Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 826South Africa
South African Local Government Association and Another v Afriforum NPC (2024-061993) [2024] ZAGPPHC 826 (19 August 2024)
Headnotes
a lawful method to determine tariff increases had to be based on a cost of supply study. This finding is premised on the Electricity Pricing Policy (“Policy”) read with section 27(h) of the Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006 (“ERA”). The Policy mandates municipalities "shall conduct a cost of supply study". Section 27(h) of ERA provides that NERSA’s methodology must comply with the Policy which in turn mandates a cost of supply study. The legislative mandate in section 27(h) of ERA is that NERSA must comply with the Policy. The Court concluded that the 2024 methodology did not require a cost-of-supply study; and consequently, the 2024 methodology was unlawful.
Judgment
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## South African Local Government Association and Another v Afriforum NPC (2024-061993) [2024] ZAGPPHC 826 (19 August 2024)
South African Local Government Association and Another v Afriforum NPC (2024-061993) [2024] ZAGPPHC 826 (19 August 2024)
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sino date 19 August 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2024-061993
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
19 August 2024
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION
First
Applicant
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
Second
Applicant
and
AFRIFORUM
NPC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DE
VOS AJ
[1]
NERSA and SALGA seek leave to appeal against an order from this
Court. The order
declared NERSA's methodology for determining
electricity tariff increases unlawful, invalid, and unenforceable
(paragraph 2 of
the order). The method was unlawful as it failed to
require tariff increases to be based on cost of supply studies. In
addition,
the Court ordered that NERSA must use a methodology
premised on a cost of supply study (paragraph 3 of the order) and is
prohibited
from using a methodology absent a cost of supply study
(paragraph 4). As for municipalities, they would only be permitted to
levy
a tariff increase based on a cost of supply study (paragraphs 5
– 6 of the order). For municipalities who had not conducted
a
cost of supply study, the order provided an opportunity to conduct a
cost of supply study and apply for an increase (paragraph
7 of the
order). Lastly, the Court granted a costs order against NERSA.
[2]
In essence, the Court made a substantial finding that NERSA’s
methodology
was unlawful and consequently ordered NERSA and the
municipalities to only increase tariffs based on the cost of supply
studies.
[3]
NERSA seeks leave to appeal against all aspects of the order,
including the
substantive finding of invalidity, consequential
relief, and costs order. SALGA does not seek leave to appeal against
the substantive
finding of invalidity or the order that prohibits
NERSA from applying unlawful methodology. SALGA seeks leave to appeal
solely
against the consequential relief against municipalities
(paragraphs 5 – 7). Afriforum opposes leave to appeal.
[4]
First, NERSA’s request for leave to appeal against the
substantive finding
of invalidity is considered.
The
substantive finding of invalidity (paragraphs 2 – 4 of the
order)
[5]
Some context is required. Afriforum brought an urgent application
aimed at the
tariffs for electricity that end-users pay
municipalities. It was common cause that end-users had been
overpaying for years,
and electricity had become unaffordable.
Municipalities were increasing tariffs, and NERSA was approving these
tariffs despite
overpayment and unaffordability. The reason for the
overpayment and unaffordability was that the increases were not based
on the
cost of supply of electricity. Therefore Afriforum
challenged NERSA’s methodology used to approve municipal
requests
for tariff increases. Whilst the methodology must be
cost-based and, specifically, based on a cost-of-supply study, it
appears
that for years, end-users have been paying for tariff
increases that were not based on the cost of electricity supply.
[6]
Whilst NERSA's 2023 methodology required a cost-of-supply study, it
did away
with that requirement in 2024 in response to municipalities'
failure to conduct cost of supply studies. Afriforum challenged the
2024 methodology. This was the crux of Afriforum's case:
end-users were paying tariffs not based on the cost of electricity
supply.
[7]
The Court held that a lawful method to determine tariff increases had
to be
based on a cost of supply study. This finding is premised on
the Electricity Pricing Policy (“Policy”) read with
section
27(h) of the Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006 (“ERA”).
The Policy mandates municipalities "shall conduct a
cost of
supply study". Section 27(h) of ERA provides that NERSA’s
methodology must comply with the Policy which in turn
mandates a cost
of supply study. The legislative mandate in section 27(h) of ERA is
that NERSA must comply with the Policy. The
Court concluded that the
2024 methodology did not require a cost-of-supply study; and
consequently, the 2024 methodology was unlawful.
[8]
NERSA seeks leave to appeal against this substantive finding that its
2024 methodology
was unlawful. NERSA's position in the application
for leave to appeal is that it is entitled to consider and approve
applications
for tariff increases based on something less than an
application for a tariff increase supported by a cost of supply
study.
[9]
For NERSA to be successful in an appeal, it would have to convince an
appellate
Court that the Policy does not require a cost of supply
study. There is no real chance that NERSA will be successful as the
Policy
mandates, expressly, and repeatedly that municipalities
conduct cost of supply studies.
[10]
Worse, section 27(h) of the Electricity Regulation Act provides that
NERSA's methodology must comply
with the Policy. To be successful on
appeal, NERSA would have to convince an appellate Court that despite
the Policy and the ERA,
it could approve the cost of supply increases
absent a cost of supply study.
[11]
To be successful on appeal, NERSA would have to persuade an appellate
Court not to apply section 27(h)
of ERA and to deviate from clear and
binding Policy, absent any legal justification to do so. There
is no reasonable chance
of NERSA being successful in this regard.
[12]
In addition, NERSA would have to explain to an appellate Court
how it can approve tariff increases
absent cost of supply studies
when its own pleaded case was that such studies were required for
increases to be lawful. NERSA pleaded
that each municipality "must
support its respective application with the actual cost of supply
studies". NERSA would
also have to convince an appellate Court
that no cost of supply study was required, despite NERSA's frameworks
requiring cost of
supply studies. There is no real prospect of NERSA
being successful in this regard.
[13]
The Policy is clear: a cost of supply study is required. The ERA is
clear: NERSA’s methodology
must comply with the Policy. NERSA’s
deviation from the Policy is clear; in fact, NERSA tells the Court
that in 2024, it
moved away from requiring the cost of supply studies
as municipalities were not compliant. This case concerns NERSA’s
move
from a lawful method used in 2023 to an unlawful method in 2024.
As a regulator, it cannot deviate from the legislature and
executive’s
standards because those it has to regulate are not
complying with the law.
[14]
The Court concludes that there are no reasonable prospects that NERSA
will persuade an appellate Court
that its 2024 methodology was
lawful.
[15]
NERSA raises, under the same rubric, other grounds of appeal which
must also be considered. NERSA believes
its new methodology is
lawful, as it is not based on a Guideline and Benchmarking
methodology. In 2022, Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi
declared NERSA’s
previous methodology, known as a Guideline and Benchmarking
methodology, unlawful. Her Ladyship Justice
Kubushi tested the
Guideline and Benchmarking methodology against the Policy and found
it lacking.
[16]
The specifics of the challenge before Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi
focused on the shortcomings of the
Benchmarking methodology when
tested against the Policy for its failure to be based on cost of
supply methodology. The specific
challenge here is that the 2024
methodology falls short of the Policy as it does not require a
cost-of-supply study. As did her
Ladyship Justice Kubushi, this Court
tested NERSA's methodology against the Policy. The similarity between
the case before Justice
Kubushi and the present matter, is found in
testing the methodology against the Policy. The judgment of Her
Ladyship Justice Kubushi
required a cost of supply methodology; the
present case builds on that finding and requires a cost of supply
study.
[17]
NERSA contends that as its 2024 methodology is not based on the
Guideline and Benchmarking methodology,
its methodology is lawful.
This does not follow. The standard against which the methodology must
be tested is that the Policy sets.
NERSA errs in its reasoning that
the 2024 methodology is lawful as it is no longer the Guideline and
Benchmarking methodology.
It is not enough for NERSA to state that it
desists from unlawful methodology; it has to show that its
methodology is lawful.
NERSA has to show that anything
less than a cost of supply study is lawful. It has not referred the
Court to a legal basis to support
this position. It has to do so in
light of the clear provisions of the Policy.
[18]
It is, insufficient for NERSA to defend its 2024 methodology against
the Benchmarking methodology;
it has to defend its 2024 methodology
against the Policy. NERSA cannot defend the 2024 methodology as
it fails to require
a cost of supply study.
[19]
As for the Policy, NERSA accepts that it is binding and requires a
cost-of-supply study. NERSA submits
that its 2024 methodology
"substantially complies with the policy". Nothing more is
said in this regard, no facts are
pleaded, and no further explanation
is provided. It is raised for the first time in its application for
leave to appeal. As no
such case had been made out, there is no
prospect of NERSA convincing an appellate Court to reach a different
conclusion.
[20]
The Court is not persuaded that another Court would conclude that
NERSA’s methodology is lawful.
Leave to appeal against
paragraph 2 is therefore refused. The Court is also not persuaded
that NERSA has any real chance of convincing
another Court that it
should be permitted to use an unlawful method. Therefore, leaving to
appeal against paragraphs 3 and 4 was
also refused.
Forward-looking
relief against the municipalities (paragraphs 5 – 7 of the
order)
[21]
The Court granted relief, which halted further use of an unlawful
methodology. SALGA seeks leave to
appeal against this relief. SALGA
contends the appropriate relief would be to suspend the finding of
invalidity and allow municipalities
to charge tariffs based on the
unlawful methodology. The reason SALGA presents for suspending the
invalidity finding is that municipalities
cannot afford to pay Eskom
for the bulk supply of electricity without the tariff increases.
[22]
The argument is that Eskom has increased its tariffs, and the
municipalities will not be able to afford
the increased Eskom tariffs
if they cannot increase their tariffs. The knock-on effect will be
that these municipalities cannot
provide electricity to their
customers and will be bankrupt or suffer severe financial hardship.
To prevent this outcome, SALGA
submits that a just and equitable
remedy would be to allow the municipalities to levy the tariffs based
on the unlawful methodology
for the time being and allow them to
comply with the law in future, within an undefined timeframe.
[23]
SALGA’s case is that the substantive finding of invalidity is
correct, but that the court must
suspend this finding, indefinitely,
and in the meantime municipalities should be permitted to charge
tariffs based on the unlawful
method, which results in overpayment
from end-users.
[24]
The Court concluded it would not be just and equitable to suspend the
operation of invalidity, firstly,
based on the facts that had been
presented. SALGA proffered only its mere say-so that municipalities
could not afford to supply
electricity. No numbers were provided. No
factual case was pleaded. SALGA presented the position as a logical
conclusion to be
drawn that if Eskom's bulk supply of cost had
increased and municipalities could not increase their tariffs, the
municipalities
could not afford the bulk cost increase. The argument
is presented as one that follows as a matter of logic.
[25]
The reasoning assumes municipalities were charging the supply cost
and were not overcharging end-users.
The Court cannot make this
assumption, as the undisputed fact before the Court is that
municipalities have been overcharging end-users
for a long period. As
the overcharging is the common cause; SALGA's assumption of the
unaffordability of bulk electricity does
not follow.
[26]
As municipalities have been overcharging for years, it cannot be
assumed that they cannot afford an
increase in bulk electricity
costs.
[27]
In addition, SALGA provided no facts to support its argument that
municipalities could not afford to
reticulate electricity. The only
facts SALGA pleaded related to four municipalities. SALGA pleaded
specifically that four municipalities
could not afford to provide
electricity if they could not charge tariffs on the unlawful (2024)
method. SALGA's pleaded case was
internally contradicted. On the one
hand, SALGA pleaded that if the relief sought was granted, four
municipalities would be bankrupted.
However, it also pleaded that if
the relief was granted, three of these four municipalities would not
be affected by the relief
as they had conducted cost of supply
studies. The only specific facts pleaded by SALGA to suspend the
finding of invalidity were
contradicted by SALGA’s own pleaded
case.
[28]
In the application for leave to appeal, SALGA contends the Court
erred in not considering the pleaded
case properly. SALGA refers to
the allegations it had pleaded regarding municipalities' inability to
afford to reticulate electricity.
SALGA has identified the specific
allegations it relies on to contend it had pleaded this case.
[29]
These allegations are repetitions of a conclusion of logic which does
not follow. Nor was it based
on any specific factual allegations,
contravened by its pleadings and at odds with the common cause
allegation that municipalities
had been overcharging end-users for
years. The Court was not persuaded that SALGA had made out a case for
the devastating consequences
it was presenting as a conclusion.
[30]
The Court is not persuaded that another Court would come to the
conclusion that it ought to suspend
a finding of invalidity when the
basis for the suspension is not proven or pleaded. A just and
equitable remedy cannot bend to
cater to a situation that, on the
facts, does not arise. The Court did not and could not attach
much weight to SALGA’s
allegations of municipal interests, due
to the weakness of the facts relied on.
[31]
In addition, a just and equitable remedy weighs all affected parties'
interests. The interests of municipalities
are only one side of the
scale. However, to weigh only this would be myopic.
[32]
Against the case SALGA presented, the Court has to weigh the
interests of the end-users. NERSA's consultation
paper concluded that
failing to set cost-reflective tariffs meant that "tariffs are
increasingly unaffordable" for end-users.
The finding of Her
Ladyship Justice Kubushi relied on NERSA’s indication that
tariffs were increasingly unaffordable. None
of the parties before
this Court sought to undo that finding, which was not disputed. It
takes little imagination to grasp the
effects of end-users being
overcharged for electricity and it being unaffordable. The pleaded
case before this Court was that tariffs
were becoming increasingly
unaffordable. The Court must weigh against NERSA's unproven case in
the interests of these end-users.
[33]
The Court had to, in deciding whether it was just and equitable to
suspend the finding of invalidity,
weigh a weak, disputed and
contradicted case by SALGA against the common cause impact of
overpayment and unaffordability on end-users.
[34]
Aside from
the unaffordability, the Court was faced with unlawful conduct. NERSA
and the municipalities have known that it must
comply with the Policy
since 2006 when ERA came into force. Both have known of the
obligation to conduct a cost of supply
study since 2008, when the
Policy was adopted. Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi gave NERSA and the
municipalities a year grace period
to get their houses in order.
Before Ladyship Justice Kubushi, the evidence was that the switch to
a cost-of-supply study approach
would not present difficulties and
that municipalities had already, at the stage of the hearing before
Kubushi J, started to report
on the information required for
cost-of-supply studies and "it is thus anticipated that
compliance in this regard will not
be a hurdle".
[1]
[35]
The Court rejected SALGA’s proposal to indefinitely suspend the
finding of invalidity in light
of the weakness of SALGA’s case,
which weighed against end-users' interests and the importance of the
rule of law.
[36]
This Court cannot grant leave to appeal in circumstances where the
challenge to the remedy is one premised
on a factual case which has
not been proven, internally contradicted, disputed and which is, in
any event, outweighed by other
considerations, including the
interests of end-users and upholding the rule of law.
[37]
Afriforum submits that SALGA’s approach in the leave to appeal
only factors on one side of the
scale. The Court is persuaded by this
argument.
[38]
SALGA submits that the Court erred in finding that its powers
to grant just and equitable relief
does not extend to permit an
illegality to continue. SALGA points to the Court's powers to
suspend an order of invalidity
as proof that courts can and do grant
relief which permits illegalities to continue. The Court declined to
grant an order suspending
the invalidity as it did not conclude it
would be just and equitable in the circumstances. The Court accepts
that part of its powers
to grant just and equitable relief would be
to suspend the declaration of invalidity. However, the Court
concluded that, in this
case, it would not be just and equitable to
do so.
[39]
The circumstances weighed with the Court, set out in the introduction
and expanded on in its reasons,
were it was being asked to permit
illegality to continue without any explanation from the
municipalities for non-compliance (paragraph
13); budgetary
constraints were insufficient to justify a deviation from the law
(paragraph 14), and SALGA had not pleaded a strong
factual case to
support a suspension of invalidity (paragraph 15). The Court set out,
from the outset, that it would not be "just
and equitable to
permit non-compliant municipalities to continue charging unlawful
tariffs, particularly where there was already
an order in place
providing them a year to address their non-compliance"
(paragraph 17). The Court cited these reasons
as the basis for
rejecting the notion that a just and equitable remedy would be to
suspend the declaration of invalidity.
[40]
The limits
on the Court's discretion are set by what is just and equitable. The
discretion this Court exercised is one where it
is granted wide
decision-making powers with several options or variables. There is a
range of permissible decisions. It is the
type of discretion that
appellate courts are slow to interfere with unless the Court's choice
is at odds with the law.
[2]
Appellate Courts, for reasons sourced in appellate restraint and the
preservation of judicial comity will unlikely interfere
only because
they favour a different option within the range of options available
to the Court. The approach fosters certainty
in applying the law and
favours finality in decision-making.
[41]
It weighs with the Court that the true difference between the relief
granted by the Court and that
sought by SALGA, is that SALGA sought
an indefinite suspension of the finding of invalidity. The relief
proposed by SALGA would
permit municipalities to continue to
overcharge end-users, indefinitely, against the back-drop of such
overcharging being ongoing
for years. This relief, of an indefinite
suspension, holds no incentive for municipalities to comply with the
law and subjects
end-users to further – and indefinite –
overpayment. The Court was also not provided with an explanation as
to why
further grace was required for municipalities to comply as the
requirement to conduct a cost of supply study became law in 2008.
In addition, the facts before Kubushi J was that to conduct such
studies would present no difficulty and had already commenced,
in
2022. The Court concluded that such relief, permitting an
indefinite suspension, was not just and equitable. Instead
the
Court concluded that an order which compelled municipalities to
comply with the law, halted overpayment but also permitted
municipalities who had not complied a 60 day period within which they
could redeem the situation, would be just and equitable.
If
municipalities could not do so in the 60 days, laced into the relief
was the opportunity to approach the Court and explain why
non-compliance within 60 days was not possible. The relief
protected the rule of law, end-users and ensured a culture of
justification for non-compliance.
[42]
To be successful on appeal, SALGA would have to persuade an appellate
Court that it was unjust and
inequitable not to indefinitely suspend
the finding of invalidity in circumstances where the Court expressly
permitted municipalities
to correct the situation and even approach
the Court for more time to do so. The Court is not persuaded
that SALGA will be
able to convince an appellate Court that such
relief is inequitable and unjust.
[43]
SALGA
submits that an order which permitted the municipalities an
opportunity to place facts before the Court regarding the impact
of
not being permitted to use the unlawful method was the appropriate
relief. SALGA relies on the Constitutional Court's decision
in
Allpay
[3]
as support of this relief is appropriate. The Court has considered
Allpay
and specifically that the opportunity to file additional pleadings
was sourced in the delay of 20 months between the award of the
tender
and the decision on the merits. During these 20 months, the
successful tenderer took various infrastructural steps. In those
circumstances, the Court provided the parties an opportunity to set
out the changes since the award. These are not the facts before
this
Court. The municipalities were cited from the outset. They could tell
the Court the impact if NERSA could not use an unlawful
method. They
failed to do so. This is not an instance of a change of circumstances
– it is one of the municipalities not
placing facts before the
Court and then at the stage of leave to appeal, contending it is
unjust and inequitable to grant relief
against them.
[44]
In any event, the reasons of the Court expressly provides that if the
60 day redemption period is too
short, then municipalities can come
to court can explain the situation. There is, already weaved
into the judgment, an opportunity
for municipalities to explain the
basis of their non-compliance.
[45]
For these reasons, the Court concludes that there is no real chance
of another Court coming to a different
conclusion.
Prohibition
of tariff increases absent a cost of supply study
[46]
The Court granted an order which prohibited municipalities from
increasing their tariffs absent such
an increase being based on a
cost of supply study. The order only applies to non-compliant
municipalities. SALGA submits that this
order was erroneously granted
and that another Court will come to a different conclusion. Here
SALGA makes, broadly, two arguments.
[47]
The first is that the Court ought to have confined itself to the
pleadings, the relief was not sought
and SALGA was not permitted an
opportunity to respond to such relief.
[48]
The impact of this relief was debated at the hearing of the matter.
In addition, Afriforum filed
a draft order in which this relief was
sought in paragraph 5. SALGA filed written submissions in
response to the draft order
filed by Afriforum which included
paragraph 5 (paragraph 6 of the Afriforum draft order).
Therefore, SALGA had an opportunity
to make oral submission to court
as well as additional written submissions, in these written
submission there was no indication
of prejudice on the basis of not
being afforded an opportunity to place specific facts before the
Court.
[49]
The second is that the Court did not have regard to the fact that
municipal budgets are approved and
adopted by democratically elected
bodies, whose actions are not easily set aside by a Court.
[50]
The process is that municipalities must set their budgets based on
the tariffs approved by NERSA. Already
at the hearing of the matter
it was apparent that the budgets were set prior to this
determination.
[51]
More principally, the primary duty of courts is to the Constitution
and the law, “which they
must apply impartially and without
fear, favour or prejudice”. These duties will often result in
decisions that have an impact
on budgets. This does not mean that the
courts are interfering with budgetary determinations.
[52]
The
Constitutional Court recognised this more than 20 years ago when it
held that courts' determinations "may in fact have
budgetary
implications, but are not in themselves directed at rearranging
budgets.”
[4]
In this
way, the judicial, legislative and executive functions achieve
appropriate constitutional balance.
[5]
The fact that a court’s decision impacts a budget is not a
basis to conclude that the relief granted was unjust and
inequitable.
It is often the case that an order to comply with the law will have
budgetary consequences.
[53]
The Court concludes that there is not a reasonable chance that SALGA
will persuade an appellate Court
that the relief it granted is unjust
and inequitable on this basis.
The
60-day redemption period
[54]
SALGA submits that an order granting non-complaint municipalities 60
additional days to conduct their
cost of supply study was not
properly before the Court. The ground of appeal is that the Court did
not confine itself to the pleadings
or the evidence before it.
Specifically, SALGA contends that the order was not asked for in
Afriforum’s notice of motion.
SALGA submits that properly
the Court ought to have provided the parties an opportunity to show
cause as to why such an order should
not be granted.
[55]
SALGA’s submission that the 60-day additional period to comply
was not in Afriforum’s notice
of motion is correct. However,
the suggestion for a redemption period to comply with the requirement
of a cost of supply study
is sourced from SALGA's proposed draft
order provided to the Court. In paragraph 6 of SALGA's proposed draft
order, it suggested
that:
“
Municipalities
shall be permitted to supplement electricity tariff applications with
cost of supply studies, and the first respondent
shall consider and,
if they are legally compliant, approve such electricity tariff
applications by municipalities as are based
on the municipalities’
cost of supply studies submitted after the date of this order, within
one month of receipt of the
requisite cost of supply studies.”
[56]
SALGA would have to persuade an appellate Court that it was improper
for the Court to grant a redemption
period, as it was not sought by
Afriforum, in circumstances where SALGA itself suggested such a
redemption period. The Court is
not persuaded that an appellate Court
would find it inappropriate that the Court erred in granting such a
redemption period in
circumstances where SALGA suggested a redemption
period.
[57]
As for the 60 days, SALGA is correct because it is not found in
Afriforum's notice of motion. The 60-day
period operates in favour of
the municipalities. The judgment specifically referred to the fact
that the 60 days was not a period
intended to be sufficient to
conduct a cost of supply study; it was a further grace period on top
of the 20 months the order of
Kubushi J provided. In addition, the
duty to conduct a cost of supply study is sourced from a 2008 Policy.
Municipalities' obligations
to conduct the cost of supply study are
sixteen years old. The judgment also indicated that if a municipality
could not comply
– it could seek a variation of this time
period.
[58]
The core of the argument by SALGA is that it is prejudiced by relief
being granted, which did not appear
in the notice of motion of the
applicant. The Court is not persuaded by this submission,
particularly as the redemption period
was a suggestion of SALGA's. It
also weighs with the Court that the 60-day redemption period, subject
to variation, favours SALGA's
constituencies.
[59]
The true difference between the order granted and SALGA’s
position is that it suggested an indefinite
period for municipalities
to comply with the requirement to conduct cost of supply studies.
Such relief would not be effective
and would hold no incentive for
municipalities to comply with their obligations. The limitation
of 60 days must be seen in
light of the lengthy years-long
non-compliance and overcharging; the Policy being a 2008 document and
the parties before Kubushi
J stating that conducting such studies
would not present a problem. This period is any event, based on
the express reasoning
of the Court subject to variation.
Mootness
[60]
NERSA submits that it considered and approved tariff applications
before this Court handed down its
order. NERSA argues that, in this
way, the issue had become moot before the Court handed down its
order. NERSA refers to communication
made and uploaded to case lines
before receiving the order which conveyed NERSA’s tariff
decisions.
[61]
For the order to be moot, it has to be without any practical
consequences. The order contains not only
a substantive declaration
but also regulates the position going forward – it is exactly
this relief and its impact on municipalities
going forward attract
SALGA's application for leave to appeal. The matter was not rendered
moot before the order was handed down.
In any event, the
communication was not evidence, was not placed under oath, and none
of the parties were allowed to respond to
the communication.
The communication was uploaded between the court reserving judgment
and the order being handed down.
[62]
The Court
further notes that NERSA, before Kubushi J raised the same mootness
argument. Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi held that "the
submission
made by NERSA is that serious material events have overtaken the
relief which the applicants are seeking in these proceedings.”
[6]
The material events, before Justice Kubushi were that NERSA had taken
a new decision. Her Ladyship Justice Kubushi considered
NERSA's
reliance on mootness. The Court dismissed the claim as "there
are strong public interest considerations in favour
of this Court
determining the lawfulness of the method".
[7]
[63]
This Court rejects NERSA’s regurgitated allegations of
mootness, for the same reasons on which
Her Ladyship Kubushi rejected
them.
Costs
[64]
NERSA complains that this Court granted costs in favour of SALGA. The
structure of this argument is
that SALGA was a respondent and SALGA's
papers opposed the relief sought by Afriforum. This is correct, but
as pointed out by SALGA,
NERSA, the day before the hearing, filed a
letter stating that applications for tariff increases would be
considered absent a cost
of supply study. This changed the landscape
of the matter and clarified to SALGA the unlawfulness of NERSA's
method. With
this letter in hand, SALGA approached the Court on
the basis that NERSA’s method was in fact unlawful. SALGA, at
the hearing,
supported the substantive relief sought by Afriforum.
[65]
NERSA's failure to comply with its central duty to act as a regulator
and to rather yield to municipal
non-compliance with the Policy and
ERA, is the cause of the litigation. NERSA then opposed the relief on
grounds that had largely
been rejected by Her Ladyship Kubushi J and
was in clear conflict with the Policy, ERA and its own frameworks.
NERSA’s conduct
should attract a costs order.
[66]
It must also be remembered that whilst the municipalities failed to
comply with the longstanding policy
position – SALGA is not the
municipalities, and no criticism for the municipal non-compliance can
be laid at SALGA's feet.
In these circumstances, it is appropriate
that NERSA be liable for SALGA's costs.
Conclusion
[67]
The Court orders:
a) The
applications for leave to appeal are dismissed.
I de Vos
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be e-mailed to the parties/their legal representatives.
Counsel for
Afriforum:
Margaretha
Engelbrecht, SC (heads of argument)
Etienne Botha
Instructed by:
Marjorie Van
Schalkwyk, Hurter & Spies
Counsel for NERSA:
Terry Motau, SC
Realeboga Tshetlo
Instructed by
Prince Mudau &
Associates
Counsel for SALGA:
Kennedy Tsatsawane
SC
Kgomotso Kabinde
Instructed by:
H M Chaane
Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
29 July 2024
Date of judgment:
19 August 2024
[1]
Kubushi
J at para 171
[2]
Florence
v Government of the Republic of South Africa
2014 (6) SA 456
(CC)
para 113
[3]
Allpay Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and
Others (CCT 48/13)
[2013] ZACC 42
;
2014 (1) SA 604
(CC);
2014 (1)
BCLR 1
(CC) (29 November 2013)
[4]
Minister of Health and Others v Treatment Action Campaign and Others
(No 2) (CCT8/02)
[2002] ZACC 15
;
2002 (5) SA 721
(CC);
2002 (10)
BCLR 1033
(CC) (5 July 2002) para 38
[5]
Id
[6]
Kubushi
J para 33
[7]
Kubushi
J para 41
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