Court name
Supreme Court
Case number
SA 1 of 2003
Title

Wirtz v Orford and Another (SA 1 of 2003) [2005] NASC 4 (11 May 2005);

Media neutral citation
[2005] NASC 4











CASE NO.: SA 01/2003






IN THE
SUPREME COURT OF NAMIBIA








In the
appeal of



















ROBERT DOUGLAS WIRTZ



APPELLANT









And
















HUMPHREY
JOHN LEASK ORFORD





OMDRAAI (PTY) LTD




FIRST RESPONDENT






SECOND RESPONDENT













CORAM: STRYDOM, ACJ, et O’LINN, AJA.



HEARD ON: 2004/04/06



DELIVERED ON: 2005/05/11










APPEAL JUDGMENT
















STRYDOM, ACJ: The respondents, styled as the first and second
applicants, applied to the Court a quo for an order in the
following terms:







  1. Interdicting and restraining the first and second respondents and
    their employees or persons acting on their behalf from using the
    private road and deproclaimed road, formerly designated as 1455 on
    the farm Omdraai No 114 and having access to the farm Omdraai no.
    114 in the District of Windhoek.









  1. Interdicting and restraining the first and second respondents and
    their employees from damaging or removing the applicants’ locks,
    chains, gates or fences preventing access on to the farm Omdraai No.
    114.









  1. Interdicting and restraining the first and second respondents from
    permitting or authorising or instructing their employees to use the
    portion of the de-proclaimed road 1455 on the farm Omdraai No 114.









  1. Interdicting and restraining the first and second respondents from
    permitting or authorising or instructing the employees from damaging
    or removing the applicants’ locks, chains, gates or fences
    preventing access onto the farm Omdraai No. 114 placed at the
    entrances to the farm Omdraai No 114 on the de-proclaimed road
    formerly known as No. 1455.









  1. Directing that the first respondent pay the costs of this
    application on the scale as between practitioner and client,
    alternatively in the event of opposition by the second or third
    respondents, directing that such further respondents who oppose the
    application, pay such costs jointly and severally with the first
    respondent.









  1. Granting the applicants such further and/or alternative relief as
    the Honourable Court deems fit.”








An order, substantially in the form asked for by the respondents, was
issued by the Court on 13 December 2002. Only the appellant
defended the application and he was ordered by the Court to pay the
costs of the application, as well as that of his counter application,
which was also dismissed, on a practitioner and client scale. A
Notice of Appeal against the whole judgment and the order of costs
was filed on the 16th January 2003.







Mr. Frank, SC, appeared before us on behalf of the appellant, whereas
Mr. Smuts, SC, appeared on behalf of the respondents.







The case concerns the right of the appellant to use a private road,
road 1455, which crosses the respondent farm, Omdraai, but which was,
on application by the first respondent, already de-proclaimed and
closed by the Roads Board during 1997. At this time the farm
Hillside, which is linked with this road, was farmed by the father of
the present appellant.







This case was affected by two unfortunate occurrences over which
neither of the parties had any control. After argument in the Court
a quo judgment was reserved by the learned Judge. Instead of
pronouncing its judgment or order in open Court, the learned Judge,
without any notice to the parties, had the order of the Court filed
in pigeon holes in the public office of the Registrar of the Court.
These pigeon holes are each allocated to a practitioner and are meant
for notices issued by the Registrar’s office to the practitioners
or, where process was issued by the Registrar, it is placed in the
pigeon hole of the particular practitioner who can then lift and
serve it. This had the unfortunate but foreseeable effect that the
parties involved only became aware of the handing down of the order
at different times and to complicate matters further the order was
handed down shortly before the December recess with the result that
the respondents only knew about the order early in January.







In terms of Supreme Court Rule 5(5)(b) an appellant is required to
file four copies of the record of appeal within three months of the
date of the judgment or order appealed against. Sub-rule (6)(b)
further provides if there is not compliance with this rule, and the
record is not filed in time, the appeal shall be deemed to have been
withdrawn. The appellant did not file copies of the record within
three months of the date of the order and when this did not happen
the respondents took action and finally fenced off road 1455 whereby
the appellant was denied access via this road.







This action by the respondents sparked off an urgent application by
the appellant in which he asked the Court to declare that the
judgment or order given constituted an irregularity and that the
appellant be granted leave to use the said road pending the
pronouncement of a proper and valid order. In the alternative the
Court was asked to declare that the appeal was not withdrawn and
further in the alternative the appellant prayed for condonation if
the Court should find that the appeal had indeed lapsed as a result
of non-compliance with rule 5(5)(b).







This application was argued before Gibson, J. and was summarily
dismissed by the learned Judge. The appellant also appealed against
the dismissal of this order. This appeal was heard simultaneously
with the appeal in the main application and I shall further herein
refer to it as the interim application.







The second issue which affected the appeals in this matter came about
in the following manner. When the appeal was argued the Court was
properly constituted with three Judges, the third Judge being Teek,
JA. After argument was heard the Court, also consisting of Teek,
JA, reserved judgment and Teek, JA, was designated by me, the
presiding Judge, to write the judgment of the Court. However, before
judgment was written and handed down, Teek, JA, was, on the
recommendation of the Judicial Service Commission, suspended by His
Excellency, the President of the Republic of Namibia, following upon
allegations of criminal conduct by the Judge and after charges were
brought against him. Teek, JA, is still so suspended, pending the
outcome of an investigation by the Judicial Service Commission and
the charges preferred against him. Judgment in this matter is long
overdue and the question is now whether the remaining two Judges, who
are ad idem as to the outcome of the appeal, can properly and
validly deal with the matter and pronounce judgment.







The second aspect, which concerns the suspension of Teek, JA, has
nothing to do with the appeal in question as the alleged cause
thereof only arose during the beginning of this year.







Whether the remaining two Judges can validly deal with the judgment
in this appeal depends on the provisions of the Supreme Court Act,
Act 15 of 1990 (the Act.) Section 13(1) of the Act provides that a
quorum of the Court in civil as well as criminal matters shall be
three Judges. It further provides that the Chief Justice, or senior
Judge in his absence, may increase the number of Judges to as many
Judges of an uneven number as he or she may determine. Of
importance in regard to the quorum of the Court is ss (4) which
provides as follows:







“If at any stage during the hearing of any matter in the Supreme
Court one or more judges of the court die or retire or become
otherwise incapable of acting or are absent, the hearing shall, if
two or more judges remain, proceed before such remaining judges and,
if only one judge remains, be adjourned and the matter shall, subject
to the provisions of subsection (1), be heard de novo by a
freshly constituted court: Provided that if the hearing proceeds
before two judges and they, or where there is more than two judges,
the majority, do not agree on judgment, the matter shall be heard de
novo.”















The first issue which must be considered is whether, after the
suspension of Teek, JA, two or more judges remained as required by
the subsection. This is relevant because I retired at the end of
June 2003 and was then appointed in an acting capacity until the end
of September 2004. When the appeal was heard I had already retired
but was then acting but at this stage, when the judgment is written,
I am no longer acting. It seems therefore that my situation is not
covered by section 13(4) of the Act. However, in my opinion my
situation is covered by sec. 7 of the Act which provides that any
appointment of a person as an acting judge ”shall be regarded to be
also in respect of any period during which such person is necessarily
engaged in connection with the disposal of any proceedings in which
he or she had taken part as such a judge and which have not been
disposed of at the termination of the period for which he or she has
so been appointed…..”







I am therefore of the opinion that I may still act in this matter and
that, as required by sec. 13(4) of the Act, two judges remained after
the suspension of Teek, JA. Whether the two remaining judges can
validly deal with this matter depends further on the interpretation
of sec. 13(4).







As set out above sec 13(4) requires that the absence of, in this
case, one of the judges, must occur during “any stage of the
hearing of any matter….” and the question is whether the absence
or incapacity of Teek, JA, arose during any stage of the hearing of
the matter. A more or less similar situation arose in an appeal
before the Full Bench of the Transvaal division of the Supreme Court
of South Africa when one of the judges became incapacitated after
argument was heard and judgment was reserved but before the judgment
was written and handed down by the Court. Dealing with sec. 17(2)
of the Supreme Court Act of South Africa, the relevant parts of which
are substantially the same as our sec 13(4), Ackermann, J,
interpreted the section as follows in the matter of Automated
Business Systems (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for Inland Revenue,
1986
(2) SA 645 (TPD), page 655H-I:







“According to the wording of ss 17(2), the incapacity or absence of
the Judge is related to ‘any stage during the hearing’ of any
matter by a Full Court, and provision is made, in the circumstances
detailed, for the ‘hearing’ to ’proceed’. A narrow and
literal construction of the word ‘hearing’ could, possibly, mean
that the subsection does not apply to a situation such as the present
where the Judge has become incapacitated after conclusion of argument
and after judgment has been reserved. Such a construction would, in
my view, be patently absurd. It would mean that the hearing could
proceed if the incapacitation occurs at the beginning of the hearing
but not after argument has been concluded. I can see no reason for
drawing such a distinction and the Legislature could not have
intended such a consequence.”















The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa,
previously dealt with a similar problem in its decision in Kempton
van Lines (Edms) Bpk v M.S. van Rensburg
, 16/11/1982, not
reported.







In that case three judges heard an appeal from the then South West
Africa Division of the Supreme Court. The appeal was heard by
Muller, Kotzé and Trengrove. The judge of appeal, Kotze, who
wrote the judgment of the Appellate Divison concurred in by
Trengrove, J.A., commented as follows:







"My brother Muller became indisposed after judgment was
reserved. He is to our regret still indisposed to further
participate in this appeal. This judgment thus became, in terms of
article 12(3) of Act 59 of 1959, the judgment of the Court." (My
free translation from the Afrikaans.)











Art. 12(3) of the said Act also corresponds to the Namibian
legislation and reads as follows:







"If at any stage during the hearing of an appeal one or more of
the judges die or become otherwise incapable of acting or are absent,
the hearing shall, where the remaining judges constitute a majority
of the judges before whom the hearing was commenced, proceed before
such remaining judges, and the judgments of a majority of such
remaining judges which are in agreement shall, if that majority is
also a majority of judges before whom the hearing commenced, be the
judgment of the Court, and in any other case the appeal shall be
heard de novo."















In the case of Ex parte Chief Immigration Officer, Zimbabwe, 1994
(1) SA 370 ZSC, Gubbay, CJ, came to the conclusion that the words
‘during the hearing’ contained in sec. 4(3) of the Zimbabwe
Supreme Court Act are limited to the actual session of the Court and
does not extend beyond such hearing where for instance judgment was
reserved and one of the circumstances, detailed by the Act, occurred.
However a reading of the section showed that this section differs
significantly from the provisions in the South African and Namibian
Acts.







I agree with the reasoning and findings in the Kempton van Lines
case and that of Ackermann, J, in the Automated Business Systems
case. In a Court of Appeal where the majority of the hearings
seldom go beyond a day or two but where judgment is mostly reserved
and only delivered at a later date a narrowing down of the meaning of
the words ‘hearing’ and ‘during the hearing’ to something
which must happen whilst the Court is actually in session would limit
the application of the section to such an extent as to make it almost
of no help in the particular circumstances to which the section
applies. As was pointed out by the learned Judge it would mean that
the hearing could proceed provided the incapacitation or otherwise,
occurred at the beginning of the hearing but not after argument was
concluded and judgment reserved.







The next issue to be decided is whether the fact that Teek, JA, was
suspended from sitting as a Judge by the President of Namibia on the
recommendation of the Judicial Service Commission, (See Article 84(5)
of the Constitution), brings this matter within the scope of the
provisions of sec. 13(4) of the Act. It is a notorious fact that
this suspension continues pending further investigation of the
allegations levelled at the Judge and the charges brought against
him, and it follows that a decision by the Commission may be a
recommendation to the President to uplift the suspension or to
terminate the appointment of the Judge. It is also a notorious fact
that, at the time of the writing of this judgment, the matter has not
yet been finalised.







In my opinion words such as ‘become otherwise incapable of acting’
and ‘absent’ are wide and would include a situation such as the
present. As a result of the suspension of the Judge he has become
incapable of acting in this matter and any other matter. There is
no limitation to be extracted from the words of the subsection, or
its context, which would limit the meaning thereof or to support a
conclusion that these words could not mean incapability brought about
as a result of a suspension of a Judge.







In the result I have come to the conclusion that my brother O’Linn
and I can validly and properly give judgment in this matter provided
that we are in agreement concerning the issues of this appeal



.



As regards the first issue mentioned, namely the handing down of the
judgment or order of the Court, and because of the conclusion to
which I have come, it would be more convenient and appropriate to
deal therewith at the time when I discuss the appeal on the interim
application.







Turning now to the merits of the appeals I will first deal with the
appeal against the granting of the interdict by the Court a quo in
the main application in favour of the respondents, then the counter
application by the Appellant, and then the appeal against the
dismissal by Gibson, J, of the interim application for a declaratory
order and other relief by the appellant as well as the application
for condonation.







In regard to the appeal against the main application by the
respondents Mr. Frank, on behalf of the appellant, conceded,
correctly in my view, that the appellant did not put up any defence
to the application and that the appeal against this part of the order
cannot succeed. I will nevertheless deal shortly with the facts of
the application and the appellant’s defence thereto.







The first respondent stated that he acquired the farm Omdraai on
behalf of the second respondent in September 1990. Up to the time
of the application the first respondent could only recall two
instances where road 1455, a road which traversed the farm Omdraai,
was used by farmers of that region. The road however gave access to
the area by persons who used it for stock theft purposes and to slip
past roadblocks set up by the police. As a result of an application
by the respondents the Roads Board recommended to the Minister of
Works and Transportation to de-proclaim the road and to close it.
This recommendation was followed up by a notice in the Official
Gazette, by the Minister, de-proclaiming such road and closing it.
First respondent said that since then the road became a private road
which could only be used with his permission.







When the application was heard by the Roads Board in November 1997,
there was only one objector to the proposed closure of the road, and
that was Mr. Wirtz Snr., the father of the present appellant, since
deceased, who farmed on an adjoining farm, Hillside. At the time
the first respondent offered to Mr. Wirtz Snr. the use of the road
under certain conditions but this offer was rejected outright by Mr.
Wirtz Snr.







After the death of Mr. Wirtz Snr. the present appellant started
farming operations on the farm Hillside and approached the first
respondent for permission to use road 1455. This permission was
granted under strict conditions one of which was that it would be for
his personal use only. After various instances where the road was
used by persons other than the appellant and the chain and padlock
put on the gate to the entrance of the road was cut by employees of
the appellant, the first respondent revoked his permission to use the
road, granted to the appellant. This did not bring an end to the use
of the road by the appellant or his employees and the cutting of the
padlocks and chains continued unabated. As a result thereof
respondents brought the present application.







The appellant was the only respondent who disputed the application.
He denied that the road was a private road and stated that after the
closure thereof it became a minor road in terms of the provisions of
the Roads Ordinance, Ordinance 17 of 1972. The appellant further
stated that as a result of the fact that he caused boreholes to be
drilled on the farm Hillside, and because water was found, the farm
could now be utilised for extensive cattle farming, something which
was not possible during the time his father was on Hillside. He was
further offered an option to sell grazing to Meatco which
necessitated him to buy equipment to the value of N$1 000 000.00.







Furthermore the appellant said that it was well known that an
alternative abattoir was opened in Witvlei during the beginning of
2002 which was a much more accessible market for his cattle than
Windhoek because it was much closer. The deponent stated that the
closure of the road by the Roads Board was conditional upon his
father being given a right to use the said road. The right was
therefore not personal but a right in rem.







The appellant stated that it was a necessity for his farming
operations to be able to use road 1455 as the alternative road over
the farm Bitterwasser was inaccessible to heavy trucks for six months
of the year due to the rainy season which turns part of the road into
a marsh. It was also alleged by the appellant that road 1455 was
never regarded as a private road because signs, as required by the
Road Ordinance, were never erected and maintained whereby possible
uninformed users of the road would have been alerted to the fact that
the road was closed. The appellant denied that the road was
infrequently used prior to its closure and stated that his father
used the road even after it was closed.







The defences set out to meet the application by the respondents are
therefore threefold namely, that the appellant had a right in rem
to use the road as it was a condition by the Roads Board on
de-proclaiming and closing the road, that the road was not a private
road as it became a minor road on its closure and therefore open to
the appellant to use and, thirdly, because the respondents neglected
to put up signs indicating that the road was a private road, as
required by the Ordinance, the road remained a public road to which
the public, and consequently the appellant, had at all times access.







As far as the first defence is concerned the first respondent
explained that this was never a condition on which the Board made its
recommendation to the Minister. This is clear from a copy of the
record of the proceedings before the Board which was attached to the
application. The first applicant was asked whether the road would
be available to Mr. Wirtz Snr, should it be closed, and he replied
that he would hand a key to Mr.Wirtz Snr. if so requested. When Mr.
Wirtz Snr. put his case before the Board he was asked by the Board
whether it would be acceptable if keys, to open the gates, were
given to him and he replied in the negative. No such condition, as
claimed by the appellant, appears from the Government Notice whereby
the de-proclamation and closing of road was gazetted nor does it form
part of the recommendation of the Board to the Minister. In my
opinion an offer was made to Mr. Wirtz Snr. personally to have the
use of the said road but he rejected the offer and that was the end
of the matter. No jus in rem was created in favour of
successors in title to the farm Hillside.







The defence based on the submission that the road on closure became a
minor road to which the appellant had access, is also without merit.
Sec. 64(8) of Ordinance 17 of 1972 provides that where such road is
closed either by erecting a fence across it, or by any other means
whatsoever, road traffic signs shall be erected by the person closing
the road to inform would be users that the road has been closed to
traffic. The section clearly spells out that such road can be
closed in a way which would not permit further traffic using the
road. Reliance was initially placed on the definition of a minor
road, in sec. 1 of the Ordinance, which provides that a minor road is
a road which is not a proclaimed road and which links two or more
proclaimed roads or crosses the boundaries of two or more farms and
to which the public has rightful access. In the
present instance the road was not only de-proclaimed by the Roads
Board but was in fact closed so that the public no longer had
rightful access thereto.







The third defence was based on the fact that the appellant did not
comply with the provisions of the same subsec. (8) by not erecting
road traffic signs, at the time of closure of the road, which would
have indicated to would be users that the road was closed and which
were to be maintained for a period of at least six months. It was
admitted by the first respondent that he did not comply with this
provision.







In terms of subsec. (9)(b) a person who failed to comply with the
provisions of subsec. (8) by not erecting and maintaining such road
signs for a period of at least six months, after closure of the road,
was guilty of an offence. No specific penalty is provided and one
will have to look at the general penalty clause. In terms of sec.
68 of Ordinance 17 of 1972 the penalty for non-compliance with the
provisions of the Ordinance, where no penalty is expressly provided,
is a fine not exceeding two hundred Namibian dollar or imprisonment
not exceeding six months.







It is correct that criminalizing non-compliance with the provisions
of a statute is a factor to consider whether it was the intention of
the Legislator to visit such non-compliance with invalidity.
Whether this is the case a number of factors must be considered.
Of importance is the wording and context of the section and the
mischief which the Legislator wanted to address. The penalty itself
would give an indication of how serious the Legislator regarded
non-compliance with such provisions.







The purpose of subsec. (8) seems to me to give notice to a would-be
user of the particular road that it was closed and not open for use
by the general public. It would also serve to avoid inconvenience
to such user who may follow such road only to find that it is
barricaded at some point which need not be the point where the
closure starts. In the present instance the road was barricaded at
its very beginning by a chain and padlock being placed on the gate
that gave access to the road. The evidence was further that this
road was very seldom used. The denial by the appellant of this
infrequent use is not much more than a bare denial as no indication
was given, and none springs to mind, on which this could have been
based. His allegation that the road was frequently used by his
father is clearly hearsay as no foundation was laid to substantiate
such claim. Furthermore the penalty in this instance is such that
no intention can be gathered from that, and the other relevant
factors, that it was the intention of the Legislator to visit
non-compliance of the subsection with invalidity. It seems to me,
bearing also in mind the mischief that the Legislator wanted to
address, that conviction of an offender plus possible payment of a
small fine was regarded as sufficient punishment without invalidating
the de-proclamation and closure of the road by the Minister. (See
in general Eland Boerdery (Edms.) Bpk. v Anderson, 1966 (4) SA
400 (T) and Standard Bank v Estate Van Rhyn, 1925 AD 266.)







The appellant concluded his answering affidavit as follows:







“38. In the premises I humbly pray for an order in the following
terms:



38.1 that this application be dismissed with costs;







38.2 that the applicant be ordered to allow me interim access to road
FR 1455 pending an action to be instituted within 21 days claiming a
right of way across farm Omdraai to the farm Hillside;



38.3 that I be granted a via necessitate to utilise road FR
1455 pending an application to the roads board to have road FR 1455
reproclaimed;







alternatively



to have road FR 1455 declared to be a minor road.”




Mr. Frank, conceding that no valid defence was raised by the
appellant to the interdict sought by the respondents, submitted that
the question which arose in terms of the counterclaim was whether a
temporary right of way over respondent's property Omdraai should have
been granted by the Court a quo.







In regard to the interim relief both Counsel were agreed as to the
law applicable in such instance and it is accepted that the onus was
on the appellant to show:








  1. a prima facie right;









  1. a well grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim
    relief is not granted and the ultimate relief is eventually granted;









  1. that the balance of convenience favours the granting of an interim
    interdict; and









  1. the first respondent has no other satisfactory remedy;








(See in this regard Hix Networking Technologies v System
Publishers (Pty) Ltd,
1997 (1) SA 391(A) at 398 – 399; The Law
of South Africa (Ed. Joubert), Vol 11 (first re-issue) at 291 -292
and also Prest: The Law and Practice of Interdicts (1996) at 65).







As to the approach of the Court to establish whether an applicant has
acquitted himself of this onus the Court was again referred to the
above volume of The Law of South Africa, p 292, by both Counsel. I
agree that the law is correctly set out as follows:







“The proper approach is to consider the facts as set out by the
applicant together with the facts set out by the respondent which the
applicant cannot dispute, and to decide whether, with regard to the
inherent probabilities and ultimate onus, the applicant should on
those facts obtain final relief at the trial. The facts then set up
in contradiction by the respondent should then be considered, and if
they throw serious doubt on the applicant’s case, he cannot
succeed.”











The only prima facie right which the appellant attempted to
establish was that of a via necessitate and in this regard the
following was stated by the Court in the matter of Van
Rensburg v Coetzee,
1979 (4) SA 655(AD) at 457 E - F and the
principle is correctly summarized in English in the head note as
follows:







“A claim to a way of necessity arises when a piece of land is
geographically enclosed and has no way out, or, if a way out is
available, it is however inadequate and the position amounts to this
that the owner ‘has no reasonably sufficient access to the public
road for himself and his servants to enable him, if he is a farmer,
to carry on his farming operations’. Without an order of court
this claim does not make the registration of a right of way of
necessity in respect of another person’s land possible; and,
further, before such order is obtained, entry on the other person’s
land will apparently be unlawful.”















Bearing in mind all the evidence that was put before the Court a
quo
I agree with Mr. Smuts that the case of the appellant
flounders already on the first requisite for interim relief, namely
the onus on the appellant to show that he has a prima facie right.







It is clear from the allegations set out in the various affidavits
that road 1455 is not the only link the appellant has from his farm
to a main road, but that a proclaimed road over the farm Bitterwasser
is also available to the appellant. However, although not denying
that this is so, the appellant stated that, due to thick sand and
marshy conditions during the rainy season, this road could not be
used for about six months per year by heavy trucks. Various other
reasons were also given by the appellant as to why he should be given
access via road 1455.







In his answering affidavit the appellant stated that an abattoir had
opened in Witvlei which was an alternative market for his cattle and
if permitted to use road 1455 would give him a shorter route to this
market. Appellant alleged that the road via the farm Bitterwasser
would be approximately 50 kilometres longer when approached from the
Witvlei/Gobabis side and 20 kilometres longer when approached from
Windhoek which affected the viability of such alternative market.
Furthermore the appellant was offered the option to sell grazing to
Meatco which necessitated him to buy equipment to the value of N$1
million dollar which was due to arrive during June 2002 and which
needed to be transported by trucks to the farm. Heavy trucks would
also be needed to transport the grazing once this operation is
started.







In his replying affidavit the first respondent was able to refute
most of the allegations by the appellant either because what was
stated by the appellant was proved not to be correct or was shown to
be an exaggeration which was not supported by the facts. Another
strange feature was the fact that the appellant did not avail himself
of the right to reply to the replying affidavit of the first
respondent in so far as it put in issue facts which supported the
counter application of the appellant. Could it perhaps be that it
would have been difficult and embarrassing for the appellant to reply
to the issue of the Witvlei Abattoir when it was shown by an
affidavit of the investor in the abattoir that it was not open and
was not operational? The first respondent also called in question
the difference in distances alleged by the appellant if he was not
allowed access via road 1455. According to the first respondent
the route over Bitterwasser to Witvlei would be 25 kilometres further
and not 50 kilometres whereas using this route to reach Windhoek
would be15 kilometres further.







Mr. Smuts further pointed out that also in regard to the option of
providing grazing to Meatco there is no certainty whether this in
fact materialized. To me it seems that this was an instance which
should have been covered by the appellant in a replying affidavit
more specifically because the appellant stated that he expected the
equipment to arrive in June 2002, and the replying affidavit of the
first respondent was only signed on the 14th of June 2002
which would have allowed the appellant to deal with this situation in
his replying affidavit. From his silence in this regard one must
infer either that he had no problem transporting the equipment via
the alternative route over Bitterwasser or the option did not
materialize. The first respondent also took issue with the
allegation that the road was impassable for a period of six months
every year and he pointed out that the rainy season in Namibia was
far shorter.







It was furthermore alleged by the first respondent that road 1455 was
also not suitable, during certain times of the year, to carry cattle
trucks and in his replying affidavit photographs were attached
showing trucks of the appellant on this road stuck in the sand.
Although it was accepted by the respondents that the road over
Bitterwasser was impassable during part of the year, more
particularly during the rainy season, it was alleged by the first
respondent that that was also the case in regard to road 1455 and
that for that reason the first respondent himself did not use road
1455 but trekked over-land with his cattle to a neighbouring farm
where the cattle were then loaded on trucks and taken to the market.
The first respondent suggested that that was also what the appellant
should do and it was alleged that this was in fact done by Mr. Wirtz
Snr.







By electing not to reply to these allegations the appellant’s duty
to show that he has a prima facie right in the form of a via
necessitate
is left in serious doubt, not to mention the other
requisites for a temporary interdict. Bearing in mind the approach
of a Court to the evidence it seems to me that the facts set out by
the first respondent in contradiction to those set out by the
appellant, many of which were, in this instance, not refuted by the
appellant, are such that the appellant cannot succeed.







The appellant was satisfied to base his counter application on
general allegations and it lacks in my opinion specific and
particular detailed facts which could have put a much fuller picture
before the Court for it to consider the question whether this was an
appropriate instance to grant the interim relief to the appellant.
Lack of specificity coupled with an election not to reply to the
allegations of the respondent, as far as they concerned the counter
application, were factors which certainly affected the outcome of the
counter application. Under the circumstances I am satisfied that
the Court a quo was correct when it dismissed the counter
application.







The appellant also appealed against the dismissal of the urgent
interim application when he found that road 1455 was fenced off and
thereby denying him access from the farm Hillside. This was done
when the successor in title to the farm Omdraai concluded that
records of the appeal were not timeously filed and that the appeal
had lapsed. By Notice of Motion the appellant then applied for the
following order:







“2. For an order declaring that the order and/or judgement so given
by this Honourable Court on dates unknown but during December 2002
and June 2003 respectively constitutes an irregularity as same was
not pronounced in open court as is required by Section 13 of the High
Court Act 16 of 1990.







3. That the Applicants be granted leave to use Road 1455 pending a
proper and valid pronouncement of the court order and/or judgement so
given during December 2002 and June 2003 respectively.







Alternatively to the above and in the event of it being found that
the Court order and judgement was properly pronounced in open court
during December 2002 and June 2003 respectively, for an order
declaring that the Appeal so noted by the Applicant on 16 January
2003 has not been withdrawn and/or has not lapsed as contemplated by
Rule 5(6)(a) of the rules of the Supreme Court.







Alternatively to the above and in the event of it being found that
the Appeal so noted had indeed been withdrawn and/or lapsed as
envisaged in Rule 5(6)(a) of the rules of the Supreme Court, that
condonation be granted to the Applicant for the late prosecution of
the Appeal as provided for in Rule 5(5)(b) of the Rules of the
Supreme Court.







4. That the Appeal so noted on 16 January 2003 is effective and
pending alternatively, be reinstated and that Applicant be afforded
leave to prosecute such Appeal and for leave to obtain a date for the
hearing of the appeal.”















This application was heard by Gibson, J, and was dismissed by the
learned Judge with costs. In her judgement the learned Judge, in my
opinion correctly, pointed out that the alternative prayers in
paragraph 3 of the Notice whereby the appellant prayed for an order
to reinstate the appeal and prayed, in the alternative, for
condonation of the late filing of the record in terms of the Rules of
the Supreme Court, could only be sought from the Supreme Court itself
and being rules of that Court only that Court had the power to grant
such orders.







As far as the other prayers were concerned these were dismissed on
the basis of Rule 30(1) of the High Court Rules. This Rule provides
that any party to a cause in which an irregular step or proceedings
has been taken can apply, within l5 days after becoming aware of the
irregularity, to set it aside, provided that no further steps have
been taken after the party became aware of the irregularity.
Because the appellant took further steps, e.g. by filing a Notice of
Appeal, after having become aware of the irregularity, he was barred
from claiming the further relief. However, Mr. Frank pointed out
that Rule 30 was not applicable to the situation as it refers to
irregularities committed by one or other of the parties to the cause
and the irregularity complained of in this instance, if it were such,
was committed by the Court itself. Mr. Smuts agreed with this
submission and in my view correctly so.







Mr. Smuts, in limine, submitted that the appeal against the
order of the Court a quo was not properly before us as it was
an interlocutory proceeding which could only come before us after
leave was granted by the Court a quo, or if leave was refused,
by special leave of the Chief Justice. (See High Court Act No 16 of
1990, Section 18(3).)







Mr. Frank submitted that the appellant sought, by means of the
interim application, a declaratory order, which was appealable as of
right as the dismissal of the application was final. It was common
cause that the appellant did not apply for leave to appeal.







Mr. Frank referred the Court to the cases of Van Streepen &
Germs (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial Administration,
1987 (4)
SA 569(A) at 582H – 583B and Marsay v Dilley, 1992 (3) SA
944(A) at 962 B - E. Counsel also submitted that it has long been
accepted that the refusal of a temporary interdict is appealable as
being of final effect. Reference in this regard was made to
Herbstein and Van Winsen: The Civil Practice of the Superior
Courts in South Africa; 3rd ed. p 740 where the following
is stated:







“Such an order is appealable … on the ground that … the refusal
may result in plaintiff being unable, if successful in his
action, to obtain the relief he seeks, i.e. it will preclude some
of the relief which might have been given at the hearing.

(my emphasis).















The cases referred to by Counsel dealt primarily with the issue of
when a pronouncement by the Court of first instance is a ‘judgment’
or ‘order’ which would be appealable. (See sec. 20(1) of Act 59
of l959, the Supreme Court Act of South Africa). Our sec. 18(1) of
Act 16 of 1990 is to that extent similar in that it provides for a
right of appeal in regard to judgments or orders pronounced by a
Court of first instance. The meaning given to the words ‘judgment’
or ‘order’ in these cases are therefore relevant also to the
meaning of those words as used in our sec. 18(1). This was decided
by this Court in the matter of Aussenkehr Farms (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Minister of Mines and Energy and Another,
unreported
judgment of this Court, delivered on 5/03/2003).







To be a ‘judgment’ or ‘order’, as those words are understood
in sec. 18(1) of Act 16 of 1990, it must have the following three
attributes, namely:








  1. Where the judgment or order made has the effect of being a final
    decision (i.e. one which cannot be corrected or altered or set aside
    by the trial Judge at a later stage of the trial);









  1. Where the decision is definitive of the rights of the parties; and









  1. Where the decision has the effect of disposing of a substantial
    portion of the relief claimed by the plaintiff in the main action.








(See in this regard Zweni v Minister of Law and Order, 1993
(1) SA 523 (A). This was also decided in the cases to which the
Court was referred to by Mr. Frank, namely the Van Streepen-case
and the Marsay-case, and in my opinion is also reflected
in the passage quoted from Herbstein and Van Winsen,
emphasised by me. The refusal of the interim application did not
preclude any relief which might be given at the hearing.)







The issue in the cases referred to by Mr. Frank was not whether the
orders made by the Court a quo were appealable with or without
leave but whether, a particular order made by the Court, was a
‘judgment’ or ‘order’ which was appealable whether leave was
granted or not.. It was in this regard, namely whether an order was
appealable and when not, that the Courts in South Africa, and notably
the Appeal Court, have adopted a more flexible approach over the
years. It was pointed out by Corbett, JA, as he then was, in the Van
Streepen-
case, that there was much to be said for the view that
some of the orders, referred to in previous cases, would now have
been appealable with leave in terms of section 20(1), read with sec.
20(2)(b) of Act 59 of 1959, before the amendments introduced by Act
105 of 1982. However, in terms of the amendments, introduced by this
Act, leave to appeal is now required in all appeals in civil
proceedings except in terms of certain particular statutes which
provide for a direct appeal to the Appellate Division.







Section 18(3) of Act 16 of 1990 requires that leave to appeal must be
obtained in all interlocutory matters and in appeals against an order
for costs only, which was in the discretion of the Court. In the
context of our statutory provision the issue to be decided is
therefore not whether the interim order was appealable or not but
whether it was appealable as of right or whether leave to appeal
should have been obtained.







The answer to this question depends on whether it can be said that
the order made by the Court a quo was a ‘judgment’ or
‘order’. Bearing in mind the attributes for a ‘judgment’
or ‘order’ set out herein before I agree with Mr. Frank that the
dismissal of the interim relief was final in the sense that it could
not subsequently be changed by the Court. However that is only one
of the attributes of a ’judgment’ or ‘order’. In my opinion
the order of the Court a quo was not decisive of any of
the rights of the parties nor did it dispose of a substantial, or for
that matter, any portion of the relief claimed by the applicant in
the main application. The relief claimed by the appellant in the
interim order was procedural in nature which, by itself, is a strong
indication that the relief claimed was interlocutory.







I have therefore come to the conclusion that the appeal against the
dismissal of the interim order is not properly before us and must be
struck from the roll with costs.







It is, in my opinion, still necessary to deal with the submissions
made in connection with the way in which the Court a quo handed
down the order and reasons for its judgment in this matter by putting
it in the pigeon holes of the respective parties’ legal
practitioners in the office of the Registrar, instead of delivering
it in open Court as required by Article 12 of the Constitution and
section 13 of the High Court Act, Act No. 16 of 1990. If, as was
submitted by Mr. Frank, in the alternative, that this amounts to a
nullity, then it follows that there is no proper appeal for us to
deal with. This issue is further also relevant to the application
which was launched in this Court by the appellant in which the Court
was asked to declare that the appeal was not withdrawn as provided
for in Supreme Court Rule 5(6) or, alternatively, to grant
condonation if Rule 5(6) applied.







From what was set out in the case of Financial Mail (Pty) Ltd v
Registrar of Insurance,
1966 (2) SA 219 (WLD) at p 220E – 221D
it is clear that from early times Courts in South Africa were, in
terms of various statutes, required to conduct hearings and to
deliver their judgments and orders in open Court. As far as civil
law is concerned the Constitution provides the instances where the
Court could conduct its hearing behind closed doors and it is common
cause that these do not apply to the present situation.







The reason why this is so is that the public at large has an interest
in the conduct of hearings by a Court of Law and in the judgments and
orders handed down by it. Furthermore the dealings of the Court is
open to scrutiny at all times and by anyone and this can mostly only
be achieved if those proceedings are carried out in open Court,
except for those instances provided for in our Constitution where
public interest must make way for the interest of the individual or
the security of the State. Does this mean that where a Court
misdirected itself and allowed evidence of a witness, or part
thereof, to be in camera where it should not have done so,
that such evidence, or the trial itself, becomes a nullity? I do
not think that that is so per se, and it would in my opinion
depend on the degree by which the public and/or the parties were
deprived of their right to an open hearing and the seriousness of the
irregularity







It was stated in the case of Nkisimane & Others v Santam
Insurance Co
1978 (2) SA 430(A) at 433H -434A that –







“…..statutory requirements are often categorised as ‘peremptory’
or ‘directory’. They are well-known, concise and convenient
labels to use for the purpose of differentiating between the two
categories. But the earlier clear-cut distinction between them (the
former requiring exact compliance and the latter merely
substantial compliance) now seems to have become somewhat blurred.
Care must therefore be exercised not to infer merely from the use of
such labels what degree of compliance is necessary and what the
consequences are of non or defective compliance. These must
ultimately depend upon the proper construction of the statutory
provision in question, or, in other words, upon the intention of the
lawgiver as ascertained from the language, scope and purpose of the
enactment as a whole.”















The same sentiments were expressed in the case of Weenen
Transitional Local Council v Van Dyk,
2000 (3) SA 435 (N) at
p442E – G as follows:











“Whether a given provision is peremptory or directory is
determined, inter alia, with reference to the language of the
provision, the scope and purpose of the statute and the context
within which the relevant provision appears in relation thereto and
the consequences to convenience and propriety if the measure were to
be held to be peremptory (the rationale being that in certain
circumstances a declaration of nullity might well produce greater
inconvenience and more undesirable results than the non-compliance
itself - Leibrandt v South African Railways, 1941 AD 9 at p 12
-13.)”















The above cases were cited by Mr. Frank and it was submitted by him
that this was clear authority that the irregular handing down of the
order in this instance caused it to be a nullity. I do not agree.
In this instance the hearing of the matter, i.e. the argument by
Counsel, was in open Court. Although the public has an interest in
the outcome of the matter it does not follow that thereby the public
in general will not in time have such access where and if necessary.
I think that in this regard it is important to determine why, in this
case, the reasons and order were not handed down in open Court. I
have no doubt that the Honourable Judge who handed down the reasons
and order of the Court acted bona fide, albeit incorrectly,
and that there was never an intention to deprive the public or the
parties from having insight into the reasons or the order. This
action must be distinguished from a situation where the Court or
Judge acted mala fide with the intention of keeping his
actions secret or to limit publication thereof by acting
surreptitiously or by making an order to that effect. Of importance
is the fact that eventually both parties were informed of the
outcome, as was no doubt the intention of the Judge, and could
arrange their further process accordingly. This is evidenced by the
fact that the appellant, in time, gave notice of his intention to
appeal against the judgment. If Counsel is correct that the order
is a nullity it would mean that there is no appeal before us and, at
least as far as the appeal is concerned, the process will have to
start all over again. That was perhaps why this argument was only
raised in the alternative by Counsel. Generally where a nullity
occurred the process, up to the commission thereof, is affected
thereby. It is therefore questionable whether the subsequent
handing down of the order in open Court would cure the defect. The
effect of such a declaration will further inconvenience the parties
and saddle them with additional and unnecessary costs.







For the above reasons and bearing in mind the purpose, scope and
language of the lawgiver, I have come to the conclusion that this is
not an instance where the irregular handing down of the order of the
Court should be visited with invalidity. It is so that the
inadvertent action by the Judge was wholly unnecessary and should
never have occurred. It put the parties to extra costs, and time
and energy were wasted in dealing with this unprecedented and
irregular handing down of the order. It led to some confusion and
uncertainty as to the further application of the rules of this Court
and resulted in further litigation which may not have been necessary
if the order was handed down in open Court whereby a specific date
would have been fixed and from where the parties could with certainty
arrange any further steps they intended to take in terms of those
rules.







Lastly there is the issue whether the appeal has lapsed, and if so,
whether condonation should be granted and the appeal re-instated.
Supreme Court Rule 5 provides for the procedure to be followed on
appeal. In so far as it is relevant to this case, ss. (1) provides
that a notice of appeal, where there is a right of appeal, should be
lodged with the Registrar of the Court within 21 days after the
judgment or order appealed against has been pronounced. Sub-rule
5(b) requires an appellant, with a right to appeal, to lodge four
copies of the record with the Registrar of the Court within three
months of the date of the judgment or order appealed against.
Non-compliance with the provisions of this rule caries with it the
sanction that the appeal shall be deemed to have been withdrawn.
(Sub-rule (6)(b).)











In the case of Administrator, Cape, and Another v
Ntshwagela and Others,
1990 (1) SA 705 (AD) at p 715B – D,
Nicholas, AJA, explained the distinction between the words judgment
and order, as follows::







“In Dickinson and Another v Fisher’s Executors, 1914 AD
424, it was explained at 427 that the distinction between a judgment
and an order would probably be found to be this,







‘……..that the term judgment is used to describe a decision of a
court of law upon relief claimed in an action, whilst by an order is
understood a similar decision upon relief claimed not by action but
by motion, petition or other machinery recognised in practice.’







When a judgment has been delivered in Court, whether in writing or
orally, the Registrar draws up a formal order of Court which is
embodied in a separate document signed by him. It is a copy of this
which is served by the Sheriff. There can be an appeal only against
the substantive order made by a Court, not against the reasons for
judgment."











(See also the case of Van Streepen, supra, at page 580D –
E.)















It seems to me that the use of the words ‘judgment’ or ‘order’
in rule 5 is intended to refer to this technical meaning Notice of
appeal should therefore be given within 21 days after handing down
the order of the Court and the records must be lodged and served
within three months of that date. Although the order in this matter
was dated 13th December 2002 it only came to the notice of
the legal representative of the appellant on 6th January
2003. Notice of appeal was lodged on 16th January 2003.
Because of the peculiar way in which the learned Judge dealt with the
order, the 21 days within which notice of appeal must be given in
terms of the rules, could only start to run once the order came to
the notice of the appellant or his legal representative. The notice
of appeal was therefore lodged well within time.







The reasons for judgment were dealt with in the same peculiar way.
These reasons were dated the 19th May 2003. As far as the
reasons are concerned it was always the practice that when these were
made available, after an order was already made by the Court, that
these were not handed down in open court but was filed with the
Registrar of the Court upon proper notice to the respective parties.
An appeal lies against the order of the Court and not its reasons
and, provided proper notice is given, the parties are well informed
and will be able to take any further steps they regard necessary.
In terms of rule 5(2) of the Supreme Court rules a party who wishes
to appeal need only state whether he appeals against the whole order,
and if not, then to state against what part of the order.







It was stated by the appellant that the reasons only came to the
notice of his legal representative during the beginning of June 2003
but that the latter could no longer remember the exact date. Copies
of the record were lodged on the 29th August 2003 by the
appellant. If the delivery of the reasons for judgment only came to
the notice of the appellant or his legal representative during the
beginning of June 2003 it would follow that the lodging of the
records on 29th August was still within the 3 months
period since the reasons were handed down. An issue which I need
not decide is whether, in terms of the rule the period of 3 months
should be calculated from the time, in this instance, when the order
came to the knowledge of the appellant, or whether the rule required
such calculation to be made from the date the reasons were handed
down, as the Supreme Court rule only refers to the judgment or order.
I shall accept, in favour of the appellant, that the latter date is
the date from which the 3 months period should be calculated.







Although it is stated by the appellant that the reasons for judgment
only came to the knowledge of his legal representative on an
unspecified date in June this is gainsaid by a letter addressed by
the legal practitioner to respondent’s legal practitioner dated the
27th August 2003. This letter reads as follows:







“Dear Sir,



RE: DR. ORFORD // R.D. WIRTZ



The above matter has reference.



As you are undoubtedly aware the Appeal in the aforesaid matter has
lapsed. The reason therefore is that we were waiting for a response
to the application we submitted to the Roads Board.



Kindly indicate whether you would be prepared to consent to the
re-instatement of the appeal failing which we shall have to bring an
application for re-instatement.



Your assistance herein will be greatly appreciated.”















The issue dealt with in this letter is clear, namely the lapsing of
the appeal. There is even a reason given why this happened.
Bearing in mind the rules of the Supreme Court and that the writer of
the letter was someone expert in the law this lapse could only have
been caused by the record of the proceedings not having been lodged
in time. This letter was written on the initiative of the legal
practitioner himself without any pressure brought to bear upon him
and it could only be that, after a simple calculation was made, it
became clear that that was indeed the case. If that was not so and
if the legal practitioner made a mistake or wrongly thought that the
date of the reasons was the date from which a calculation had to be
made, I would have expected an explanation to that extent. However
no such explanation was given. The explanation given by the
appellant in paragraph 21 of the condonation application, namely that
the letter was written if, and in the event that the appeal had
lapsed, bears no relevance to the first sentence of the letter nor to
the fact that it was correctly stated in the letter that it would
therefore be necessary to re-instate the appeal. I therefore
conclude that the appellant, or his legal representative, became
aware that the reasons were filed on a date which required them to
file the record before the letter was written on 29th
August 2003. Under the circumstances the appeal had lapsed and it
was necessary for the appellant to apply for condonation for its
re-instatement.







The finding above therefore requires consideration of the issue of
condonation and re-instatement of the appeal should the application
succeed. I am inclined to grant condonation and to re-instate the
appeal. The matter is obviously one of importance to both parties.
To this must be added the uncertainty and confusion caused by the
unprecedented handing down of the Court’s order and the reasons.
Neither party could provide this Court with any authority regarding
the effect of such handing down and nor could I find any. The
neglect was clearly not motivated by an intentional disregard of the
rules of this Court and was not of any long duration. Under the
circumstances it would in my opinion not be fair to penalise the
appellant and to dismiss the appeal for non-compliance with the rules
of the Court because of something which was not solely to be blamed
on the appellant or his legal practitioner. Because of the
conclusion to which I have come on the appeal this is not of much
assistance to the appellant but it may be of some comfort that the
appeal was not dismissed on a mere technicality.







As far as the respondents are concerned their opposition to the
application was not unreasonable and there is therefore no basis to
order them to pay the costs of the application notwithstanding the
fact that the application was successful. What remains is to decide
whether the appellant should be ordered to pay the costs of the
application for condonation. For the reasons set out when I
discussed the issue whether to grant condonation or not, I am of the
opinion that it would be fair to make no order of costs.







In the result the following order is made.








  1. The appellant’s application for condonation succeeds and the
    appeals are re-instated.








2. The appeal against the main application and the dismissal of
appellant’s counter claim is dismissed with costs.







3. The appeal against the refusal of the interim application is
struck from the role with costs.















________________________



STRYDOM, ACJ















I agree.















________________________



O’LINN, AJA































COUNSEL ON BEHALF OF THE APPELLANT:






INSTRUCTED BY




MR. T.J. FRANK, S.C.






C. BRANDT ATTORNEYS




COUNSEL ON BEHALF OF THE 2ND RESPONDENT:







INSTRUCTED BY:







MR. D.F. SMUTS, S.C.







LORENTZ & BONE