Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 132South Africa
Eskom Holdings SOC Limited v Nqorile CC and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 132; 47122/2021 (28 February 2023)
Headnotes
judgment on 1 December 2021. The application is opposed by both defendants.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Eskom Holdings SOC Limited v Nqorile CC and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 132; 47122/2021 (28 February 2023)
Eskom Holdings SOC Limited v Nqorile CC and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 132; 47122/2021 (28 February 2023)
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sino date 28 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 47122/2021
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED
28
February 2023
In
the matter between:
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC
LIMITED
Plaintiff
And
NQORILE
CC
First Defendant
MOKGOSI
SPIHIWE MALEPANE MAKHANYE PULE
Second Defendant
This
judgment is issued by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is
submitted electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by email. The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of
this matter on CaseLines by the Judge or her Secretary. The
date of
this judgment is deemed to be
28 February
2023.
JUDGMENT
COLLIS
J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
On 17 September 2021,
[1]
the
plaintiff issued summons against the first and second defendants,
which summons was served on the defendants on 12 July 2021.
2. Upon service of the
summons, the defendants entered an appearance to defend on 1 October
2021 and proceeded to file their plea
on 11 November 2021. Thereafter
the plaintiff applied for summary judgment on 1 December 2021. The
application is opposed by both
defendants.
BACKGROUND
3.
Between the parties, the dispute arises from an agreement concluded
between the first defendant and the plaintiff for the supply
of
electricity to the first defendant’s property, located at Stand
20 Shetlands, Street, Heathcliff Manor. Both the defendants
consumed
electricity supplied to it by the plaintiff.
4. It is common cause
amongst them that the supply of electricity is regulated in terms of
Eskom’s Standard Conditions of
Supply for Small Suppliers with
conventional metering.
5. In terms of the
Standard Conditions of supply the express material terms were as
follows:
5.1
Accounts for all charges payable by the First
Defendant shall be sent to the First Defendant as soon as possible
after the end of
each month and each account shall be due and payable
on the date the account is received by the First Defendant, which
date for
the purposes of electricity supply agreement, shall be
deemed to be not later than 7 (seven) days from the date of the
account;
5.2 Should payment not be
received within a period of twenty-three (23) days from the date the
account is deemed to have become
due and payable in terms of the
abovementioned clause, the Plaintiff may discontinue the supply to
the First Defendant and terminate
the electricity supply agreement
after having given the First Defendant fourteen (14) days written
notice. The amount outstanding
shall bear interest compounded monthly
from the date the account is deemed to have become due and payable in
terms of sub-clause
above to the due date of payment, at a rate per
annum equal to the prevailing prime overdraft rate charged by First
National Bank
of Southern Africa Limited plus 5% (five per centum);
5.3 Should a customer
dispute an account, it shall not be entitled to reduce or set-off its
debt or defer payment thereof beyond
the period of grace allowed for
in the abovementioned sub-clause, but such account shall as soon as
possible thereafter be adjusted
if necessary;
5.4 Should a customer be
incorrectly charged for any amount payable in terms of the
electricity supply agreement as a result of
human error, the
applicant shall inform the respondent of the correct amount/s payable
and the reasons thereof;
5.5 In the case of a
customer being over charged and having paid such over charged amount,
the Plaintiff shall as soon as practicable
either credit the
customer’s electricity account or reimburse the customer with
the total amount over charged. The said amount
shall include
interest, compounded monthly from the date the customer has paid the
over charged amount up to the date Eskom has
credited the customer’s
electricity account or has repaid the customer, as the case may be,
at a rate equal to the prevailing
prime overdraft rate charged by
First National Bank of Southern Africa Limited;
5.6 In the event that the
customer is being undercharged, the applicant shall debit the
customer’s electricity account with
the total amount under
charged and such amount shall be payable by the customer on such
terms as may be agreed to by the applicant,
subject to the proviso
that the customer may pay the amount over a period commemorative of
the amount undercharged, but such credit
shall be limited to a period
of a maximum of six (6) months. The amount outstanding shall bear
interest, compounded monthly, from
the date the customer’s
account is being debited in terms of this clause to date of payment,
at a rate per annum equal to
the prevailing prime overdraft rate
charged by First National Bank of Southern Africa Limited;
5.7 A certificate under
the signature of a duly authorised employee of Eskom setting out the
amount due and payable by the customer
at any time in terms of the
electricity supply agreement, shall be sufficient and conclusive
proof, subject to manifest arrear
of the customer’s debt for
the purposes of insolvency and legal proceedings and obtaining of
provisional sentence; and
5.8
Should a customer commit any breach of the electricity supply
agreement and the applicant resorts to litigation, the customer
shall
be responsible for all costs and expenses incurred by Eskom as a
result of such litigation including attorney.
[2]
DEFENDANTS PLEADED CASE
6.
It is the defendants pleaded case
[3]
that the plaintiff failed to send accounts for charges/invoices each
month as per the standard conditions of supply albeit that
the second
defendant continuously made enquiries around the invoices.
7.
Secondly, that the plaintiff failed to attend the premises in
question in order to check the metering. It is for this reason
that
the defendants alleges that the certificate issued by the plaintiff
to the defendants during 2020, is based on estimates and
not actual
electricity consumed at the residence.
[4]
Pursuant to this demand made by the plaintiff as per the certificate
of balance furnished to the defendants, the second defendant
resorted
to paying the amount of R4500.00 and R3000.00 on 24 February 2017 and
03 May 2017 without ever receiving any invoices
from the
plaintiff.
[5]
8.
It is
the
defendants further pleaded case that they do not dispute their
obligations for the consumption of electricity and the consequent
liability towards the plaintiff. As per the Particulars of Claim, the
plaintiff sets out that it has complied with their obligations
in
terms of the standard conditions and that it is the defendants who
have breached their obligations in terms of the said conditions.
In
response hereto the defendants baldly aver that it is the plaintiff
who have breached the standard conditions. To this end,
the
defendants further aver that they entered into a Deferred Payment
Agreement with the plaintiffs, in terms of which agreement
the
outstanding amount is in the sum of R 473 767.99.
[6]
9.
In their plea, the defendants averred that, at the time of delivering
their plea, they had made payment in excess of R 162 000.00.
[7]
To this end, they attached annexure “
IN
2
”
reflecting the said payments. The annexure shows the total payments
in the sum of R 162 927.00 had been made, without
reflecting the
entire period over which the payments were made.
AFFIDAVIT RESISTING
SUMMARY JUDGMENT
.
10.
In the affidavit opposing summary judgment, the defendants as
mentioned again admitted the standard conditions, as well as the
plaintiff’s tax invoice self-contained terms and conditions.
[8]
There is no dispute on the defendant’s contractual obligations
and liabilities herein.
11.
In opposing the summary judgment application, the defendants firstly
seek to oppose the summary judgment application on the
determination
of the merits as alleged in the filed affidavits and secondly, the
defendants seek to obtain leave from the Court
to defend the main
action,
in
lieu
of them furnishing security to the satisfaction of the Court. The
respondents rely on both grounds.
[9]
LEGAL PRINCIPLES
APPLICABLE IN SUMMARY JUDGEMENT APPLICATIONS
12.
In
applications for summary judgments the decisions of Maharaj v
Barclays National Bank Ltd
[10]
,
Joob Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint
Venture
[11]
and Breitenbach v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
[12]
remain of application.
13.
In Maharaj v Barclays National Bank Ltd the Supreme Court of Appeal
held that:
[13]
“
One
of the ways in which a defendant may successfully oppose a claim for
summary judgment is by satisfying the Court by affidavit
that he has
a bona fide defence to the claim. Where the defence is based upon
facts, in the sense that material facts alleged by
the plaintiff in
his summons, or combined summons, are disputed or new facts are
alleged constituting a defence, the Court does
not attempt to decide
these issues or to determine whether or not there is a balance of
probabilities in favour of the one party
or the other. All that the
Court enquires into is: (a) whether the defendant has “fully”
disclosed the nature and grounds
of his defence and the material
facts upon which it is founded, and (b) whether on the facts so
disclosed the defendant appears
to have, as to either the whole or
part of the claim, a defence which is both bona fide and good in law.
If satisfied on these
matters the Court must refuse summary judgment,
either wholly or in part, as the case may be.”
14.
In the matter of Tumileng Trading CC v National Security and Fire
(Pty) Ltd
[14]
,
the Western Cape Division of the High Court had occasion to consider
these changes. In its judgment, the Court admonished the
counsel
appearing in the matter for not having considered the implications of
the amendments on the summary judgment procedure.
[15]
15.
In the above matter the Court observed that subrule 32(3) which
regulates what is required from a defendant in its opposing
affidavit, has been left substantively unaltered in the overhauled
summary judgment procedure. The Court further held that a defendant
is not required to show that the defence is likely to prevail but
that it has a legally cognisable defence on the face of it and
that
the defence is genuine or bona fide.
[16]
16.
In
Joob
Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla Zek Joint Venture
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that
[17]
:
“
In
the Maharaj case at 425G-426E, Corbett JA, was keen to ensure first,
an examination of whether there has been sufficient disclosure
by a
defendant of the nature and grounds of his defence and the facts upon
which it is founded. The second consideration is that
the defence so
disclosed must be both bona fide and good in law. A court which is
satisfied that this threshold has been crossed
is then bound to
refuse summary judgment. Corbett JA also warned against requiring of
a defendant the precision apposite to pleadings.
However, the learned
judge was equally astute to ensure that recalcitrant debtors pay what
is due to a creditor.”
17.
In the decision Chris Hani District Municipality v
HJT Transport Mining Civils (Pty) Limited the Court to be the
following:
“
Under
the old rule, it was the defendant who was required to elaborately
set out his defence in such manner that the nature of the
defence is
fully disclosed and the facts underpinning such a defence point to
the existence of a defence. Under the new rule, the
plaintiff for his
part is required, since the summary judgment is filed after the
defendant has filed a plea, to deal with the
allegations made in the
plea in his own affidavit, to which the defendant must answer.What is
apparent from the new rules is that
the defendant must file a plea
first so that if summary judgment is sought, any affidavit filed by
the defendant to resist the
summary judgment is consistent with the
defence set out in his plea. In my view this gives the summary
judgment remedy its true
value from its original and classical
inception, as a remedy against a defenceless defendant who files a
spurious defence just
so that the proceedings are delayed at the
expense of a plaintiff with a meritorious claim. What is then
calledfor, in my view,
at a minimum, is the consistency between the
plea where the defendant alleges his defence and affidavit filed on
the basis of which
the latter resists summary judgment. A defendant
who pleads a particular defence in his plea and alleges vastly
different facts
in his affidavit filed to resist summary judgment can
hardly be said, in the absence of a plausible explanation, to have a
bona
defence. What is more, were such tendency were to be
countenanced, summary judgment would lose its true value and
purpose.”
18. It is against these
principles that the matter at hand will be considered and in this
regard the following is of relevance:
18.1
It is common cause that the plaintiff
has
been supplying electricity to the property, in accordance with the
applicants Standard Conditions of Supply for Small Suppliers
with
conventional metering.
18.2
Further that the plaintiffs’ tax
invoices/accounts to customers are printed back-to-back with
self-contained terms and conditions.
The
material express conditions contained in the invoices/statements
furnished provide,
inter alia,
as follows:
18.2.1
That Electricity services are supplied and
this bill is rendered in terms of Eskom’s conditions of
contract as amended from
time to time;
18.2.2
Due date means the date the electricity is
deemed to be received by the customer as provided for in the
electricity supply agreement;
18.2.3
Final payment date means the date by when
the customers payment of the full invoice account must be reflected
in Eskom’s bank
account, failing which interest will be
charged, from the due date to the date of payment on the outstanding
amount;
18.2.4
Estimated readings will be automatically
adjusted after the next actual meter reading;
18.2.5
Payment may not be deferred;
18.2.6
Interest is payable on all overdue
accounts;
18.2.7
Eskom is entitled to disconnect supply for
non-payment;
18.2.8
In the event of a disconnection and in
addition to the repayment of all outstanding amounts due, a
disconnection visit fee and deposit
will become payable; and
18.2.9
The customer is legally liable for all
charges reflected on the account.
19. As mentioned it is
the defendants pleaded case that they entered into a Deferred Payment
Agreement with the plaintiff in respect
of which the total amount due
at the time was an amount of R473 769.99 and in reduction of
this amount that it has paid an
amount of just over R 162 000.
Thus, on its own version at the time of concluding the Deferred
Payment Agreement it owed the
plaintiff R473 769.99 and from the
proof provided by it, it is evident that intermittent payments have
been made by the defendants
in terms of this Deferred Payment
Agreement and that not all which was due when the agreement was
entered has been paid. There
as a result remains a shortfall.
20. The defendants in
their plea denied the Standard Conditions of Supply on the basis of
failure to have received monthly statements,
whereas in the affidavit
resisting summary judgment, it admitted the Standard Conditions of
Supply. This is inconsistent with the
defence set out in their plea.
21. To the matter at hand
as I see it, it is rather the defendants defence that as a result of
the failure on the part of the plaintiff
to have provided it with
monthly statements pursuant of actual readings reflecting its
consumptions, it has been unable to establish
the exact payments due
to the plaintiff and this resulted in them either making short
payments on their part or at times making
no payments.
22. This stance adopted
by the defendants however flies in the face of the Standard
Conditions agreed upon when the agreement was
concluded and it will
result in establishments such as the plaintiff being financially
crippled simply because consumers refrain
from paying after usage
because no invoices or statements have been rendered or where it has
been rendered it is being challenged.
23. This stance adopted
by the defendants to my mind, does not disclose the nature and the
grounds of its defence and the circumstances
upon which it is founded
in respect of which summary judgment can be refused. It thus follows
that judgment must follow in favour
of the plaintiff.
COSTS
24. As far as the scale
of costs to be awarded in the present proceedings, it should be
mentioned that a court always has a discretion
in awarding the
appropriate costs.
25. Considerations which
will inform the courts decisions will be factors such as to whether
the costs sought has been pleaded for
in the summons.
26.
In the present instance the plaintiff has pleaded for costs on an
attorney and client scale to be awarded as this was agreed
to between
the parties in the event of litigation ensuing.
[18]
27. The plaintiff being
the successful party in these proceedings, I could find no basis of
depriving the plaintiff of such costs.
ORDER:
28. In the result the
following order is made:
28.1 Summary judgment is
entered in favour of the Plaintiff against the Defendants for payment
of the amount of
R484,978.51 (FOUR HUNDRED AND EIGHT FOUR THOUSAND
NINE HUNDRED AND SEVENTY EIGHT RAND AND FIFTY ONE CENTS)
at a
prime overdraft rate plus 5% per annum as charged by First National
Bank;
28.2 Interest on the
prime overdraft rate plus 5% per annum as charged by First National
Bank of South Africa from 29 March 2021
until date of payment; and
28.3 Costs of the suit as
between Attorney and Client scale.
COLLIS
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
:
Counsel
for the Plaintiff: Adv. M. MAKGATO
Attorney
for the Defendant: DYASON ATTORNEYS
Counsel
for the Defendants: Adv. C.I MOKWENA
Attorney
for the Defendants: PULE INCORPORATED
Date
of Hearing: 19 JULY 2022
Date
of Judgment: 28 FEBRUARY 2023
[1]
Caselines
002-1.
[2]
Particulars
of Claim 002-7 para 9
[3]
Defendants’ Plea para 12 005-5.
[4]
First
and Second Defendants Plea.
[5]
Defendants’ Plea para 12.3 005-5
[6]
Annexure
N2; Caselines 009-13.
[7]
Defendants’
Plea para 17.
[8]
Caselines 009-7 para
27
– 29.
[9]
Caselines 009-6 para 24.
[10]
1976
(1) SA 418 (A).
[11]
2009
(5) SA 1 (SCA).
[12]
1976
(2) SA 226 (T).
[13]
See
fn 10 above at 425G – 426E.
[14]
2020
(6) SA 624 (WCC).
[15]
Id
at para 3.
[16]
See
fn 21 above at para 13.
[17]
See
fn 11 above at para 32.
[18]
Particulars of Claim para 9.23 Caselines 002-10.
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