Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 470South Africa
Casting, Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2023/114156) [2024] ZAGPPHC 470 (30 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Casting, Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2023/114156) [2024] ZAGPPHC 470 (30 April 2024)
Casting, Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2023/114156) [2024] ZAGPPHC 470 (30 April 2024)
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sino date 30 April 2024
SAFLII
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Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO
: 2023/114156
DOH:
30 April 2024
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
/YES
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
/YES
3.
REVISED.
DATE:14 May 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
### CASTING, FORGING AND
MACHINING CLUSTER OF SOUTH AFRICA (NPC)
CASTING, FORGING AND
MACHINING CLUSTER OF SOUTH AFRICA (NPC)
First
Applicant
SCAW SOUTH AFRICA
(PTY)LTD
Second
Applicant
DUNROSE
TRADING 57 (PTY) LTD
Third
Applicant
ABRACON
PROPERTY 1 (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Applicant
INTERNATIONAL
WIRE CONVERTORS (PTY) LTD
Fifth
Applicant
And
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
CITY
POWER SOC LTD
Second
Respondent
REASONS
BAM
J
A.
Introduction
1.
On Tuesday 30 April 2024, the applicants,
represented by counsel, applied before this court for an interim
interdict restraining
the respondents from terminating or threatening
to terminate the electricity supply in the premises occupied by the
second to the
fifth applicants, pending final determination of the
application they had launched during November 2023.
2.
The first respondent filed a notice to
oppose the application and its answering papers were due on 26 April
2024. However, the first
respondent did not file its papers on 26
April. Instead, on the eve of the hearing, (29 April), the first
respondent filed papers
in excess of 800 pages, including a counter
application to declare the applicants vexatious litigants.
3.
The applicants, as a consequence of the
first respondent’s conduct, were denied the opportunity to
engage with the first respondent’s
defence and reply. The court
was also denied the opportunity to read the respondent’s
papers.
4.
Given
the first respondent’s failure to meet the deadline of 26 April
and observe the permissible limit of pages
[1]
that may be filed in the urgent court, in terms of this Division’s
Practice Directive, the applicants suggested that the
court refer the
matter to the Deputy Judge President’s office for a
preferential date, with the rider that the court grant
them the
interim order set out in their Notice of Motion.
5.
Having
carefully reflected on the circumstances of the applicants’
case, I ruled that the matter proceed without reference
to the
respondent’s papers. Accordingly, the matter proceeded solely
on the applicants’ papers. After hearing the applicants,
I
refused the interdict. The applicants have since requested reasons
for the order I made
[2]
.
I begin by introducing the parties and follow up with a generous
statement of the background facts to put matters into perspective.
Structure of the
reasons
6.
These reasons take the following structure:
6.1 Parties- B
6.2 Background – C
6.3 The Applicants’
approach to its case C
6.4 Merits- D
6.5 The Law, followed by
its application to the facts of this case – E
6.6 Requirements for an
Interdict – F
6.7 Conclusion- G
B.
Parties
7.
The first applicant is a non-profit company
incorporated in terms of South African laws, with its principal place
of business situated
at 1[...] S[...] Road, Spartan, Kempton Park.
The first applicant’s primary business is to promote growth and
development
of the metals manufacturing industry.
8.
The second applicant is SCAW South Africa,
a company duly incorporated in terms of the company laws of South
Africa with its registered
address recorded as Gate 1, Penny Lane,
Germiston. SCAW has various divisional business units, with each
conducting an independent
stand-alone business that is measured and
accounted for separately. This application concerns the Haggie Steel
Rope division of
SCAW. Its premises are located at Lower Germiston
Road, Cleveland, Johannesburg. Haggie specialises in manufacturing
steel wire
rope for the mining and electrical sectors.
9.
The third applicant is Dunrose Trading 57
(Pty) Ltd, (Dunrose) which trades under the name Abracon. Dunrose is
incorporated in terms
of South African laws with its principal place
of business at 6 Raduktor Avenue, Stormil Ext 3.
10.
The fourth applicant is Abracon Property 1,
a company duly incorporated in terms of South African law with its
registered address
recorded as 2[…], 1[…] Avenue,
Corner […] Street, Edenvale. Abracon is in the business of
letting immovable
property and is the owner of the premises occupied
by Dunrose.
11.
The fifth applicant is International Wire
Convertors (Pty) Ltd (IWC), a company duly incorporated in terms of
South African law
with its registered address recorded as 8[…],
[…] Street, Booysen’s Reserve, Johannesburg. IWC is the
manufacturer
of low and high carbon steel wire.
12.
The
first respondent is the City of Johannesburg, a Category A
municipality in terms of the Local Government: Municipal Structures
Act
[3]
,
MSA, with its principal place of business at 1[...] C[...] B[...],
Braamfontein. The second respondent is the City Power Soc Ltd,
an
entity wholly owned by the first respondent. The second respondent’s
registered address is 4[...] H[...] Road, Reuven.
The second
respondent took no part in these proceedings. Thus, reference to the
respondent or the City or CoJ refers to the same
person.
C.
Background
13.
On
2 November 2023, the applicants instituted proceedings, in the
ordinary course, for an interdict to restrain the respondents
from
disconnecting the electricity supply to the premises occupied by the
second to the fifth applicants, pending finalisation
of what they
referred to as disputes in terms of Section 102 of the Municipal
Systems Act, MSA
[4]
;
alternatively, without giving the applicants notice and the related
components of the right to procedural fairness
[5]
.
14.
Following the issuing of the November
application, there appears to have been various exchanges of
correspondence between the applicants’
and the respondents’
attorneys. In the letters, the applicants are critical of the
respondents’ threats to terminate
and, in some instances,
actually terminating the supply of electricity to some of the
applicants’ properties.
15.
I quote from a letter dated 15 November
2023 to illustrate the point. The letter is from Botha Inc, the
applicants’ attorneys.
In the relevant parts, the applicants
record:
‘‘
2…we
informed you that your clients[,] CoJ, in the face of the interdict
and with reckless disregard of the relief being
sought in the
interdict application, issued pre-termination notices threatening to
cut the electricity supply to two of the applicants’
premises
in the Interdict Application, namely the Fifth Applicant (IWC) and
the Third Applicant, Dunrose Trading.
3.
By the way, we
refer your client to the following:
3.1
Your client and City Power were both previously represented by ENS
Attorneys in relation do a dispute regarding the lawfulness
of the
CoJ tariffs approved by NERSA. As part of this dispute, [applicants]
declared a dispute in terms of section 102 of the Local
Government
Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000, in relation to each of the
applicable tariff years,
[applicants]
paid what they contend to be lawful electricity Tariff
,
being a lesser amount than the NERSA approved tariff invoiced to our
clients by CoJ. The difference between the amounts paid by
our
respective clients forms the subject matter of the Section 102
Disputes. Our clients further launched a review application
to review
and set aside the impugned tariff which resulted in the judgment of
Kubushi J which we deal with below
.
3.6 …
Your
client is also aware that its electricity tariffs over the
immediately succeeding years (2020/21; 2021/22; and 2022/23) are
similarly being disputed by, amongst others, IWC in terms of section
102, based on substantially similar grounds.
3.7
However, in view of the CoJ’s historical disregard of the
section 102 Dispute, the Guideline judgement and the CoJ Judgement
prompted our client to launch the interdict application in an attempt
to shield our clients against the ongoing unlawful conduct
by the
CoJ. This interdict application was served on your client on 3
November 2022…
’
16.
On 16 November 2023, the respondents,
through their attorneys of record, Patel Inc., responded to the
applicants’ letter.
In the relevant parts, the letter reads:
‘
4.
Kindly note, our client confirms the accounts …6[…] and
….3[…] have been flagged. This must be understood
as a
revocation of the pre-termination notice.
5. We urge your
offices that, while our client may do all in its power to flag the
account every 30–60 days due to the vast
number of accounts
they may be dealing with, same may not occur and your offices are
humbly requested to send through a follow
up email to request a
flagging of the account while the matter is under dispute and or
statement and debate. However please note
that a flagging of the
account is depended on your clients continu[ing with the] agreed
[upon] payment of the accounts.
6. For reasons whereby
a payment under the 59% is made, our client cannot provide a blanket
undertaking as requested as [this] may
lead to a precedence around
credit control policies.’
17.
If I understand the letter from Mr Patel
correctly, the CoJ, through its attorneys, says they will continue to
flag the applicants’
accounts. They also invite the applicants
to send an email with the accounts that are to be flagged while the
accounts are under
dispute or where the statement is being debated
but the flagging is dependent on the applicants’ continued
payment of what
had been agreed on the accounts. However, in the
event the applicants pay an amount under 59% [presumably of what is
outstanding],
the CoJ cannot provide the undertaking sought by the
applicants not to terminate electricity supply.
The
November 2022 decision
18.
It
is now apposite to refer to the decision in
Casting,
Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Others
v
National
Energy Regulator of SA and Others
[6]
.
The
decision was handed down during November 2022 with the following
order:
‘
1.
The decision of the First Respondent, published on the First
Respondent's website on or about 16 August 2019 (with retrospective
effect to 1 July 2019), to approve an electricity tariff for the
Second Respondent for the 2019/2020 tariff year ("the tariff
decision"), is reviewed and set aside.
2. Save
to the extent set out in paragraph 3 below, the order in paragraph 1
shall not have any retrospective effect and shall
not affect any
amounts that became due to the Second/Third Respondents
[7]
pursuant
to the tariff decision.
3. In respect of the
Applicants (which shall include the members of the applicants as at
the date of instituting the present
application), the following
regime shall apply subject to paragraph 4 below:
3.1.The Applicants and
the Second/Third Respondents will seek to resolve by mutual agreement
their dispute regarding the applicable
electricity tariffs payable
for the 2019/2020 tariff year;
3.2. If agreement is
not reached in terms of paragraph 3.1 within thirty (30) days of the
date of this order, the tariff decision
is remitted to the First
Respondent [NERSA], for it to take a decision only on the applicable
electricity tariffs payable by the
Applicants for the 2019/2020
tariff year; and
3.3. Following the
agreement in paragraph 3.1 or a valid decision as contemplated in
paragraph 3.2:
3.3.1. If the Applicants
owe amounts to the Second/Third Respondents arising from the
agreement in paragraph 3.1 or the decision
in paragraph 3.2, they
shall pay these amounts forthwith; and
3.3.2. If the
Second/Third Respondents owe amounts to the Applicants arising from
the agreement in paragraph 3.1 or the decision
in paragraph 3.2, they
shall credit the Applicants with these amounts forthwith.’
19.
The following is apparent from reading the
order of 22 November:
i)
The court set aside NERSA’s decision,
approving the CoJ
’
s electricity
tariff.
ii)
The order made by the court has no
retrospective effect.
iii)
The order has no effect on the electricity
tariffs of the financial years after the 2019/20, financial year.
iv)
The order did not take away the power of
CoJ to use its credit control measures, including termination of
services to consumers,
including the applicants, in line with the
City’s Credit Control measures.
v)
There is no mention that the applicants may
pay what they believe is the correct amount for their consumption of
electricity. Rather,
the order encourages the applicants and the CoJ
to reach an agreement about what the applicants owe to the CoJ in
relation to the
2019/20
financial
year, failing which, NERSA must issue the correct tariff.
vi)
Whatever is due to the applicants following
either an agreement between the applicants and the CoJ or a valid
decision by NERSA,
in relation to the 2019/20 financial year, must be
credited forthwith, in the applicants’ accounts with CoJ, and
all amounts
due to the CoJ must likewise be paid.
vii)
There is nothing in the order that says the
applicants must be paid cash, in the event there is credit due to
them following the
events set out in (v).
viii)
Finally, the court did not say the CoJ’s
conduct, in charging a tariff approved by NERSA, had acted
unlawfully. It reviewed
and set aside the tariff approved by NERSA
and put the responsibility to issue a valid tariff at the doors of
NERSA.
20.
To summarise the background:
i)
The applicants, on the strength of their
success in reviewing and setting aside the decision made by NERSA
approving the 2019/2020
tariff of the CoJ, have chosen to pay what
they believe is the correct amount for their consumption.
ii)
As a result of the City exercising its
statutory power in terms of its Credit Control measures, as empowered
by the MSA, the applicants
are before court seeking an order to
restrain the City from exercising those statutory powers, based on
what they claim is a dispute
in terms of Section 102 of the MSA.
iii)
Following various exchanges between the
parties, the CoJ informed the applicants that two of their accounts
had been flagged. The
CoJ further invited the applicants to send an
email of the accounts they want flagged but made it clear that it
would continue
to flag the accounts provided the applicants pay the
amounts agreed upon.
iv)
In the event of paying an amount less than
the 59% [of what is outstanding] the City will not flag.
v)
The CoJ further made it clear that it will
not provide an undertaking not to terminate electricity supply to the
any of the applicants’
properties as this may set a precedent.
Applicants’
approach
21.
I digress to make a few observations about
the applicants’ approach in this application. In paragraph 7 of
their founding
affidavit, the deponent avers:
‘
I
respectfully request that this affidavit is to be read together with
the founding affidavit in the main application, and I will
focus here
only on the events that have occurred after the application was
launched.
I request further that
this affidavit is read against the backdrop of:
i.
the findings of this honourable
court of 20 October 2022 in
Nelson
Mandela Bay Business Chambers NPC and another v National Energy
Regulator and others
, where the court
declared the methodology used by NERSA to determine the municipal
electricity tariffs throughout South Africa
was unlawful; and
ii.
the findings of this honourable
court of 25 November 2022 in
Casting
Forging, and Machining Cluster of SA NPC and Others v National Energy
Regulator of SA and others
[2022] JOL 57058
(GP)
where
the court declared the 2019/2020 electricity tariffs of the City of
Johannesburg to be unlawful, and directed NERSA to determine
a lawful
tariff. To date NERSA has failed to determine such tariff.’
22.
The applicants do not identify which
aspects of the November 2023 founding affidavit must read with the
present application, bearing
that the applicants are before the
urgent court. The applicants also do not identify the findings in the
Nelson Mandela Bay and
the Casting Forging (2022) judgments they
consider relevant to the present application, which the court is
asked to take into account.
23.
In
other words, this court must sift through the mentioned material and
make its own decision about what to take into account for
purposes of
the present proceedings. This is unacceptable. It is trite that an
applicant must make their case in the founding affidavit.
The
application stands or falls on the basis of the case set out in the
founding affidavit
[8]
.
24.
In
conducting themselves in this manner, the applicants, it would
appear, have failed to heed the words of the court, per Fourie
J in
C
asting,
Forging & Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Others
v
National
Energy Regulator of SA and Others
[9]
where
they were warned against the very same conduct of making reference to
an affidavit in another case that is not before court.
25.
On 5 April 2024, the applicants filed a
supplementary affidavit wherein they purportedly seek leave to file
the supplementary affidavit.
They do not explain why the
supplementary affidavit must be accepted by the court. They make no
case other than repeat much of
what is set out in the founding
affidavit. They further introduce letters exchanged after the
founding affidavit had been filed.
The applicants appear to be
oblivious to the rules regarding number and sequence of affidavits in
motion proceedings. In
James Brown &
Hamer (Pty) Ltd (previously named Gilbert Hamer & Co Ltd)
v
Simmons
NO
it was said that:
‘
It
is in the interests of the administration of justice that the
well-known and well-established general rules regarding the number
of
sets and proper sequence of affidavits in motion proceedings should
ordinarily be observed. That is not to say that those general
rules
must always be rigidly applied:…Where, as in the present case,
an affidavit is tendered in motion proceedings both
late and out of
its ordinary sequence, the party tendering it is seeking, not a
right, but an indulgence from the Court: he must
both advance his
explanation of why the affidavit is out of time and satisfy the Court
that, although the affidavit is late, it
should, having regard to all
the circumstances of the case, nevertheless be received.’
[10]
D. Merits
26.
Against that generous background, I now
deal with the merits of the applicants’ case. I begin by
setting out the orders sought
by the applicants in the present
motion:
i)
That this application be adjudicated
as a matter of urgency….
ii)
That, pending the final adjudication
of the main application under Case Number 2023-114156, which was
issued on 2 November 2023,
the respondents are interdicted from
disconnecting the supply of municipal services to the premises of the
second to fifth applicants.
iii)
Ordering any respondent who opposes
this application to pay the costs of the application jointly and
severally on a punitive scale.
27.
In order to appreciate the true nature,
extent and duration of the order sought by the applicants, one must
refer to the Notice
of Motion, filed on 2 November 2023. The relief
sought there reads:
‘
1.
The respondents are interdicted from disconnecting the electricity
supply to the premises of the second to the fifth applicants
pending
the finalisation of the disputes lodged by those applicants in terms
of section 102 of the Local Government: Municipal
Systems Act 32 of
2000 (the Systems Act) pertaining to the 2019/2020; 2020/21; 2021/22;
2022/23; and 2023/24 financial years
,
regardless of when (and in which financial year) the disputes are
finally resolved
.
2. In the alternative
to the relief sought in paragraph 1 above, the respondents are
interdicted from disconnecting the electricity
supply to the premises
of the second to the fifth applicants without following the procedure
set out in this paragraph.
28.
I do not set out the procedure envisaged by
the applicants in terms of sub paragraph 2 in paragraph 25 of this
judgment. The procedure
contemplated is lengthy and elaborate. The
applicants bring in what they loosely refer to as the related
components of their rights
to procedural fairness.
29.
In the present proceedings, the applicants
say nothing about paying for their current consumption. They say
nothing about liquidating
arrears until such time that NERSA has
issued a valid tariff. They make no statement about having met the
CoJ to resolve their
differences as per the November 2022 decision.
They make no statement about what they had done, even if the CoJ
failed to play
their part to resolve the issues surrounding the
2019/20 billing, in furtherance of the November 2022 Court order.
E. The Law
30.
The decision of
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
v
Vresthena (Pty) Ltd and Others
,
by the Supreme Court of Appeal, SCA, is particularly important in
providing guidance to this court as the two cases have common
features. In that case, Vresthena, in whose favour the interdict had
been granted, sought to argue before the SCA that the order
was
interim as it would stand until the disposal of certain aspects of
Part A and Part B. The CoT, the appellant on appeal, and
respondent
in the court a
quo
,
had been burdened with reconnecting electricity pending the hearing
of the matter. The parties there were also ordered seek an
expedited
date of hearing from the registrar. In confirming that the interdict
was final and thus appealable, the court had the
following to say:
‘
[13]
The orders that were granted by the high court have a number of
shortcomings…Second, the duration of the order is indefinite
which means that it shall endure until such time that the legal
process in Part B is completed… Fourth, the restoration
of
electricity without the provision for the payment of arrears creates
an anomaly in that the City is forced to provide electricity
to the
property where payment is not being made. Lastly, the chilling effect
of the order is that it compels the City to act contrary
to the
prevailing law and
its
constitutional mandate
:
it must continue to supply electricity to users who are in arrears
and have a history of non-payment for the foreseeable future,
and at
the same time the City is denied the statutory power to terminate
services without approaching a court to obtain leave to
do so. These
characteristics of the order demonstrate that its effect is final in
nature. At the very least, for reasons I traverse
below, this is one
of those cases where the relief sought ought to have never been
granted, and the order is appealable on this
basis too.’
[11]
(own underline)
31.
I have already set out in detail the order
sought by the applicant in the present proceedings. The order sought
by the applicants
in the present case must endure until all their
disputes are finally resolved, regardless of when that might be. On
the strength
of the court's reasoning in
Vresthena
,
the order sought by the applicants in the present case is, in fact,
final in its impact. And, as I shall soon show, it carries
with it
the sting of this court’s intrusion into the executive terrain,
(which the Constitutional Court in
OUTA
referred to as the separation of powers harm), which is immediate.
Meanwhile, the CoJ’s hands will be tied indefinitely while
the
applicants consume electricity without paying for it.
32.
The applicants are fully aware that the
issue of the tariff is not something that can be resolved by the CoJ.
NERSA is the party
that must issue a valid tariff or tariffs. I refer
in this regard to the comments of the court in
Casting,
Forging & Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Other
s
v
National Energy Regulator of SA and
Others [2019]
, where the court refused
the interdict sought by the applicants:
‘
I
agree with this dictum, but wish to add a further qualification to
clarify this interpretation: having regard to the provisions
of
Chapter 9 of the Act, section 102(2) is intended to apply to internal
disputes between a municipality and a consumer relating
to, inter
alia, inaccuracies or mistakes with regard to the metering systems
introduced by a municipality, or the consumption of
services, or the
calculation of the amounts due for such services, or inaccurate
accounts, or tariffs incorrectly applied by a
municipality, but not
with regard to the external determination of a municipal tariff in
terms of other legislation by an authorised
third party, such as
NERSA. Such a determination is not, in my view, included under the
term "dispute" as referred to
in section 102(2) of the Act.
This is a dispute between the applicants and NERSA and not between
them and the municipality with
regard to any of the grounds referred
to above. This determination by NERSA falls outside the ambit of the
Municipal Systems Act
and therefore also outside the provisions of
section 102,’
[12]
33.
In the previously mentioned case set out in
paragraph 31 of this judgment, the applicants conceded that their
dispute is against
NERSA, yet they continue to label the dispute/s as
a Section 102 dispute/s. Apart from attaching and referring to the
various pre-termination
notices, the applicants make no positive
statements that they have paid a particular amount/s or are
committing to paying certain
amounts towards a specific account/s. As
a consequence, vast amounts of monies are owing to the respondent. I
point to two examples:
(i)
In terms of the Notice of disconnection
dated 10 November 2023, with reference to the fifth applicant, IWC,
with account number
ending with 33869, an amount of R 34 727 495. 00
is said to be outstanding. In terms of the 23 February 2024
pre-termination notice,
the amount has grown to R 38 438 199. This is
a staggering thirty-eight million four hundred and thirty-eight
thousand, one hundred
and ninety-nine rand.
(ii)
In respect of the property described as 91
& 92 Stormil, Extension 3, with account number ending with
6[...], an amount of R1
860 172.00 was said to be owing as at 10
November 2023 as per pre-termination notice. Other than the claim to
have paid what the
applicants believe is the correct amount, there is
no mention of a rand amount paid. As for the amounts owed by IWC,
they appear
to be growing without any payment made.
34.
I pause here to note that in the
applicants’ balance of convenience, which I will look into
later, the applicants complain
that in the event the order is not
granted, they will be forced to pay the CoJ about R100 million. This
is not an amount that accumulates
overnight. Based on the applicants’
version, they are refusing to pay the CoJ for their current
consumption because, so they
claim, the tariffs for the financial
years after 2019/2020 are unlawfully high. They ask this court to
grant them an interdict
to shield themselves from what they claim is
the unlawful conduct of CoJ.
35.
The picture I have just painted is
sufficient to demonstrate the chilling effect that the court spoke
about in
Vresthena
,
of compelling a municipality to act against its constitutional
mandate by providing electricity to a consumer who is in arrears,
and, in this case, refusing to pay for their consumption.
36.
The court in
National
Treasury and Others
v
Opposition
to Urban Tolling Alliance and Other
s
(OUTA) laid down the law in more authoritative terms:
‘
A
court must also be alive to and carefully consider whether the
temporary restraining order would unduly trespass upon the sole
terrain of other branches of Government even before the final
determination of the review grounds. A court must be astute not to
stop dead the exercise of executive or legislative power before the
exercise has been successfully and finally impugned on review.
This
approach accords well with the comity the courts owe to other
branches of Government, provided they act lawfully….[27]
In
the present case, there can be no doubt that the impact of the
temporary restraining order is immediate, ongoing and substantial.
The order prohibits SANRAL from exercising statutory powers flowing
from legislation whose constitutional validity is not
challenged.’
[13]
37.
The court went further:
‘
[45]
It seems to me that it is unnecessary to fashion a new test for the
grant of an interim interdict. The Setlogelo test, as adapted
by case
law, continues to be a handy and ready guide to the bench and
practitioners alike in the grant of interdicts in busy Magistrates’
Courts and High Courts. However, now the test must be applied
cognisant of the normative scheme and democratic principles that
underpin our Constitution. This means that when a court considers
whether to grant an interim interdict it must do so in a way
that
promotes the objects, spirit and purport of the Constitution.
[46]
Two ready examples come to mind. If the right asserted in a claim for
an interim interdict is sourced from the Constitution
it would be
redundant to enquire whether that right exists. Similarly, when a
court weighs up where the balance of convenience
rests, it may not
fail to consider the probable impact of the restraining
order on the constitutional and statutory
powers and duties of the state functionary or organ of state against
which the interim
order is sought.
[47]
The balance of convenience enquiry must now carefully probe whether
and to which extent the restraining order will probably
intrude into
the exclusive terrain of another branch of Government. The enquiry
must, alongside other relevant harm, have proper
regard to what may
be called separation of powers harm. A court must keep in mind that a
temporary
restraint against the exercise of statutory power well ahead of the
final adjudication of a claimant’s case
may
be granted only in the clearest of cases
and
after a careful consideration of separation of powers harm
.
It is neither prudent nor necessary to define “clearest of
cases”. However one important consideration would be whether
the harm apprehended by the claimant amounts to a breach of one or
more fundamental rights warranted by the Bill of Rights. This
is not
such a case.’
[14]
(Own
emphasis)
38.
With that exposition of the law on the
granting of interdicts against public functionaries seeking to
exercise their statutory powers
set out, it is now convenient to say
something briefly about the executive and legislative powers of a
municipality, including
its constitutional duties.
39.
In
Vresthena
the court had the following to say:
‘…
The
duty of the municipality to provide electricity is regulated by the
Constitution, statutes and By-laws. The relevant provisions
of the
Constitution are as follows:
‘
152.
Objects of local government
(1)
The objects of local government are—
(b)
To ensure the provision of services to communities in a sustainable
manner;. . .
(2)
A municipality must strive, within its financial and administrative
capacity, to achieve the objects set out in subsection (1).
153.
Developmental duties of municipalities
A
municipality must—
(a)
Structure
and manage its administration and budgeting and planning processes to
give priority to the basic needs of the community,
and to promote the
social and economic development of the community; and . . .
156.
Powers and functions of municipalities
(1)
A municipality has executive authority in respect of, and has the
right to administer—
(a)
The local government matters listed in Part B of Schedule 4 and Part
B of Schedule 5; and ...
(2)
A municipality may make and administer By-laws for the effective
administration of the matters which it has the right to
administer.
’
[15]
40.
The court further noted:
‘
The
Constitutional Court in Mkontwana v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan
Municipality held that electricity is a component of basic services
and that municipalities are constitutionally and statutorily obliged
to provide their residents with electricity. However, non-payment
for
such services has a negative impact on the provision of such services
by the municipalities. In that regard citizens have to
pay for such
services. As a form of credit control, any municipality has a
statutory right to terminate such services on notice.
Section 102 of
the Systems Act gives municipalities a discretion to implement any
debt collection and credit control measures provided
for in the
Act.’
[16]
41.
There can be no doubt that a Municipality,
such as the CoJ or any other municipality, has legislative and
executive powers, sourced,
in the first instance, from the
legislation designed to give effect to the scheme set out set out in
the Constitution and, ultimately,
from the Constitution itself.
F. Requirements for an
interdict
a)
Applicants’ case of a clear right
42.
The applicants claim they have a
clear right in terms of section 102 of the MSA, not to have their
municipal services terminated
pending the finalisation of the
disputes declared by each of the applicants under section 102. The
applicants further note that
the CoJ has taken issue with the
applicants’ interpretation of section 102, but they submit that
for purposes of this interim
application, the applicants’ legal
interpretation must be accepted as correct.
43.
The applicants also claim to have a clear
right based on the undertaking granted by both the attorneys of City
Power and CoJ (ENS)
on 17 and 21 January 2024, in terms of which it
was said that ‘
as an interim
solution pending our comprehensive response, should our client elect
to proceed with disconnection, ample notice will
be given and any
applicable procedures followed
.’
The CoJ, according to the applicants, has failed to give effect to
the undertaking and, in fact, continues to issue pre-termination
notices, and in some instances, it cuts off municipal services
without giving ‘ample time’ and without following PAJA.
44.
Third, the applicants claim to have a clear
right to have the main application adjudicated, and without having
that relief undermined
by CoJ terminating their electricity supply,
and continually disrupting the business with notices of termination.
45.
None of what the applicants claim give them
a clear right has any merit. In the first instance, while the
applicants coyly say the
CoJ has another interpretation of section
102, and that for purposes of this interim order, their
interpretation must prevail,
they know that this very submission did
not find favour with the court in NERSA (2019) cited in paragraph 31
of this judgment.
In fact, the applicants conceded in that case that
their dispute was against NERSA and for those reasons, it cannot be a
Section
102 dispute.
46.
With regard to the second source of their
clear right, the applicants were informed by Patel Inc as early as
November 2023 that
the City cannot give such an undertaking less they
create a precedent. Mr Patel invited the applicants to pay the agreed
upon amount/s
while the accounts continue to be flagged. They have
chosen not to mention anything about the Patel letter in these
proceedings
preferring to refer to an undertaking they say the City
has not delivered on. This claim too by the applicants is astonishing
given
that by their own admission, the City has issued the
pre-termination notices. They do not state why the pre-termination
notices
that are issued in the ordinary course by the CoJ are not
sufficient warning for them. Nor do they say they have previously
made
a case to the CoJ stating why the pre-termination notices are
not sufficient notice in their case.
47.
As a consequence of not making the agreed
payments, the CoJ has soldiered on with its Credit Control Measures
as they are entitled
to do, provided they give notice as set out in
the CoJ’s by-laws.
48.
As for the claimed clear right founded on
the third basis, the court in
Vresthena
has made it clear that calling upon a municipality to supply
electricity to a customer who has arrears amounts to ordering the
municipality to act in breach of its constitutional duty.
49.
I add that ther applicants’ reliance
on the pending application issued in November 2023 requires this
court to weigh the prospects
of success on the interdict sought in
those proceedings. On the strength of the
ratio
in
OUTA
and
Vresthena
,
the prospects are poor, especially when considering that the CoJ had
long invited the applicants to work with it by paying 59%
of what is
outstanding in order for it to keep the accounts flagged. They do not
mention that invitation in these proceedings.
They also do not allege
to have made a specific payment/s towards any of the accounts. The
applicants have failed to demonstrate
a clear right.
b)
Irreparable harm
50.
The applicants say that the significant
irreparable harm that each applicant will suffer in the event the
relief is not granted
is set out in the main application and is not
repeated here. I interpose that this application stands or falls on
the basis of
what is in the applicants’ founding affidavit. The
applicants were warned about crafting affidavits in this fashion.
[See
paragraph 25 of this judgment.] They have contented themselves
with making occasional references to the November affidavit, which
is
not before this court. The conduct is simply unacceptable.
51.
They add that CoJ does not seriously
dispute the disruption to the applicants’ business and the
consequential harm that they
will suffer in the event electricity is
shut off. The applicants further add that the industrial processes
conducted by the applicants
are entirely dependent on an
uninterrupted supply of electricity and their clients have no
alternative remedy but to purchase their
electricity from the CoJ.
This, they claim is sufficient to justify final relief.
52.
During argument, counsel for the
applicants, perhaps motivated by this court’s decision to
exclude the respondent’s
papers, maintained that the court does
not have evidence of the harm that will be caused to the City, in the
event the order is
granted. The harm is caused the moment the court
grants an order forcing the CoJ to supply power to a non-paying
customer with
arrears, according to Vresthena. That is exactly what
the court in
OUTA
meant
by the unwarranted trespass into the executive terrain by a court and
preventing the exercise of statutory power where there
is no basis to
do so.
53.
The
applicants appear not to appreciate that their refusal to pay the CoJ
impacts negatively on the CoJ ability to discharge its
constitutional
duty towards other citizens who depend on the CoJ for services. This
was accepted as a matter of principle in
Mkontwana
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
[17]
,
in
OUTA,
and in
Vresthena
as
already mentioned in these reasons. Such an order may be granted only
in the clearest of cases. Based on the reasoning in this
judgment,
this is not one of those cases.
54.
Lastly, the applicants and the CoJ were
encouraged in terms of the order made in the NERSA 2022, case per
Kubushi J, to work with
one another to resolve their differences and
conclude on what is outstanding in terms of the 2019/20 financial
year. There is no
reason for the applicants not to pay the CoJ in
respect of the succeeding financial years for their consumption. A
rough scan of
the letters issued by the applicants to the CoJ
demonstrates no attempt to work with the CoJ. If anything, the
applicants have
set out to interpret the order in a way that can best
be described as unusual. I conclude that the applicants have failed
to demonstrate
irreparable harm.
c)
Balance of
Convenience
55.
The applicants aver that the balance of
convenience favours the granting of the interim relief. If the relief
were to be refused,
so it is submitted, the applicants who have a
valid and pending section 102 dispute with the municipality would
have no choice
but to pay the disputed amount to the municipality to
ensure that their electricity supply is not disconnected. In that
case, the
applicants would be forced to pay significant arrears,
totalling about R100 million, which the applicants assert is not
owing to
CoJ because the tariffs that the CoJ are charging are
unlawfully high.
56.
The applicants add that there is no
undertaking from the CoJ that were the applicants to be successful
with their review, the CoJ
would pay them the amounts concerned. They
say that permitting the CoJ to persist with the current conduct will
essentially allow
the CoJ to proceed as it pleases, with abundant
disregard of the existing court orders.
57.
The November 2022 order uses the word
‘credit’ as in crediting the applicants’ accounts.
It does not say anything
about paying cash to the applicants.
Secondly, the statements that the CoJ would proceeding with abundant
disregard of the existing
court orders.
58.
I shall not repeat the November 2022 order
save to say that the order makes plain that the party that must issue
a valid tariff
is NERSA. The Nelson Mandela Bay case deals with the
methodology relied on by NERSA. None of these court orders suggest
that the
CoJ is or has acted unlawfully in applying what is after
all, a valid tariff, until set aside. The only tariff that has been
set
aside thus far is the 2019/2020 tariff. There too, the court
order is clear. It laid the blame at the doors of NERSA. It further
ordered the CoJ and the applicants to work together to agree the
amount owing to the CoJ, failing, NERSA must issue a valid tariff.
59.
On
the authority of
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd
v
City
of Cape Town and Others
[18]
,
the tariffs, once passed by NERSA are valid, until set aside and the
CoJ must enforce them, regardless of what the applicants
assert about
those tariffs.
60.
The Court in
OUTA
enjoins this court to consider the separation of powers harm when
weighing the balance of convenience. It further instructs that
granting an interdict against the exercise of statutory powers long
before the review is decided may be granted only in the clearest
of
cases. The court in
Vresthena
informs that ordering a municipality to provide electricity to a
customer with arrears is ordering it to act in contravention of
its
constitutional duty. It brings about a chilling effect. In the
present case, we are dealing with a customer who not only has
arrears
but one that refuses to pay for its consumption on the basis that the
tariffs for the financial years after 2019/2020 are
unlawfully high.
The balance of convenience in my view favours the refusal of the
order.
d)
No alternative
remedy
61.
The applicants have an alternative remedy.
They were invited to pay 59% of what is outstanding so the City
continues to flag the
accounts. They have chosen not to say anything
about that invitation in these proceedings. Nor do they say they have
made such
payment. Instead, they claim that in the event the order is
granted, they will be forced to pay about R100 million in
circumstances
where there is no undertaking that they will be repaid
amounts due to them. The CoJ is only permitted to credit the
customer’s
accounts not repay a customer. In any event, as I
have already mentioned, the applicants have long been invited by the
CoJ to work
with it by paying 59% of what is outstanding. They have
chosen not to heed the invitation.
G. Conclusion
62.
In sum, the applicants do not meet the
requirements for an interdict, whether interim or final.
63.
These then were my reasons for refusing
the order.
NN BAM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVIION, PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing
:
30
April 2024
Appearances
:
For
the applicants
:
Adv
B Swart SC with Adv S.P Jones
Instructed
by:
MC
Botha Inc
c/o
Couzyn Hertzog & Horak Attorneys
Brooklyn,
Pretoria
For the
respondents:
Adv M Coovadia
Instructed
by:
Patel
Inc,
c/o
Sharief & Associates
Lynnwood
Manor, Pretoria
1. The papers combined
may not exceed 500 pages in the urgent court.
[2]
The
request for reasons reached this office on 3 May 2024.
[3]
Act
117 of 1998
[4]
Act
32 of 2000
[5]
The
applicants provide the full detail of what they envisage as related
components of the right to procedural fairness in their
Notice of
Motion filed on 2 November 2023.
[6]
(92792/2019)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 927 (25 November 2022:
[7]
The
reference to the second and third respondents is a reference to the
City of Johannesburg Municipality and the City Power.
[8]
Gold
Fields Limited and Others v Motley Rice LLC
,
In re:
Nkala
v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others
(48226/12) [2015] ZAGPJHC 62;
2015 (4) SA 299
(GJ);
[2015] 2 All SA
686
(GJ) (19 March 2015), paragraph 121
[9]
(93301/2019)
[2019] ZAGPPHC 967 (24 December 2019), paragraphs 7-8
[10]
1963
4 SA 656
(A) At 660 D-H,
[11]
(1346/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 51
(18 April 2024), paragraph 13
[12]
(93301/2019)
[2019] ZAGPPHC 967 (24 December 2019), paragraph 18
[13]
(CCT
38/12)
[2012] ZACC 18
;
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC);
2012 (11) BCLR 1148
(CC) (20 September 2012), paragraph 26
[14]
OUTA,
note 13 supra
[15]
Vresthena
note 11 supra, paragraph 18
[16]
Vresthena
note 9 supra, paragraph 25
[17]
(CCT
57/03)
[2004] ZACC 9
;
2005 (1) SA 530
(CC);
2005 (2) BCLR 150
(CC)
(6 October 2004), at paragraph 38
[18]
(41/3003)
[2004] ZASCA 48
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