Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 58South Africa
Sacramento and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (006225/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 58 (3 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 February 2023
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPPHC 58
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Sacramento and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (006225/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 58 (3 February 2023)
Sacramento and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (006225/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 58 (3 February 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2023_58.html
sino date 3 February 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:006225/2023
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES/NO
03/02/2023
In
the matter between:
BEETHOVEN
DE JESUS BARROS DO SACRAMENTO
1
st
Applicant
FABIANA
BARRETO DOS SANTOS SACRAMENTO
2
nd
Applicant
And
THE
CITY OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOJAPELO
AJ
1.
The applicants who are property owners at
Silver Woods Country Estate in Pretoria had their electricity supply
disconnected by the
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality, the
respondent in this matter. The applicants have brought this urgent
application for
an order that the electricity supply to their
property be restored and further that the City be interdicted and
restrained from
terminating and/or in anyway interfering with the
electricity supply to their property pending the finalisation of a
dispute. The
applicants further request punitive costs against the
City on the scale as between attorney and own client.
2.
The applicants are husband and wife and are
registered owners of the disputed property known as Erf [....],
measuring 1055m
2
,
under Deed of Transfer Number T [....] which is situated at Silver
Woods Country Estate in Pretoria. The property was registered
in
favour of the applicants on 15 October 2021, and they reside with
their three (3) minor children.
3.
It is the applicants’ case that they
have been residing in the property since they have acquired it and
have never received
any accounts for the services from the respondent
whatsoever. It is the applicants’ case that they rely on a
prepaid electricity
payment of which is up to date. The applicants
state that they do not owe the City any amount as their accounts have
been paid
in full. However, there are no accounts from the City in
the name of the applicants that has been attached to the papers. From
the reading of the papers, it does not appear that the applicants
have an existing services account with the City.
4.
The first applicant states that
;
“The amount that I allegedly owe to the respondent under
account No. [....] is subject to a dispute whereby the outstanding
accounts were not received by me and were addressed to the previous
owner of the property, Mr. PA Terblanche, and not to myself
nor the
second applicant. I confirm that to date, such dispute has not been
resolved”
. According to the Deed
of Transfer that has been attached to the papers, Mr. Terblanche is
the previous owner of the applicants’
property.
5.
The applicants are Brazilians citizens.
They allege that they speak Portuguese, and struggle with English and
further that they
are not familiar with the processes in the country.
They state that during the December 2022 holidays they left for
Brazil on 08
December 2022 and returned to South Africa on 14 January
2023. On their return on 14 January 2023, it came to their attention
that
the City has during their absence delivered pre-termination and
termination notices to their property. The said notices are:
5.1
A pre-termination notice dated 14 December
2022 claiming the amount of R99 132-76.
5.2
Another pre-termination notice dated 09
January 2023 claiming an amount of R107 272-99.
5.3
A disconnection notice dated 11 January
2023.
6.
Although the said notices were apparently
served at the applicants’ premises, they were addressed to Mr.
PA Terblanche. At
the time those notices were served, the applicants
were not around having traveled to Brazil for the December holidays.
As stated
hereinabove Mr. Terblanche is the previous owner of the
property. The said notices were addressed to the property owned by
the
applicants, although the addressee was Mr. Terblanche. The
pre-termination notices read thus:
“
It
has come to my attention that your municipal services and/or rates
and taxes account was not paid by the due date. This is a
final
demand for payment for outstanding balance at the Financial Services
Department. In the case of rates and taxes account,
according to
section 28(1) of the Municipal Property Rates Act 2004 (Act 6 of 2004
MPRA) the Municipality may recover the amount
in whole or in part
from the tenant or occupier of the property, despite any contractual
obligation to the contrary on behalf of
the tenant or the occupier.
Please react to this
demand within (14) fourteen days by either paying at the
MUNICIPAL
CASHIERS
or by contacting the Financial Services Department to
discuss the matter.
If you fail to comply
with the above, the City of Tshwane Municipality will regrettably be
obliged to terminate/lower the level
of services to your premises and
to debit the relevant charges against your account.”
7.
There was no reaction by the applicants to
these notices as they state that during that period, they were not in
the country but
in Brazil. The City issued another notice dated 09
January 2023 with a similar warning, but the amount owed has now
increased to
R107 272-99. There was no reaction to the second
pre-termination notice either. The third notice was a disconnection
notice
to terminate the electricity supply services to the premises,
and to further invite the submission of proof of payment for the
services to be re-connected. All the three notices were served on the
premises when the applicants were not in the country. The
applicants
only returned on 14
January
2023 and by that time the electricity supply was already
disconnected.
8.
The applicants then on 23 January 2023
instructed their attorneys who on their behalf wrote a letter of
demand to the Municipality.
In the said letter the attorneys for the
applicants referred to the account number as being that of Mr.
Terblanche. The applicants
are referred in that letter as the owners
of the property. The termination notices were addressed to Mr.
Terblanche the previous
owner. The applicants did not have any
account in their name to give to their attorney who was now assisting
them.
9.
It does appear that during the transferring
of the property from Mr. Terblanche into the names of the applicants
the City did not
transfer the services account of the property,
including the electricity account from the names of the previous
owner into those
of the applicants. The transferring attorneys did
give a notice to the City to change the names of the account holders
to reflect
the applicants’ details as they are the new owners.
The said notice from the transferring attorney is dated 21 October
2021.
It is alleged that the said letter was delivered by hand to the
City. Despite such notice it does not appear that the City opened
a
services account in the name of the applicants. They have been
staying on the said property having obtained transfer during October
2021 and have to date not received an account in their own name. The
allegations that their accounts with the City are up to date
cannot
be supported by any attachments. There is simply no account in the
name of the applicants with the City that was attached
to the papers.
10.
This fact is highlighted by the applicants’
attorneys in their letter of demand in which they state that:
“
10.
It seems clear that these notices relate to an indebtedness of
Terblanche, although it is not clear how that could
have come about,
given that the transfer of ownership would have required Tshwane to
have issued a clearing certificate for such
transfer and for
Terblanche’s account to have been paid up and three months in
advance.
11.
We have established from the transferring attorneys that they did
give notice of transfer and change of ownership
to the City of
Tshwane, by hand on 21 October 2021.
12.
Our clients have been making payment to the City of Tshwane since
taking ownership, these payments relates
to electricity consumed at
the property in respect of the installed prepaid meters. Our clients
made payments in respect of the
prepaid meter charges without fail.
13.
Our clients never received any other accounts from the City of
Tshwane and being foreigners, without English
or any other South
African language as their first languages, they do not precisely
understand the Tshwane system municipal systems.
14.
Our clients are not unwilling to pay the accounts, but they do need
to receive accounts, before they can be
expected to make payment.
15.
You have failed and/or neglected and/or refused to provide our
clients with substantiated and detailed accounts
as to what they
allegedly owe you in municipal charges prior to disconnecting the
electricity supply.
16.
To be clear, our clients do not understand what the basis is for the
disconnection of their electricity supply,
because, to their minds
they have been making their electricity payments.
17.
It would seem that the electricity supply has been disconnected on
account of some other indebtedness to yourselves,
“municipal
services or rates and taxes”, but not electricity, and no
accounts have been received from you in regards
thereto.
18.
You
appear to have failed and/or neglected to open an account for clients
upon transfer of the property into their names. Now the
electricity
supply has been terminated upon the strength of notices sent to the
previous owner, demanding payment and pre-termination
notices, but
once again, no accounts”
.
11.
The applicants’ letter of demand
concludes by demanding that the City restore electricity, failing
which an urgent application
will be brought to the High Court. This
is such an urgent application.
12.
The applicants’ case is based on the
principles of spoliation as it is alleged on behalf of the applicant
that they were in
an uninterrupted supply of electricity from the
respondent to the property and the interference by the respondent
with the applicants’
access to electricity is akin to
deprivation of possession of property. It is not necessary to deal
with the restoration of electricity
supply based on what transpired
during the hearing.
13.
The City filed a notice to oppose but did
not file any answering papers. Strangely enough, the City challenged
the attorneys, Manly
Inc’s authority to represent the
applicants by filing a notice in terms of Rule 7(1) in which it was
categorically stated
that; “…
the
respondent hereby disputes the authority of the applicants’
attorneys of record to act on behalf of the applicants and
therefore
request the applicants’ attorneys to provide a written power of
attorney as proof of authority to act same”
.
This is very odd as there is no evidence from the papers that suggest
that the applicants’ attorneys do not have proper
mandate to
represent the applicants. It is extremely odd for a state institution
to challenge the authority of an attorney who
is representing
ordinary applicants without any foundation for such. These are
ordinary applicants who are litigating in their
personal capacity and
trying to exert their rights in Court against the Municipality in the
protection of their households. This
is not a prudent utilization of
the rules of Court. This effort should have been properly utilized to
file an answering affidavit.
Unfortunately that was not done.
14.
However, at the hearing of the matter, the
City was represented by Counsel who informed the Court that the
disputed amount has been
paid by the applicants and that the
electricity has been restored to the premises. The applicants’
Counsel, however, persisted
with the application for an interdict as
she stated that the money was paid under protest because the
applicants have never received
any accounts from the Municipality.
Counsel for the City countered that by submitting that according to
his instructions and what
he has observed is that applicants have an
account with the City in their own name and the said account bears
the same account
number as the account number that appeared on the
above mentioned termination notices which were addressed to Mr.
Terblanche. There
is according to the City’s Counsel one
account number using the particulars of the applicants and also of
the previous owner
Mr. Terblanche. That explains the applicants
predicament and complaint that they have never received any account
from the Municipality.
15.
It was submitted on behalf of the
applicants that the said payment was made under protest in order to
have the electricity connection
to the premises restored. The amount
paid can not be justified by reference to any specific account that
the City has sent to the
applicants as there is up to the date of the
argument of this matter, according to the applicants’ Counsel,
no account ever
received by the applicants. On the other hand, it
cannot be denied by the applicants’ Counsel that the applicants
continued
to receive services from the City for all the months that
they have been the owners of this disputed premises. Those services
surely
must be paid for. The applicants’ predicament is that
they have not received any accounts for these services from the City.
16.
Section 95 of the Municipal Systems Act 32
of 2000 provide for customer care and management by the Municipality.
It provides that:
“
In
relation to the levying of rates and other taxes by a municipality
and the charging of fees for municipal services, a municipality
must,
within its financial and administrative capacity-
(a) establish a sound
customer management system that aims to create a positive and
reciprocal relationship between persons liable
for these payments and
the municipality, and where applicable, a service provider,
(b) establish
mechanisms for users of services and ratepayers to give feedback to
the municipality or other service provider regarding
the quality of
the services and the performance of the service provider;
(c)
take reasonable
steps to ensure that users of services are informed of the costs
involved in service provision, the reasons for
the payment of service
fees, and the manner in which monies raised from the service are
utilised;
(d)
where the
consumption of services has to be measured, take reasonable steps to
ensure that the consumption by individual users of
services is
measured through accurate and verifiable metering systems;
(e)
ensure that
persons liable for payments, receive regular and accurate accounts
that indicate the basis for calculating the amounts
due;
(f) provide accessible
mechanisms for those persons to query or verify accounts and metered
consumption, and appeal procedures which
allow such persons to
receive prompt redress for inaccurate accounts;
(g) provide accessible
mechanisms for dealing with complaints from such persons, together
with prompt replies and corrective action
by the municipality;
(h) provide mechanisms
to monitor the response time and efficiency in complying with
paragraph (g); and
(i) provide accessible
pay points and other mechanisms for settling accounts or for making
pre-payments for services.
17.
It is quite clear that the provisions of
section 95 of the Municipal Systems Act obligates the Municipality to
provide the applicants
with regular and accurate accounts that
indicate the basis for calculating the amounts due. That has not been
complied with in
this particular matter as the applicants have to
date not yet received an account in their name from the Municipality.
There is
no account received by the applicants in relation to the
monies that the applicants have paid in protest to have their
electricity
supply restored.
18.
The applicants are entitled to know the
exact amount that they are liable for. In that regard the applicants
are entitled to the
full accounts of the amounts that it is alleged
they owe to the City which amounts should be verified against the
amounts already
paid.
19.
If the applicants are not receiving any
accounts from the City, the applicants will not be able to pay for
the services that they
receive from the City. They are therefore at
the risk of having their services discontinued or disconnected once
again. The risk
is real as it is evidenced by the abovementioned
disconnection of the electricity supply to the applicant’s
premises.
20.
Of course, the Municipality is entitled to
enforce payment for the services received. In terms of section
102(1)(c) of the Municipal
System Act, the Municipality is entitled
to implement any of the debt collection and credit control measures
in relation to any
arrears on any of the accounts of persons
utilizing their services. Such credit control measure will include
the disconnection
of electricity supply as it has been evidenced in
this matter. However, if there is a dispute, the Municipality may not
implement
the credit control measures as section 102(2) of the
Municipal System Act provides that; “
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”
.
The debt collection and credit control measures are referred to in
subsection 1.
21.
There is no definition of the “dispute”
in the Municipal Systems Act. It has been held that
section
102(2) of the Systems Act requires that the dispute must relate to a
'specific amount' claimed by the municipality.
(Body
Corporate Croftdene Mall v Ethekwini Municipality 2012(4) SA 169
SCA).
22.
The Court in the matter of
Body Corporate
Croftdene Mall (supra)
went on to
state that
; Whether a dispute has been properly raised must
be a factual enquiry requiring determination on a case-by-case basis.
23.
In this matter the applicants have paid an
amount for the restoration of electricity to their house without
receiving an account.
It is quite clear that what is before Court and
the Municipality is a dispute by the applicants who have now paid for
municipal
services but they still do not have an account from the
Municipality in their own names. The dispute pertain to whether the
amount
that has been paid is the accurate amount that is due and
payable and further the statutory obligation of the City to ensure
that
the applicants receive regular and accurate accounts. As stated
herenabove, the City did not file any answering affidavit. The only
version before Court is that of the applicants.
24.
Under the circumstances the City should be
given an opportunity to comply with its obligation in terms of
section 95 of the Municipal
Systems Act of providing a detailed and
accurate accounts to the applicants. And to resolve whether the
amount that was demanded
from the applicants which was eventually
paid is the accurate amount owed to the City. And going forward to
ensure that the applicants
will receive accounts in their own names
at the addresses that they have given to the City.
25.
It is my view that until such time that
this dispute is resolved, the City should not implement its debt
collection or credit control
measures against the applicants. This
much is dictated by the provisions of section 102(2) of the Municipal
Systems Act. I am therefore
satisfied that the applicants are
entitled to an interdict along the terms provided for in section
102(2) of the Municipal Systems
Act. In this matter the City is not
prejudiced as it has received what it regards to be a full settlement
of the amounts due to
the City by the applicants, although the
applicants state that the said amount were paid in protest.
26.
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The non-compliance with the Uniform Rules
of the Court are herewith condoned in terms of Rule 6(12) and this
matter is dealt with
as a matter of urgency.
2.
The respondent is ordered to:
2.1
Furnish the applicants with a detailed and
accurate accounts of municipal services from 15 October 2021,
alternatively, from the
date which the applicants became owners of
the disputed property up to date.
2.2
Attend to the reconciliation of the
accounts as reflected in subparagraph 2.1 hereinabove against the
payment that has already been
made by the applicants.
2.3
Ensure that going forward the applicants
are provided with regular and accurate accounts that indicate the
rate of the consumption
of the services in terms of the applicable
legislation.
3.
That pending compliance with paragraph 2
hereinabove, the respondent is interdicted from implementing any
credit control measures,
which include the termination of electricity
supply to the applicants premises.
4.
The above interdict shall automatically
lapse upon the compliance with the provisions of paragraph 2
hereinabove.
5.
The respondent to pay the costs of this
application.
MM
MOJAPELO AJ
ACTING
JUDGE
HIGH
COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS
ADVOCATE E WARD
CLUB ADVOCATE CHAMBERS
ATTORNEY
FOR THE APPLICANT
MANLEY MANLEY INC
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT
ADVOCATE TC KWINDA
ATTORNEYS
FOR THE RESPONDENT
JL
RAPHIRI ATTORNEYS INC
PRETORIA
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
SACS (Louis Trichardt) (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (40420/2020 ; 17064/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 710 (14 July 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 710High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Mokgobi (13023/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 22 (20 January 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 22High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
A.K.S obo O.K.S and Another v Minister of Police [2023] ZAGPPHC 424; 27010/2018 (5 June 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 424High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Sebueng (18628/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1167 (15 September 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1167High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Mensah (25149/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 694 (17 August 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 694High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)98% similar