Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1216South Africa
Casting, Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa NPC and Others v City of Johannesburg and Another (1141562023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1216 (26 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 November 2024
Headnotes
to be unlawful and set aside. The order was not appealed, and the dispute could not be resolved amicably within 30 days as directed by the court. In January 2023, the matter was remitted to NERSA to determine the 2019/2020 tariffs. The 2019/2020 tariffs remain unresolved.
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 and Another (1141562023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1216 (26 November 2024)
Casting, Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa NPC and Others v City of Johannesburg and Another (1141562023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1216 (26 November 2024)
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sino date 26 November 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 114156/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: YES
Date:
26/11/24
Signature
In the matter between:
CASTING, FORGING AND
MACHINING
FIRST APPLICANT
CLUSTER OF SOUTH
AFRICA NPC
SCAW SOUTH AFRICA
(PTY) LTD,
SECOND APPLICANT
DUNROSE TRADING 57
(PTY) LTD,
THIRD APPLICANT
ABRACON PROPERTY 1
(PTY) LTD
FOURTH APPLICANT
INTERNATIONAL WIRE
CONVERTORS
FIFTH APPLICANT
(PTY) LTD
and
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
FIRST RESPONDENT
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
CITY POWER SOC
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
BAQWA J
Introduction
[1]
This is an urgent interdict in which the applicants seek to prevent
the respondents
from disconnecting the electricity supply to the
premises of the second to fifth applicants, pending the finalisation
of the disputes
lodged by the applicants in terms of section 102 of
the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000(Systems Act )
pertaining
to the 2019/20, 2020/21,2021,22,2022/23 and 2023/24
financial years regardless of when (and in which financial year) the
disputes
are to be resolved. Alternatively, the applicants seek that
the respondents be interdicted from disconnecting the electricity
supply
to the premises of the second to the fifth applicants without
first furnishing them with the written notice, written reasons and
allowing them to make representations
[1]
[2]
The respondents oppose the main application and they have filed a
counter application
in terms of which they seek to declare the
applicants’ vexatious litigants in terms of section 2(1) (b) of
the Vexatious
Proceedings Act 3 of 1956, and a payment of the
substantial arrears in excess of R113 million from the second to the
fifth applicants
on their respective municipal accounts, or
alternatively that each of the second to fifth applicants enter into
acknowledgement
of debt with the respondents in respect of the
substantial arrears on their respective municipal accounts, failing
which the respondents
be authorised to proceed with the credit action
in the form of a disconnection of municipal supply including
electricity supply
to their respective premises.
[3]
The respondents wish to record that a distinction must be drawn
between the main application
and the counter-application because the
main application is for a final interdict which is subject to the
Plascon-Evans
rule and the counter-application is NOT subject
thereto because the counter-application merely seeks to enforce
proper credit control
action in terms of the provisions of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996( the
Constitution), the Systems Act,
as well as, the Credit Control
Policy.
Parties
[4]
The first applicant is Casting, Forging and Machining Cluster of
South Africa NPC(CFMC),
a company duly incorporated in terms of the
company laws of South Africa, its primary goal is to promote the
growth and development
of metals manufacturing industry. The second
applicant is SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd (SCAW), a company duly
incorporated in terms
of company laws of South Africa, this
application concerns Haggie Steel Rope, one of the SCAW divisional
businesses which manufactures
specialised steel wire rope for the
mining and electrical sectors. The third applicant is Dunrose Trading
57 (Pty) Ltd (Dunrose),
which trades under the name Abracon, a
company duly incorporated in terms of company laws of South Africa,
it manufactures and
distributes nails and fasteners. The fourth
applicant is Abracon Property 1 (Pty) Ltd (Abracon), a company duly
incorporated in
terms of the company laws of South Africa. It
conducts its business by owning and letting properties and is the
owner of the premises
occupied by Dunrose. The fifth applicant is
International Wire Convertors (Pty) Ltd(IWC), a company duly
registered in terms of
company laws of South Africa. It manufactures
high and low carbon steel wire.
[5]
The first respondent is the City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality established
in terms of
section 12
of the
Local
Government: Municipal Structures Act 117 of 1998
. The second
respondent is City Power Soc Ltd, a municipal entity wholly owned by
the first respondent with limited liability established
as a
municipal owned entity and incorporated in terms of the company laws
of South Africa. The City of Johannesburg and City Power
will be
referred to as the “respondents” or individually as the
first and/or the second respondent where necessary.
The same will
apply in reference to the applicants in this judgment.
Background
facts
[6]
During the period of September and November 2019, the second to the
fifth applicants
submitted letters which, in their view triggered a
formal
section 102
dispute with the respondents. The letters
explained the underlying issue in dispute, which is the municipal
tariffs determined
by the National Energy Regulator of South Africa
(NERSA). It was also explained that the only way to obtain redress
was to institute
legal proceedings in the High Court to review
NERSA’
s 2019/20
tariffs. The letters further acknowledged that
the respondents are entitled to be paid a lawful charge for
electricity and the
applicants tendered to make payment of a monthly
sum and the basis on which it was calculated. Similar letters to
section 102
dispute were submitted for the 2020/21, 2021/22 and
2022/23 financial years.
[7]
On the 11 December 2019, the applicants’ attorney Botha sent a
letter to the
respondents in an effort to encourage them to adhere to
their obligations under the provisions of section 102(2) of the
Systems
Act, pending the resolution of the matter. The letters
referenced disputes in terms of section 102 which the applicants had
declared,
and the applicants asked the respondents to give an
undertaking that it would not terminate electricity supply unless
they are
given at least 21 days prior written notice. There was no
substantive response from the respondents to the letters. The
applicants
began to pay reduced amounts to the respondents calculated
on the basis reflected in the dispute notices. The applicants made
reference
to the case in
Afriforum
NPC v
Eskom
Holdings Soc Ltd
[2]
which laid down the requirements of procedural fairness in relation
to electricity disconnections.
[8]
On 12 December 2019, a review application (
Casting,
Forging and Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) and Others v
National Energy Regulator of SA and Others
[3]
“Kubushi judgment “)
was
lodged against the 2019/2020 tariffs in this court before Kubushi J,
and the matter was opposed by the respondents. On 25 November
2022,
these tariffs were held to be unlawful and set aside. The order was
not appealed, and the dispute could not be resolved amicably
within
30 days as directed by the court. In January 2023, the matter was
remitted to NERSA to determine the 2019/2020 tariffs.
The 2019/2020
tariffs remain unresolved.
[9]
Despite the finding in the Kubushi judgment, on the 17 January 2020,
the first respondent
attempted to disconnect electricity supply to
IWC without complying with the procedural requirements which includes
providing a
disconnection notice in advance to the entity or person
affected. The first respondent’s officials arrived at the IWC’s
premises to give effect to the disconnection, however this was
averted by intervention of the first respondent’s attorneys
(Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc “ENS” ) who spoke to the
officials not to effect the disconnection. Later that day Botha
sought an undertaking from the first respondent’s attorneys
regarding future compliance with the disconnection procedures.
ENS
responded and confirmed that the respondents will comply the
procedural requirements and furnish ample notice to the applicants
regarding any proposed future electricity disconnections.
[10]
Despite the above undertaking, the officials of the first respondent
arrived at the premises
occupied by the third applicant on 29 January
2020 to attempt to disconnect the electricity supply in connection to
what was alleged
to be the third applicant’s arrears. The
notice given was dated the 23 January 2020, but the third applicant
only became
aware of the notice on the 29 January 2020 when the
officials came to disconnect the electricity. ENS still intervened,
and the
electricity supply was not disconnected. Despite that letter
and on 4 September 2020, IWC was once again threatened with
disconnection
and Botha had to communicate with ENS again. Further
electricity supply disconnections were threatened, and similar
interventions
were made by the legal representatives of the parties.
[11]
On 14 and 18 March 2022, ENS wrote to the section 102 applicants on
behalf of the first respondent
to demand an increased contribution to
the electricity accounts. In these letters, threats were made to
disconnect the applicants’
electricity if they failed to
acquiesce to the demand. Botha responded on 24 March 2022 and
referred back to the undertaking given
by the first respondent and
the rights held by the applicants in terms of section 102. Botha and
ENS reached an agreement on the
mechanism to prevent disconnection
conflicts, and the applicants tendered to pay an increased amount in
respect of their electricity
bills pending the determination of the
2019/2020 tariffs as per Kubushi judgment. The 24 March 2022 letter
from Botha to ENS recorded
the applicants’ understanding that
demands made on the 14 and 18 March 2022 were not made pursuant to
any Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000(PAJA) required
notification process of fair procedure, and the first respondent was
expressly invited to
correct this understanding. No response was
received from the first respondent relating to this letter and the
threats of disconnection
were not taken further.
[12]
On 2 February 2023, Botha and ENS agreed on a protocol designed to
prevent the first respondent’s
officials from disconnecting. In
terms of the agreed protocol, the following steps were to be followed
in the event that a disconnection
without proper notice was
threatened, viz:
12.1.
The provision of a list of electricity account numbers forming the
subject of pending section 102 disputes
12.2.
A designated person at the subject company to hand the responsible
first respondent official a bundle comprising
of the relevant
documents
12.3.
To forward Botha a copy of the termination notices and for Botha to
take up the threat with ENS which ENS
would immediately contact the
relevant municipality official and issue an instruction not to
proceed with the termination.
12.4.
Alternatively, contact ENS directly to arrange for termination
instruction to be countermanded.
Issues
for determination
[13]
The following are issues for determination.
13.1.
Whether the respondents are justified in demanding the payment of
amounts owing by the applicants to the respondents?
13.2.
Whether the applicants satisfied the requirements for an interdict
against terminating electricity supply.
[14]
Prior to discussing the real issues for determination I need to deal
with the points
in limine
raised by the respondents. These are
the points
in limine
:
14.1.
Condonation
14.2.
Non- Joinder
14.3.
Whether the applicants’ alleged dispute falls within the
purview of section 102(2) of the Systems Act and
whether this alleged
dispute is
res judicata
14.4
Whether the first respondent is entitled to terminate the electricity
supply to the second to the fifth applicants’
respective
properties, in particular where customers refuse to pay all of the
current charges on their municipal account over extended
periods of
time
[15]
The respondents allege that there are real and
bona fide
disputes of facts contained in the parties’ affidavits for the
purposes of determining whether to grant a final interdict.
This
should not be confused with lodging a valid dispute for purposes of
section 102(2) of the Systems Act. In other words, the
respondents
contend, a nuanced distinction needs to be appreciated when
adjudicating the present proceedings. I deal with these
seriatim:
condonation
[16]
The respondents contend that there are real bona fide dispute of
facts with regards to condonation
as the applicants have taken issue
with the filing of an answering affidavit in the main application
which was served 52 days out
of court time, yet the applicants did
come clean regarding adhering to the time frames stipulated in Rule 6
of the Uniform Rules
of Court .The applicants assert that since the
respondents filed their answering affidavits out of time, their
founding affidavit
to their counter application should be dismissed.
The respondents contend that their Information Communications and
Technology
system (ICT) has experienced technical failures and as
such the deponents to the affidavit had been unable to access certain
threads
of evidence relevant to the present application. This was
conveyed to Deputy Judge President Ledwaba when the parties had a
virtual
meeting on the 23 May 2024 in respect of the special
allocation to this matter.
[17]
The applicants had to serve their answering affidavit within 15 court
days of filing their notice
of intention to oppose the counter
application, but they filed their answering affidavit late and failed
to seek condonation for
late filing, instead they based their late
filing on the respondent’s ICT failure. The fact that the
respondents reserved
a right to file their supplementary affidavit
does not mean the applicants were entitled to file their answering
affidavit late.
Although the applicants have sought a special
allocation for the hearing of this matter and the case management
from the Honourable
Deputy Judge President based on the respondent’s
ICT technical issues it does not mean the applicants are not equally
wrong.
[18]
It is common cause that the respondents filed the answering affidavit
52 days out of time in
the main application. Equally the applicants
answering affidavit to the counter application 15 days out of time.
Both parties contend
that due to ICT technical failures they could
not file their papers on time. The fact of the matter is that the
parities herein
do not appear to have been prejudiced by the lateness
of the said pleadings. In these circumstances the issue of
condonation becomes
a non-issue and should not detain this court’s
time any further.
Non-Joinder
[19]
Relying on
Bowring
NO v Vrededorp Properties CC and Another
[4]
and
Transvaal
Agricultural Union v Minister of Agriculture and Land Affairs and
Others,
[5]
the
respondents argue that the applicants have brought two applications
in the past where they cited NERSA as the respondent. However,
in the
present application the applicants have failed to join NERSA. The
respondents noted that in the urgent application seeking
interim
interdict regarding credit control action, the applicants joined
NERSA. In the review application the applicants also joined
NERSA.
The respondents argued that these judgments are distinctly different
although the dispute has been primarily against NERSA
and not the
respondents. In the present case the applicants have taken issue with
the 2023/2024 electricity tariffs published by
NERSA. In the Kubushi
judgment the operative part of the case was in respect of the
2019/2020 tariffs not the succeeding years.
[20]
The respondents charge customers within their jurisdiction and the
tariffs are approved by NERSA,
the customers are subject to NERSA
approved tariffs. On 30 April 2024, Honourable Madam Justice Bam
dismissed an interim interdict
on the basis of the
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
[6]
(Oudekraal
Principle)
,
where she found that the tariffs are valid once passed by NERSA until
they are set aside, and the respondents must enforce them.
On this
premise the respondents contend that NERSA has a direct and
substantial interest in this matter since the primary dispute
is
against the 2023/2024 tariffs regulated by NERSA.
[21]
The respondents argue that the applicants have brought two
applications in the past where they
cited NERSA as the respondent.
Whilst factually correct, that issue is of no relevance in the
present matter which involves payment
due to the respondents by the
applicants for services rendered in the form of electricity. Those
services do not implicate NERSA
in any shape or form due to the fact
that NERSA is a regulator and not a Municipality. For that reason,
NERSA does not have to
be joined as a party in these proceedings.
Non- Joinder as a point
in linime
is legally not sustainable.
Whether
the applicants’ alleged dispute falls within the purview of
section 102(2) of the Systems Act and is this alleged
dispute res
judicata?
[22]
The respondents contend that the second to the fifth applicants are
not section 102 applicants
because the dispute falls outside of the
purview of section 102(2) of the Systems Act, given that section 102
of the Systems Act
makes provision for accounts, and it provides as
follows:
“
(1)
A municipality may-
(a)
consolidate any separate accounts of persons liable for payments to
the municipality;
(b)
credit a payment by such a person against any account of that person;
(c)
implement any of the debt collection and credit control measures
provided for in this
chapter in relation to any arrears on any of the
accounts of such a person.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not apply where there is a dispute between the
municipality and a person
referred to in that subsection concerning
any specific amount claimed by the municipality from that person”
[23]
The respondent further referred to
Casting,
Forging & Machining Cluster of South Africa (NPC) v National
Energy Regulator of
SA
[7]
(
CFMC
v NERSA
2020)
and
Body
Corporate Croftdene Mall v eThekwini Municipality
,
[8]
they argued that NERSA is a third party in the proceedings, and it is
not a municipal entity and also noting that the dispute is
not
capable of being resolved in terms of the Systems Act. The
respondents further aver that the letters raise the same dispute
in
respect of electricity tariffs as approved and published by NERSA for
the 2023/2024 financial year as opposed to specific amount
in respect
of electricity charges on the municipal invoice. The applicants’
own version is regarding the underlying issue
for the period of
September and November 2019 related to NERSA tariffs. The respondents
also contend that they are not obliged
to respond to all the
applicants’ emails and letters as their purpose was to delay
the respondents from enforcing credit
control.
[24]
Subsequent to the Kubushi judgment, there is no lawful tariff for the
first respondent for the
2019/2020 financial year in relation to the
tariff chargeable to the applicants. Moreover, the tariff for each
year from 2019/2020
is implicated by the Kubushi judgment, because
that tariff year forms the basis of all subsequent tariff
determinations, which
are made on a percentage increase basis.
Moreover, the methodology used by NERSA to approve the first
respondent’s tariffs
for each of the subsequent years is the
same methodology that was held to be unlawful in the Kubushi
judgment. In the circumstances
mistakes made by the first respondent
in the calculations of the amounts due or services due to the
application of incorrect/unlawful
tariffs are mistakes which need to
be corrected between the applicants and the first respondent in terms
of section 102 of the
Systems Act. The mistakes are not between the
applicants and a third party.
[25]
Conversely, in terms of
Body
Corporate Croftdene
[9]
as
mentioned above by the respondents, the applicants have properly
defined and raised a dispute in respect of a specific amount
in their
section 102 letters sent to the respondents before the implementation
of debt collection measures. The applicants have
offered to continue
to pay the tendered amounts under the dispute. pending the outcome of
the dispute which is to be determined
by NERSA.
[26]
Regarding the
res
judicata
issue, the respondents submit that the main application constitutes a
form of unmeritorious litigation because the gravamen of
the
applicants’ dispute is with NERSA and not the respondents.
Also, NERSA is not a municipal entity and any dispute against
NERSA
does not fall within the purview of section 102 of the Systems Act.
This was already decided in
CFMC
v NERSA
[10]
2020 above, the court found that the applicants’ dispute
against the methodology adopted by NERSA in determining the
electricity
tariffs for the 2019/2020 year does not fall within the
ambit of section 102 of the Systems Act .It has already been decided
and
is therefore
res
judicata
,
yet the applicants vexatiously labour and persist with their
mala
fide
contention in claiming that it does.
[27]
CFMC
v NERSA
2020
[11]
, is of relevance at
paragraph 22 thereof with reference to the
res
judicata
issue. The court states as follows:
“
Who
must determine what these relevant parts of the founding affidavit
are for purposes of this application? Furthermore, the respondents
in
this application were unable to address these allegations in this
application, as these allegations have not been set out in
the
founding affidavit in the application before me. I therefore have to
conclude that no
prima
facie
case
has been made out with regard to the grounds of review relied upon by
the applicants.”
[12]
[28]
In the present matter specific amounts are claimed by the first
respondent and the applicants
have furnished facts that would
adequately enable the Municipality to ascertain or identify the
disputed items and the basis or
the objection by the applicants
thereto. Paragraph 23 further states as follows:
“
Furthermore,
I am also not convinced that the balance of convenience favours the
applicants. The impugned decision of NERSA has
been taken in terms of
existing legislation. The Constitutional Court held in
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
Others
2012
(6) SA 223
(CC) at par [44] that where an interim interdict or
temporary restraining order is sought to restrain the exercise of
statutory
powers, such a case is no ordinary application for an
interim interdict. It was pointed out that the balance of convenience
enquiry
must carefully probe whether and to which extent the
remaining 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 (par [47)). It was further pointed out that the Court
must also keep in mind that a temporary restraint against the
exercise
of a 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 the separation of powers harm
(par [47))”
[13]
The
collateral challenge defence
[29]
The respondents have literally closed their eyes to the facts
submitted to them in the form of
copious correspondences to the
respondents. More importantly the applicants are protected in this
application by the dictum in
Oudekraal
[14]
which
states as follows
:
“
When
construed against the background of principles underlying the rule of
law a statute will generally not be interpreted to mean
that a
subject is compelled to perform or refrain from performing an act in
the absence of a lawful basis for that compulsion.
It
is in those cases –
where
the subject is sought to be coerced by a public authority into
compliance with an unlawful administrative that the subject
may be
entitled to ignore the unlawful act with impunity and justify his
conduct by raising what has come to be known as a ‘defensive’
or a ‘collateral’ challenge to the validity of the
administrative act
.”
[15]
(My emphasis)
[30]
By law, the applicants as indicated by
Oudekraal
cannot be
compelled to assist in the implementation of an unlawful
administrative act. The respondents can therefore not rely on
the
res
judicata
principle.
Whether
the first respondent is entitled to terminate the electricity supply
to the second to the fifth applicants’ respective
properties,
in particular where customers refuse to pay all of the current
charges on their municipal account over extended periods
of time?
[31]
The respondents argue that the applicants cannot pick and choose how
much they arbitrarily want
to pay, in particular where they consume
electricity and refuse to pay the full amount in respect of the
electrical charges. If
this is allowed, it would have a disastrous
effect on the overall fiscus and the respondents’ ability to
provide municipal
services to all of its customers would effectively
collapse. As alluded to above, the respondents contend that they are
a separate
entity to NERSA, and as a result, NERSA should have been
joined as it regulates the approval of tariffs. The Kubushi judgment
stated
that “it will not be just and equitable for the
applicants’ remedy to reach back to 2020/21 tariff year and
result
in extraordinary potential refunds that will cause calamity
for the municipality.” The respondents further submit that the
decision in
Nelson
Mandela Bay Business Chambers NPC and Another v National Energy
Regulator and Others
[16]
was
based on the underlying methodology used by NERSA to approve tariffs,
this especially explains that this is not the method that
the
respondents use but rather NERSA which was declared invalid but
suspended for 12 months to be corrected by NERSA. These court
cases
were concerned with the methodology in which NERSA determines its
tariffs, not to allow the applicants to pay amounts which
are lesser
than their charges against their municipal accounts.
[32]
The respondents contend that they have constitutional and legislative
mandate to discontinue
services for non- payment and to collect all
amounts owing to it in terms of section 152(2) of the Constitution,
sections 5(2),
95(1)(a), 97, and 98 of the Systems Act, section
7,14,15 and 29 of the Credit Control Policy By law 2020. This was
also affirmed
in
Mkontwana
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality, Bisset & Others v
Buffalo Municipality & Others; Transfer Rights Action
Campaign &
Others v MEC, Local Government and Housing, Gauteng & Others
(Kwazulu-Natal Law Society and Msunduzi Municipality
as Amici
Curiae)
[17]
and
Rademan
v Moqhaka Municipality and Others
[18]
where the courts emphasized that the municipalities should reduce
debt by legitimate means by enforcing credit control means mandated
by section 97(1) of the Systems Act to collect all monies due and
payable.
[33]
The unique circumstances arising out of the present application and
based on the Kubushi judgment
are such that whilst not challenging
the authority of the respondents to act in terms of 97(1) of the
Systems Act, the first respondent
is not entitled to terminate the
electricity supply to the applicants’ respective properties
until the injunction in the
Kubushi judgment is complied with,
alternatively until the tariffs are rectified as directed in that
judgment.
The
law
The
requirements of an interdict.
Prima
facie and Clear right
[34]
The requirements
[19]
of an
interim interdict are trite, the applicants must have prima facie
right to seek primary relief. The applicants contend that
their first
right stems from the right not to be charged electricity tariffs by
the respondents which were set aside in a Kubushi
judgment. When the
applicants legitimately refuse to pay the tariffs which were declared
unlawful, the respondents threaten to
disconnect. The applicants
relied on Kubushi J’s order and said that it set out the regime
which required the parties to
resolve the dispute relating to the
applicable electricity tariff payable for the 2019/2020 year by
mutual agreement and failing
which the tariff would have to be
rectified by NERSA as directed by Kubushi J. The applicants
further submit that this order
renders the decision of NERSA to
approve the 2019/2020 tariffs null and void.
[35]
Section 15(2) of the Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006 states that
the respondents may not
charge a customer any other tariff and make
use of provisions in agreements other than that determined or
approved by NERSA. The
applicants contend that their right extends
further to all tariff determinations following the 2019/2020 tariff
year although the
review application was confined to 2019/2020.
Therefore, the tariffs for each year from 2019/2020 to date are
implicated by the
Kubushi judgment because that tariff year forms the
basis for all subsequent tariff determinations, which are made on a
percentage
increase basis. What also bears noting is that the
methodology used by NERSA to approve the first respondent’s
tariffs for
each of the subsequent years is the same methodology.
[36]
The applicants also contend that they have a clear right under the
Oudekraal
principle not to be charged electricity tariffs which are unlawful on
the reasoning of the Kubushi Judgment. The
Oudekraal
[20]
case
distinguished between the review relief and a collateral challenge
and accordingly stated as follows:
“
It
will generally avail a person to mount a collateral challenge to the
validity of an administrative act where he is threatened
by a public
authority with coercive action precisely because the legal force of
the coercive action will most often depend upon
the legal validity of
the administrative act in question.
It
is important to bear in mind (and in this regard we respectfully
differ from the court
a
quo
)
that in those cases in which the validity of an administrative act
may be challenged collaterally a court has no discretion to
allow or
disallow the raising of that defence: the right to challenge the
validity of an administrative act collaterally arises
because the
validity of the administrative act constitutes the essential
prerequisite for the legal force of the action that follows
and
ex
hypothesi
the
subject may not then be precluded from challenging its validity.”
[21]
[37]
Further, the applicants have a right under section 102 of the Systems
Act not to have their municipal
services and electricity supply
terminated in circumstances where a dispute has been declared in
relation to the amount of the
electricity tariff. In terms of section
229 of the Constitution, the municipality may impose rates on
property and surcharges on
fees provided by or on behalf of the
municipality if authorised by the enabling legislations. This power
is regulated by the national
legislation in the form of the Systems
Act. The municipality in terms of chapter 9 may adopt credit control
and debt collection
for the monies due and payable. Notably the
effect of the Kubushi judgement is that the amounts charged by the
respondents are
not due and payable. The applicants argued that in
the established principle of law, subjects are not compelled to
perform under
an invalid administrative act relying on
Gillyfrost
54
(Pty)
Ltd v Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality
[22]
in which the
Oudekraal
principle is approved. The municipality’s insistence on
implementing an invalid administrative act is in itself unlawful
and
contrary to an established principle of law as expressed in
Esorfranki
Pipelines.
[23]
[38]
The applicants in the present application have declared a valid
section 102 dispute regarding
the excessive amount of charges claimed
by the respondents against them. The disputes are clearly articulated
by the applicants
in the letters served on the respondents and they
advance the irreconcilable contentions about the payments demanded by
the respondents
in terms of the Systems Act. Those letters were
served on the respondents before the implementation of the debt
collection measures.
[39]
Lastly, the applicants’ right is based on the undertaking that
the respondents gave, that
they will furnish ample notice and follow
applicable procedures should there be a need to proceed with the
disconnection. The respondents
have not been complying with their own
undertaking and have been arbitrarily and inadequately without
notice, threatening and disconnecting
the applicants’ municipal
services without providing a meaningful opportunity for the
applicants to make representations.
The first respondent as an organ
of state is subject to a higher duty to respect the law and to tread
carefully when dealing with
subjects.
[40]
The applicants have demonstrated clear and undisputed facts that
established that they have prima
facie right and the legal basis as
such. Until NERSA determines the lawful tariff in which the
applicants are to be charged, the
respondents cannot disconnect
electricity from the applicants. Doing so will be infringing the
applicants’ rights not to
have their municipal services and
electricity supply terminated by virtue of the 2019/2020 invalid
tariffs, section 102 disputes
and the undertakings of the respondents
during the exchange of the letters between the parties. In
Eli
& LA Sheepskin Products (Pty) Ltd v Lesedi Local Municipality
and
Others
[24]
the court found that a dispute under section 102(2) of Systems Act
had been established and interdicted the municipality from
terminating the electricity.
Irreparable
harm
[41]
The applicants submit that the termination of municipal services and
the disconnection of the
supply of electricity will cause a
catastrophic and irreparable harm as they rely on an uninterrupted
supply of electricity for
their manufacturing process. The court in
Cape
Gate (Pty) Ltd and Others v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Other
s
held as follows
[25]
“
If
the interruption is proceeded with, the applicants, and potentially
other consumers in similar positions, will shut down. That
will
render their review right moot. Yet Eskom will not be destroyed if
the interruption decision is not implemented. It may have
to wait
before National Treasury devises a recovery plan that will ensure
payment for it, but that is a far lesser fate than awaits
the
applicants. And the applicants have no alternative than that to seek
a restraint on Eskom’s right to interrupt the supply
of
electricity.”
[26]
[42]
On the contrary the respondents will not suffer any harm because the
applicants are paying and
have tendered to pay according to a tariff
which they have calculated approximates the lawful tariff. In the
event where NERSA
determines the tariffs as ordered by the Kubushi
Judgment the respondents will recover any amounts it had previously
under recovered,
if any.
Alternative
remedy
[43]
As far as the alternative remedy goes, the applicants submit that
they do not have an alternative
remedy as they have attempted to
resolve the matter extra judicially between themselves and the
respondents without success.
Counter
application
[44]
The respondents have filed a counter application and the relief which
they seek is as follows:
44.1.
That the first to the fifth applicants are hereby declared vexatious
litigants in terms of section 2(1) (b) of
the Vexatious Proceedings
Act 3 of 1956 (the Vexatious Act).
44.2.
That the second applicant is ordered to pay the respondents the
amount of R69 048 491,77, in respect
of the arrears on
municipal account number: 2[…].
44.3.
That the third applicant is ordered to pay to the respondents the
amount of R5 757 588, 28, in respect
of arrears on
municipal account number: 2[…]
44.4.
That the fourth applicant is ordered to pay to the respondents the
amount of R4 029 392,84, in respect
of the arrears on
municipal account numbers: 5[…] and 5[…] respectively.
44.5.
That the fifth applicant is ordered to pay to the respondents, the
amount of R34 436 957,53, in respect
of the arrears on
municipal account number: 2[…]
44.4.
That the first to the fifth applicants’ application be
dismissed with costs and own client scale including
costs occasioned
by the employment of counsel.
44.4.
That the first to the fifth applicants pay the costs of this counter
application on an attorney and own scale,
including the costs
occasioned by the employment of counsel.
Respondents’
submission
[45]
The
respondents contend that the main application constitutes a form of
unmeritorious litigation because the gravamen of the applicants’
dispute is with NERSA and not the respondents. The present
application is the sixth application which the applicants have
brought
against the respondents in the span of 5 years. The first
application was launched in August 2019
[27]
on an urgent basis seeking an interim interdict against disconnection
of municipal services including electricity. The second one
was the
review application
[28]
launched in 2022 and finalised in November 2023 which is still
sub
judice.
The
third application was launched on extremely urgent basis on the 20
March 2024, and sought an interim interdict against disconnection
of
municipal services including electricity to the second to the fifth
applicants’ properties and was subsequently removed
by the
applicants from the urgent court roll with no order as to costs. The
fourth urgent application sought a similar relief to
the third and it
was launched on 22 March 2024, and it was struck from the urgent roll
for lack of urgency and the costs were reserved
to be determined at
the semi-urgent hearing scheduled for 30 April 2024. The fifth
application also sought similar relief, and
it was heard on the 30
April 2024 and was accordingly refused with no order as to costs. The
current application launched in the
ordinary course for a final
interdict to prevent the disconnection of electricity and municipal
services was launched in November
2023.
[46]
On this basis the respondents argue that the applicants have been
unsuccessful on four separate
occasions against the respondents. This
must be seen in the context where the applicants’ municipal
accounts are presently
in substantial arrears and cumulatively in the
amount exceeding R113 million. The applicants should be declared
vexatious litigants
because they are abusing the court process by
having brought a similar application in 2019 wherein they sought an
interim interdict
against a disconnection of municipal services to
their respective properties pending a review against the methodology
used by NERSA
in approving the 2019/2020 electricity tariffs and by
claiming that they have a dispute for purposes of section 102 of the
Systems
Act, when in actual fact a review against the methodology
used by NERSA in approving the 2019/2020 electricity tariffs falls
outside
of the purview of the Systems Act because NERSA is not a
municipal entity. The applicants have already failed with their
concocted
dispute as is evidenced in the
CFMC v NERSA
2020
case and they are attempting to bring a similar application again.
[46]
Lastly, so the respondents argue, If the applicants are not declared
vexatious litigants once
and for all, they are highly likely to bring
a similar application to the present one every year and again in the
years to come.
The applicants who seek to find a loophole into not
paying the full amount for the electricity which they consume
respectively,
has brought the present application
mala fide
and this should not be condoned as it is a reprehensible behaviour by
the applicants and should therefore show its censure by ordering
the
applicants to jointly and severally pay the costs of this application
on scale C to be paid by the applicants jointly and severally
the one
paying the others to be absolved, including the costs occasioned by
the employment of counsel.
Applicant’s
submissions
[47]
The applicants submit that in the first interim application, the
applicants were unsuccessful
on the basis that the tariffs were still
lawful until set aside, however in the review application the
applicants ultimately succeeded,
and the impugned tariffs were
reviewed and set aside. Currently, the application before the court
has prospectus of success. The
fourth, fifth applications and current
applications were triggered by the unlawful disconnection of the
supply of electricity and
municipal services. Those applications did
not proceed due to an undertaking by the respondents to restore the
services to the
applicants. The second matter which was also
triggered was struck off the roll by Bam J for lack of urgency as
alluded to above.
The said disconnections by the respondents were
unlawful administrative acts because of the Kubushi judgement which
is still unresolved.
The applicants could not be expected to fold
their arms and not protect their rights by launching a collateral
challenge against
the respondents in terms of
Oudekraal.
In
short, all the applications by the applicants were legitimate as to
protect their interest and they cannot be lawfully referred
to as
vexatious litigation.
Vexatious
litigation
[48]
The law regarding vexatious litigation is regulated by section 2(1)
(b) of the Vexatious Proceedings
Act 3 of 1956 which states that:
“
If,
on an application made by any person against whom legal proceedings
have been instituted by any other person or who has reason
to believe
that the institution of legal proceedings against him is contemplated
by any other person, the court is satisfied that
the said person has
persistently and without any reasonable ground instituted legal
proceedings in any court or in any inferior
court, whether against
the same person or against different persons, the court may, after
hearing that person or giving him an
opportunity of being heard,
order that no legal proceedings shall be instituted by him against
any person in any court or any inferior
court without the leave of
the court, or any judge thereof, or that inferior court, as the case
may be, and such leave shall not
be granted unless the court or judge
or the inferior court, as the case may be, is satisfied that the
proceedings are not
an abuse of the process of the court and that
there is prima facie ground for the proceedings.”
[49]
The purpose of this legislation was elucidated in
S
v Sitebe
[29]
where Caney J held as follows: “The purpose of the legislation
is to put a stop to the persistent and ungrounded institution
of
legal proceedings…”
[30]
[50]
Again, in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Dlamini
[31]
Rabie
J quoting Mokgoro J in
Beinash
and Another v Ernst & Young and Others
1999
(2) SA 116 (CC)
at
para 122G-H
held that:
“
The
purpose of this screening mechanism is …to protect, firstly,
the interests of the victims of the vexatious litigant who
have
repeatedly been subjected to the costs, harassment and embarrassment
of unmeritorious litigation, and, secondly, to protect
the public
interest that the functioning of the courts and the administration of
justice proceed unimpeded by the clog of groundless
proceedings. The
provisions of the Act consequently complement the common law to
prevent vexatious litigation and an abuse of process.
”
[32]
[51]
An order envisaged in terms of section 2(1)(b) was confirmed in
Beinash
[33]
above
where the court held that:
“
An
order restricting a litigant is only made in circumstances where the
court is satisfied that the malfeasant has ‘persistently
and
without reasonable grounds instituted legal proceedings.’”
[34]
[52]
The meaning of the word “
persistent
”
in this context was considered by Gorven J in
MEC
for Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs v Maphanga
[35]
“
On
the question whether there have been persistent proceedings, I agree
with the court a quo’s approach in interpreting the
section,
and in this particular instance, the word ‘persistent’.
Due account must be given to the language, context
and purpose of the
legislation. Although constitutionally valid, the legislation must
nonetheless be accorded a narrow construction
as it interferes with a
protected right and restricts the right of access to courts, to avoid
undue limitation of the right. The
word ‘persistent’ has
a variety of meanings which include ‘continuous, constantly
repeated, recurring’
and ‘determined, dogged, steadfast,
tenacious’. The meaning envisaged in the present context must
be a ‘recurring’
or ‘constantly repeated or
continuous’ institution of legal proceedings in a court.”
[36]
[53]
In
State
Attorney v Sithebe
[37]
it
was held that the court will, in the exercise of its powers, consider
the general character and result of the actions instituted.
Even
though the number of occasions may be comparatively small, there may
be exceptional circumstances that justify the making
of the order.
Therefore, will not only consider the persistence of the application
but the sufficient number of cases instituted
without reasonable
grounds
[54]
The courts’ approach to addressing vexatious litigation
includes considering factors such
as frequency, nature, merits and
persistence. This may be found in recurring cases and a pattern of
baseless or frivolous litigation
and a consistent disregard of the
legal process including the rights of others. In this case these
applications do not meet the
requirements of vexatious litigation in
that those applications were launched in a bid to protect the
applicants’ rights.
All the applications mentioned above were
brought on reasonable grounds.
Costs
[55]
The respondents submit that they are entitled to a higher scale of
costs being scale C on the
basis that the applicants are vexatious
litigants, and my finding is that they are not. No cost order,
therefore, arises out of
the counter application.
Conclusion
[56]
Having
considered the facts, the law, and the circumstances under which the
applications by the applicants were brought against
the respondents,
I come to the conclusion that the counter application by the
respondents is not sustainable in law, and
in
my view, having regard to the facts and the circumstances of this
matter, the applicants have satisfied requirements for an interdict.
[55]
In the result I make the following order:
Order
1.
The respondents are interdicted from disconnecting the electricity
supply to the premises of the
second to 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
pertaining to the 2019/2020, 2020/2021,2021/2022, 2022/2023 and
2023/2024 financial years regardless of when and in which financial
year the disputes 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:
2.1.
Should the respondents intend to disconnect the electricity supply to
the premises
of any of the applicants, the respondents are to furnish
the relevant applicant with a notice in which it is recorded that:
2.1.1
The respondents intend to disconnect the electricity supply to the
relevant applicant’s premises in no less
than 30 days from the
date of the letter
2.1.2.
The relevant applicant is entitled to make written representations to
the first respondent within 14 days of the receipt
of the notice as
to why the electricity should not be disconnected.
2.2.
The respondents are precluded from disconnecting the electricity
supply to the premises of the
relevant applicant until the later of
either:
2.2.1.
The elapsing of the 30 -day period described in paragraph 2.1.1 above
without the relevant applicant making written
representations; or
2.2.2.
The completion of the period envisaged in paragraph 2.3 below.
2.3.
Should the relevant applicant take up the opportunity to make written
representations, the respondents
are precluded from disconnecting the
electricity supply to the premises of the relevant applicant without
following the process
set out below:
2.3.1.
The respondents are to consider the representations, the respondents
decide nevertheless to disconnect the electricity
supply to the
premises of the relevant applicant they are to inform the relevant
applicant accordingly and provide written reasons
for such decision.
2.3.2.
When informing the relevant applicant of the decision described in
paragraph 2.3.2. the respondents are to adopt the
following
procedure:
2.3.3.1.
The decision to disconnect the electricity supply notwithstanding
the
relevant applicant’s written representations, including the
reasons for such decision(the “decision notification”)
must be conveyed to the relevant applicant in writing.
2.3.3.2.
The decision notification must record that, should the relevant
applicant contest the right of the respondents to disconnect the
electricity supply to the relevant applicant, the relevant applicant
is entitled to approach a competent Court for urgent relief.
2.3.3.3.
The decision notification must record that, should the relevant
applicant choose to challenge the disconnection decision as envisaged
by paragraph 2.3.3.2 above, the electricity supply will not
be
disconnected pending the finalisation of the litigation in question,
subject to the conditions that:
2.3.3.3.1.
The relevant applicant must inform the respondent of its decision to
challenge
the lawfulness of the proposed disconnection within 3 days
of receipt of the decision notification.
2.3.3.3.2.
The relevant applicant launches its urgent application within 7 days
of informing
the respondent of its intention to do so as envisaged by
paragraph 2.3.3.3.1 above.
3.
The counter application falls to be dismissed with costs.
4.
The respondents are ordered to pay the applicants’ costs on
attorney own-
client scale which will include the costs of employing
two counsel subject to Scale C.
SELBY BAQWA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants
Matthew Chaskalson SC,
Adv
Sarah Pudifin-Jones
Instructed
by MC Botha Inc
For
the Respondents
Adv M Coovadia
Instructed
by
Patel
Inc Attorneys
Date
of hearing:
25 July 2024
Date
of Judgment
:
October 2024
[1]
Notice
of Motion 015-016.
[2]
[2017]
3 All 663 (GP).
[3]
[2022]
ZAGPPHC 927.
[4]
2007(5)
SA 391 (SCA).
[5]
2005
(4) SA 212 (SCA).
[6]
[2004]
3 All SA 1(SCA).
[7]
2020
JDR 0119 (GP) (unreported).
[8]
2012
(4) SA 169 (SCA).
[9]
See
Body
Corporate Croftdene
at
para 22 to 23.
[10]
See
CFMC
v NERSA
2020 above.
[11]
See
CFMC
v NERSA
above.
[12]
Id at para 22.
[13]
Id at para 23.
[14]
See
Oudekraal
above.
[15]
Id at para 32.
[16]
[2022]
ZAGPPHC 778.
[17]
2005
(1) SA 530 (CC).
[18]
2012
2 SA 387
(SCA).
[19]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo,
1914
AD 221
at
p. 227
, Eriksen
Motors (Welkom) Ltd v Protea Motors Warrenton and Another
1973(3)
SA 685 (A)
Knox
D Arcy Ltd v Jamison and Other
1996(4)
SA 348 (A) at 361). (i)A prima facie right, even if it is subject to
some doubt;(ii) A well-grounded apprehension of irreparable
harm if
the interim relief is not granted;(iii) The balance of
convenience favours the granting of interim relief; and(iv) The
applicant has no alternative remedy
[20]
See
Oudekraal
above.
[21]
Id at para 35 and 36.
[22]
[2015]
All SA 58 (ECP).
[23]
2023 (2) SA 31 (CC).
[24]
[2015]
ZAGPPC 680.
[25]
[2019] 1 All SA 141 (GJ).
[26]
Id
para 154.
[27]
See
CFMC
v NERSA
2020
above.
[28]
See
Kubushi Judgment above.
[29]
1965
(2) SA 908
(N).
[30]
Id p911.
[31]
[2007] ZAGPHC 241
;
2008
(2) SA 262
(T
)
.
[32]
Id at para 23.
[33]
1999
(2) SA 116 (CC).
[34]
Id para 18.
[35]
2018
(3) SA 246 (KZN).
[36]
Id at para 20.
[37]
1961
(2) SA 159
(N) at p163.
sino noindex
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