Abstract

In Arun the Constitutional Court held that section 28 of the Land Use Planning Ordinance (LUPO) vests all land indicated as public roads on a development plan in the local authority upon approval of such a plan. This includes land that is in excess of the normal need of the development. The appellant must hence be compensated for the "expropriation" of such excess land if the provision is to comply with section 25(2) of the Constitution. This ruling is problematic for both expropriation law and administrative law.
 In terms of section 25(2) four objections may be raised against the Arun decision. Firstly, it disregards the function of the public interest requirement for expropriation, as understood in view of the law-of-general-application requirement (which, in turn, is informed by the legality principle). The state cannot expropriate property for purposes that are ultra vires (or ulterior to) the authorising legislation. Yet the Arun court seems to allow just this by permitting the local authority to acquire land unrelated to the normal need of the development against payment of compensation instead of setting the attempted expropriation aside. The judgment, secondly, ignores the role of compensation under section 25(2). Merely paying compensation to an affected party cannot turn an invalid expropriation into a valid one, since compensation is merely the result of a valid expropriation and not a justification for it. Thirdly, it makes the distinction between deprivation and expropriation pivot on the effect of the property limitation, which is unable to properly distinguish between these two forms of limitation in all instances. Finally, Moseneke DCJ's ruling seems to afford an election to litigants who are affected by materially defective expropriations to choose whether to accept the expropriation and claim compensation or to have it reviewed and set aside under PAJA. This election, if it indeed exists, subverts the principles of expropriation law and may have negative repercussions for both expropriation law and administrative law, especially in view of the single-system-of-law principle.
 From an administrative law perspective the authors identify four considerations that could assist courts in determining whether administrative law should be considered, if not applied, in a given case. The first is the internal coherency of the law in view of the subsidiarity principles. The subsidiarity principles provide guidelines for courts to decide cases where two fundamental rights might be applicable. A principled approach is necessary in this context to ensure that the law operates as a single system and displays the positive characteristics of such a system. The fact that Moseneke DCJ preferred to award compensation to Arun instead of reviewing the expropriation under PAJA runs contrary to these principles and seems to result in an outcome which endorses – instead of prevents – administrative injustice. Secondly, the Constitutional Court's refusal to follow PAJA by reason of its being onerous on the appellant contradicts earlier case law where the Court held that time-periods under the Act cannot be circumvented by reason of their being burdensome. 
 

Highlights

  • In Arun Property Development (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town City1 (Arun) the Constitutional Court held that the vesting of excess land under section 28 of the Land Use Planning Ordinance 15 of 1985 (C) (LUPO; the Ordinance) results in an expropriation which must be compensated if the provision is to comply with section 25(2) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996

  • The Arun judgment creates parallel fields of law by permitting litigants to choose between claiming compensation for a materially defective expropriation under section 25(2) or having it reviewed in terms of administrative law and set aside

  • The Court could have held that the attempted expropriation is ultra vires the authorising provision and of no effect, thereby obviating the necessity to decide the constitutionality of section 28.96 Yet the Court's ruling suggests that non-compliance with one of the substantive requirements for expropriation affords an election to the affected property holder whether to uphold the expropriation so as to receive compensation or to have it set aside

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Summary

Introduction

At first glance Arun appears to have little to say about administrative law. the judgment disposes of its relevance in a single paragraph. a close reading of the facts and the legal problem before the Court strongly suggests that administrative law cannot be summarily discounted. The section focuses on the Court's reasons for not deciding the case in terms of administrative law principles. Arun provides an interesting case study on the relationship between expropriation law (in terms of section 25(2)) and administrative law. In Bato Star Fishing v Minister of Environmental Affairs104 (Bato Star) O'Regan J directed the parties to present their arguments in terms of PAJA.105. It is unclear why PAJA was any less relevant in Arun. We identify a number of considerations that could assist courts in determining whether administrative law should be considered, if not applied, in a given case. Our focus is on what a court should consider for establishing whether administrative law is relevant or not

The expropriation question
Method of expropriation
Conclusion
The internal coherency of the law in view of the subsidiarity principles
The nature of administrative law
Principles of administrative law
Backdrop
A green-light reading of internal remedies155
Dyzenhaus: deference as respect174
Literature

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