[13] Ordinance 12 of 1980
(Cape).
[14] Section 11 read
with section 18.
[15] Section
18(3) and (3) bis of the
Ordinance.
[16] Johannesburg
Stock Exchange and another v Witwatersrand Nigel Ltd and another 1988 (3)
132 (A) at 152A-E. In the former situation the material facts should have been
available to him for the decision properly
to be made: Pepcor Retirement
Fund and another v Financial Services Board and another 2003 (6) SA 38
(SCA) para 47.
[17] De Smith,
Woolf & Jowell: Judicial Review of Administrative Action 5 ed para
5-044
[18] Christopher Forsyth: “‘The Metaphysic of Nullity’: Invalidity, Conceptual Reasoning and the Rule of Law” in Essays on Public Law in Honour of Sir William Wade QC ed Christopher Forsyth and Ivan Hare (Clarendon Press) 141. Cited with approval by Lord Steyn in Boddington v British Transport Police [1998] UKHL 13; [1999] 2 AC 143 (HL) 172B-D.
[19] Forsyth, above,
147.
[20] Forsyth, above,
148.
[21] Forsyth, above, at
159.
[22] A challenge to the
validity of the administrative act that is raised in proceedings that are not
designed directly to impeach
the validity of the administrative act.
[23] Citation in footnote 18.
[24] Bugg v Director of
Public Prosecutions [1993] QB
473.
[25] 1993 (2) SA 245 (C).
[26] See, too, the case of
Wandsworth London Borough Council v Winder [1984] 3 All ER 976 (HL)
relied upon by the court a quo (see 592F-J) and other examples cited in
Wade: Administrative Law 7ed 321-324.
[27] Forsyth, above,
156.
[28] Per Conradie J in
Metal and Electrical Workers Union of South Africa v National Panasonic Co
(Parow Factory) 1991 (2) SA 527 (C) 530C-D and Scott J in Photocircuit,
above, at 253E-F, citing Wade: Administrative Law 6th ed
at 331 (repeated in 7 ed, see para 28 above).
[29] See the comments in Wade:
Administrative Law 6 ed 354. (The passage appears to have been
inadvertently omitted from 7 ed: see Forsyth, above, fn. 68.)
[30] Wandsworth London
Borough Council v Winder, footnote 26. Generally , as to discretion, see De
Smith, Woolf and Jowell, para 20-007.
[31] Lawrence Baxter:
Administrative Law 715
[32] Per
Miller JA in Wolgroeiers Afslaers (Edms) Bpk v Munisipaliteit van Kaapstad
1978 (1) SA 13 (A)
42C-D.
[33] Wolgroeiers
Afslaers, above, 41D-F.
[34]
Wolgroeiers Afslaers, above, 42C.