Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 466South Africa
United Democratic Movement and Others v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Others (Leave to Appeal) (005779/2023; 003615/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 466 (16 May 2024)
Headnotes
these actions infringed numerous rights guaranteed in the Bill of Rights on a continuing basis.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## United Democratic Movement and Others v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Others (Leave to Appeal) (005779/2023; 003615/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 466 (16 May 2024)
United Democratic Movement and Others v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Others (Leave to Appeal) (005779/2023; 003615/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 466 (16 May 2024)
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sino date 16 May 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 005779/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
16 MAY 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
UNITED
DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT
First
Applicant
INKATHA
FREEDOM PARTY
Second
Applicant
ACTION
SA
Third
Applicant
BUILD
ONE SOUTH AFRICA
Fourth
Applicant
DR
LUFUNO RUDO MATHIVHA
Fifth
Applicant
DR
TANUSHA RADMIN
Sixth
Applicant
LUKHONA
MNGUNI
Seven
Applicant
SOUTH
AFRICAN FEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS
Eighth
Applicant
NATIONAL
UNION OF METAL WORKERS OF SOUTH AFRICA
Nineth
Applicant
HEALTH
AND ALLIED INDABA TRADE UNION
Tenth
Applicant
DEMOCRACY
IN ACTION NPC
Eleventh
Applicant
SOUTHERN
AFRICAN INSTITUTE FOR RESPONSIVE AND ACCOUNTABLE GOVERNANCE
Twelfth
Applicant
WHITE
RIVER NEIGHBOURHOOD WATCH
Thirteenth
Applicant
THE
AFRICAN COUNCIL OF HAWKERS AND INFORMAL BUSINESSES
Fourteenth
Applicant
SOUTH
AFRICAN UNEMPLOYED PEOPLE’S
Fifteenth
Applicant
SOWETO
ACTION COMMITTEE
Sixteenth
Applicant
MASTERED
SEED FOUNDATION
Seventeenth
Applicant
NTSIKIE
MGAGIYA REAL ESTATE
Eighteenth
Applicant
FULA
PROPERTY INVESTMENTS PTY LTD
Nineteenth
Applicant
and
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LTD
First
Respondent
MINISTER
OF PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
Second
Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL: DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
Third
Respondent
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Fourth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Fifth
Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT
OF
MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Sixth
Respondent
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Seventh
Respondent
GOVERNMENT
OF THE REPUBLIC
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Eighth
Respondent
CASE
NO: 003615/2023
DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE
Applicant
and
NATIONAL ENERGY
REGULATOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
First Respondent
ESKOM HOLDINGS SOC
LIMITED
Second Respondent
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Third
Respondent
MINISTER
OF PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
Fourth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF MINERAL RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Fifth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF FINANCE
Sixth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF FORESTRY, FISHERIES AND THE ENVIRONMENT
Seventh
Respondent
MINISTER
OF TRADE, INDUSTRY AND COMPETITION
Eighth
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
Nineth
Respondent
PREMIER,
WESTERN CAPE
Tenth
Respondent
PREMIER,
NORTHERN CAPE
Eleventh
Respondent
PREMIER,
EASTERN CAPE
Twelfth
Respondent
PREMIER,
KWA-ZULU NATAL
Thirteenth
Respondent
PREMIER,
MPUMALANGA
Fourteenth
Respondent
PREMIER,
LIMPOPO
Fifteenth
Respondent
PREMIER,
GAUTENG
Sixteenth
Respondent
PREMIER,
FREE STATE
Seventeenth
Respondent
PREMIER,
NORTH WEST
Eighteenth
Respondent
THE
GOVERNMENT OF THE REPUBLIC
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Nineteenth
Respondent
MINISTER
FOR COOPERATIVE GOVERNANCE AND TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS
Twentieth
Respondent
ORDER
The
applications for leave to appeal are refused with costs, such costs
to be paid by the applicants for leave to appeal jointly
and
severally and which are to include the costs of both senior and
junior counsel, where employed.
JUDGMENT
(In
the application for leave to appeal)
This
matter has been heard in open court but the judgment and order are
published and distributed electronically. The date
of handing
down is deemed to be 16 May 2024.
THE
COURT (DAVIS et COLLIS et NYATHI JJ)
Introduction
[1]
On 1 December
2023 this court, after hearing argument over a number of days and in
respect of a joint hearing of three different
applications, involving
multiple parties and with documents spanning thousands of pages,
declared a number of actions by organs
of state which eventually
culminated in the country’s “loadshedding” crisis,
as having breached various sections
of the Constitution. It was
further held that these actions infringed numerous rights guaranteed
in the Bill of Rights on a continuing
basis.
[2]
In addition to
the above, this court granted an order in the following terms:
“
3.
The Minister of Electricity is ordered to take all reasonable steps
by no later than
31 January 2024, whether in conjunction with Eskom
and other organs of State or not, to ensure that there shall be
sufficient supply
or generation of electricity to prevent any
interruption of supply as a result of loadshedding to the following
institutions and/or
facilities:
3.1
All “public health establishments” as defined in the
National Health Act 61 of 2003
, including all hospitals, clinics, and
other establishments or facilities;
3.2
All “public schools” as defined in the
South African
Schools Act 84 of 1996
;
3.3
The “South African Police Service and Police Stations” as
envisaged in the South
African Police Services Act 68 of 1995,
including satellite station
”
.
[3]
A review application against
tariff determinations by the National Energy Regulator of South
Africa (NERSA) was also dismissed but
that order had subsequently
been dealt with by way of a separate application for leave to appeal.
[4]
The current applications for
leave to appeal are in general terms against the orders referred to
in paragraphs [1] in particular
against the relief quoted in
paragraph [2] above. The applications for leave to appeal have
been launched by the President
of South Africa, the Minister of
Public Enterprises, the Minister of Mineral Resources and
Energy, Minister of Cooperative
Government and the Minister of
Electricity. These parties have been cited in the main
applications as “the Government”
and also referred to as
such in oral argument before us. We shall therefore do the same
in this judgment. A separate
application for leave to appeal
has also been launched by Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd (Eskom).
The
Government’s application for leave to appeal
[5]
In its
application for leave to appeal, the Government respondents raised a
plethora of grounds, but in oral argument before us,
these were
distilled into three main arguments: (1) the relief fashioned by the
court was impermissible, (2) the evidence of Constitutional
breaches
was not contained in the applicants’ founding papers and (3)
the relief granted lacked the required specificity.
We shall deal
with these grounds individually hereunder.
The
fashioning of the relief being impermissable
[6]
In one of the
main applications, being that in case no 005779/2023, a number of
applicants, led by the UDM, previously sought and
obtained virtually
the same relief as that referred to in par [2] above as part A of its
notice of motion, on an interim basis.
That relief was, however
not implemented as the Government had launched an application for
leave to appeal against that order,
principally on the basis that the
Minister of Public Enterprises lacked the authority to implement that
order. When the matters
came before us again, the UDM did not
persist with part B of its application and later withdrew it, while
another applicant, Action
SA, still valiantly sought to have the
relief, which it had labelled “humanitarian relief”
retained. The withdrawal
of the UDM application. however
rendered the interim relief granted in Part A moot.
[7]
It was for
this reason that the Government, in its current application for leave
to appeal, argued that the same relief could not
be granted afresh in
the second main application, despite it this time being directed
against the Minister of Electricity.
[8]
The long and
extensive argument of the Government, with respect to senior counsel,
misses the point. Once a court has determined
that there has
been a breach of a Constitutional obligation, it is duty-bound to
grant relief with a view of having the breach
remedied. In
terms of section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution, such relief must be
“just and equitable”.
[9]
We have in the
main judgment explained why we considered the relief in question to
be just and equitable and the fact that it accorded
with what had
been sought in part A of an application that was no longer before us,
might as well have been coincidental, as long
as the relief is still
just and equitable.
[10]
In
the recent matter of
Ex
parte Minister of Home Affairs
[1]
Majiedt J reminded us that “
Section
172(1)(b) affords this court the power to grant just and equitable
relief. The ambit of that power is wide and flexible.
In
Economic Freedom Fighters II
[2]
this court expressed it thus: ‘The power to grant a just and
equitable order is so wide and flexible that it allows courts
to
formulate an order that does not follow prayers in the notice of
motion or some other pleading. This power enables courts
to
address the real dispute between the parties by requiring them to
take steps aimed at making their conduct to be consistent
with the
Constitution
”.
[11]
The argument
that this Court impermissibly “borrowed” wording from a
Notice of Motion which was no longer before the
Court, is therefore
flawed. In crafting just and equitable relief, the “wide
and flexible” powers of this Court
allowed it to formulate the
same relief afresh and the fact that it coincided with previous
interim relief was therefore entirely
Constitutionally mandated.
[12]
We therefore
find that there is no prospect of success on appeal on this point.
The
evidence of Constitutional breaches
[13]
Adv Moerane SC
on behalf of the Government argued that this court, when it made the
declarations in respect of Constitutional breaches,
had relied on
facts placed before the Court by the respondents and not the
applicants. This was also the point made expressly
in par 30 of
the notice of application for leave to appeal.
[14]
The
premise of the argument is that in motion proceedings an applicant
must make out its case in its founding papers
[3]
,
which constitutes both its pleadings and its evidence.
[4]
However, it is also trite that once an allegation has been admitted,
it is then placed beyond dispute and unless withdrawn,
is binding on
a party and prohibits any further dispute thereof.
[5]
[15]
The President
deposed to affidavits in both main applications. In the
UDM-application in particular, various acts by organs
of state were
described by the deponent on behalf of Eskom, Mr De Ruyter, as
constituting a series of Governmental or executive
failures to
guarantee or uphold rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights which were
infringed upon as a result of loadshedding.
[16]
Both
applications were heard together and, as a consequence, the DA
incorporated by reference reliance on the admissions made by
the
Government in the UDM matter, to the extent that it even amended its
notice of motion on 31 March 2023 by expressly claiming
declaratory
relief in respect of breaches which led to the energy crisis.
[17]
By the time
that the amended notice of motion had been delivered, the President
had already in the UDM-matter, on 22 February 2023,
conceded the
instances of “factors” which had led to the energy
crisis. In the second affidavit by the President,
that is the
one in the DA matter, deposed to on 8 August 2023, these “factors”
were now labelled “causes”,
but the factual concessions
previously made were not retracted. In this later
affidavit the President expressly
referred to the UDM matter and the
DA’s amended notice of motion. It is these “factors”
and “causes”
which this court had found constituted the
breaches declared in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this court’s order.
[18]
The applicants
in the application for leave to appeal do not allege that the DA had
not proven its case, but argue that the court
was wrong to rely on
the evidence of the Government responses. We fail to fathom
this argument. Once accusations of breaches
of Constitutional
obligations have been levelled, albeit only in broad terms, and those
accusations have in effect been conceded,
in this case, in detailed
terms, then a court would be as entitled as it would have been in
motion proceedings to have regard to
the respondents’
exculpatory statements, to also have regard to such respondents’
own admissions and concessions.
[19]
The
above proposition is exactly what underpins the
Plascon-Evans
-principle
[6]
,
which incorporated the following dictum from
Stellenbosch
Farmers Winery Ltd
[7]
:
“…
where
there is a dispute as to the facts a final interdict should only be
granted in notice of motion proceedings if the facts as
stated by the
respondent together with the admitted facts in the applicant’s
affidavits justify such an order ….
Where it is
clear that facts, though not formally admitted, cannot be denied,
they must be regarded as admitted
”.
[20]
We therefore
find no reasonable prospect of success that another court would on
appeal find that this court could not have granted
orders based on
facts conceded by the Government, evidencing Constitutional breaches.
The
relief lacked specificity
[21]
The Government
argued that the Energy Action Plan (the EAP) had not been found to be
unreasonable and that the DA’s concerns
related to the
implementation of the plan. The premise of this argument was
that the relief granted was “too vague”
to discern where
or how that relief would fit into the Energy Plan.
[22]
We are of the
view that this argument also misses the point. As appears from the
judgment in the main application, the relief granted
was not related
to the EAP and care was taken in the formulation of the relief to not
interfere with the Government’s intended
plans but, in addition
thereto and until such plans come to fruition (through the EAP or
otherwise), it was ordered to ensure that
those identified vulnerable
and crucial segments of society dependent on Government services
receive uninterrupted supply of electricity.
[23]
Again, being
mindful of the line delineating the separation of powers, the court
did not prescribe to the Government how or in what
manner or fashion
or from which budget allocation even, the relief is to be sourced,
procured or rendered, but relied on the Minister
of Electricity’s
own statement put before court relating to his over-arching and
co-ordinating authority to ensure that uninterrupted
electricity is
to be supplied in South Africa.
[24]
We therefore
find no reasonable prospects of success on appeal on this point.
Eskom’s
arguments
[25]
Eskom’s
primary argument was that it should never have featured in the order
of this court, neither in respect of the declarations
of
Constitutional breaches, nor as an entity to which the Minister of
Electricity could turn to in order to fulfill the “humanitarian
relief”.
[26]
Despite Eskom
largely blaming the executive and other spheres of Government for the
energy crisis, there can be no denial that Eskom
was the “instrument”
through which the breaches of Constitutional obligations have taken
place. The declarations
made in paragraph 1 of the order in the
main application, which indirectly included Eskom, primarily relate
to the past breaches,
but which have resulted in a current
continuation of a denial of Constitutional rights. Eskom argued
that, on an application
of the
Plascon-Evans
-principle,
it should have been found to be innocent of the breaches, despite its
participation in the energy crisis. It is
difficult to conceive
how, despite Eskom protesting its innocence, it can divorce itself
from the admitted history of sabotage,
corruption and criminal
activity which took place “on its watch” or even by its
own employees, which occurred independently
from breaches caused by
the executive.
[27]
In addition,
Adv Katz SC on behalf of the DA, pointed out that Eskom is only
obliquely implicated in the declarations of Constitutional
delinquency and any specific “excision” of Eskom from the
orders, would be of academic consequence only. That
is
insufficient to constitute a ground on which leave to appeal should
be granted.
[28]
Eskom further
argued that the court “injudiciously” exercised its
jurisdiction in formulating the relief which, if implemented,
might
cause interference with Eskom’s “grid responsibility”
or cause it to breach provisions of its enabling
statutory
provisions. This argument is without foundation. The
court ordered no such thing as compelling Eskom to do
anything which
it may not do. The mandatory relief was against the Minister of
Electricity and, should he involve Eskom to
assist him, then it must
be implied that he cannot compel Eskom to do anything contrary to
law.
[29]
Eskom
also placed substantial reliance on a recent judgment by the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Featherbrooke
[8]
.
While selected paragraphs of that judgment were relied on, the
judgment does not support Eskom’s argument. Firstly
the
facts and the nature of the relief sought in
Featherbrooke
were
completely different and distinguishable from the present matter.
The basis for the criticism by the SCA of the
court a quo in
Featherbrooke
(apart from it having applied an incorrect test in respect of a final
interdict) was that its order was inchoate for having ordered
a
mandamus against the wrong party and that it lacked clarity. In
the present matter, by his own admission as to his capabilities
and
authority, the Minister of Electricity is the correct party to
perform the relief ordered. There is also no ambiguity
as to
what has to be performed: the Minister must simply take reasonable
measures to ensure that schools, police stations and hospitals
and
related entities are supplied with sufficient electricity so that
they don’t suffer the crippling effects of loadshedding.
That the order was not prescriptive as to how the Minister must
achieve this was, as already pointed out above, to avoid encroachment
into the sphere of Government. Neither of these aspects
infringe on any of Eskom’s rights and not only is its reliance
on
Featherbrooke
misplaced, but no reasonable prospect of success on appeal had been
demonstrated by it.
[30]
In
a last-ditch attempt to secure leave to appeal, both the Government
and Eskom submitted that there were compelling reasons of
public
interest that justified the granting of leave to appeal as
contemplated in Section 17(1)(a)(ii) of the Superior Courts Act
[9]
.
Whilst the national energy crisis is of national interest, the
“humanitarian relief” granted is to address the
rights of
a small, albeit vulnerable and important, set of segments of
society. The EAP, being the Government’s response
to the
crisis and everything else that goes with it, which may be of wider
public interest, has been left untouched by this court’s
order. It is further trite that, even in matters of public
interest, the prospects of success on appeal or, in this case,
the
lack thereof, remains a weighty factor. We find that, in the
circumstances of this case, there are insufficient “compelling
reasons” to warrant the granting of leave to appeal.
[31]
We further
find no reason to depart from the customary rule that costs should
follow the event and we also find that this includes
Action SA who,
as Adv Benson had pointed out, may initially have made common cause
with the UDM, but had not withdrawn its participation
in the main
applications.
Order
[32]
In the
circumstances, the following order was made:
The
applications for leave to appeal are refused with costs, such costs
to be paid by the applicants for leave to appeal jointly
and
severally, and which are to include the costs of both senior and
junior counsel, where employed.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
I agree.
C COLLIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
I agree.
J S NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 27 March 2024
Judgment
delivered: 16 May 2024
APPEARANCES
in Case No 005779/2023:
For the 3
rd
Applicant
Adv G Benson
Attorney for 3
rd
Applicant
Michael Herbst
Attorneys,
For
the 1
st
Respondent:
Adv
M Du Plessis SC
together
with Adv C Kruyer
Attorneys
for the 1
st
Respondent:
ENSafrica,
Johannesburg
c/o
Mothle Jooma Sabdia
Inc.,
Pretoria
For
Government Respondents:
Adv M
Moerane SC together with Adv H Rajah
Attorneys
for Government Respondents:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
In
Case no: 003615/2023
:
For the
Applicant:
Adv A
Katz SC together
with Adv
E Cohen
Attorneys
for the Applicant:
Michael
Herbst Attorneys
For the
2
nd
Respondents:
Adv M Du
Plessis SC
together
with Adv C Kruyer
Attorneys
for 2
nd
Respondents:
ENSafrica,
Johannesburg
c/o
Mothle Jooma Sabdia
Inc.,
Pretoria
For
Government Respondents:
Adv M
Moerane SC together with Adv H Rajah
Attorneys
for Government Respondents:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
[1]
2024 (2) SA 58
(CC) at [39].
[2]
Economic
Freedom Fighters & Others v Speaker of the National Assembly and
Another
2018 (2) SA 571
(CC) at [211].
[3]
Director
of Hospital Services v Mistry
1979 (1) SA 626
(A) and the numerous annotations thereof.
[4]
SA
Diamond Workers Union v Master Diamond Cutters Association of SA
1948 (2) 672 (W) and
Transnet
Ltd v Rubenstein
2006 (1) SA 591 (SCA).
[5]
Water
Renovation (Pty) Ltd v Goldfields of SA Ltd
[1993] ZASCA 169
;
1994 (2) SA 588
(A) at 605H.
[6]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A).
[7]
Stellenbosch
Farmers Winery Ltd v Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd
1957 (4) SA 234
(C) at 235E-G.
[8]
Featherbrooke
Homeowners Association NPC v Mogale City Local Municipality
(1106/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 27
(22 March 2024)
[9]
10 of 2013.
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