Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 140South Africa
Robarts Flagship Trust v Drakenstein Municipality (A08/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 140 (27 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Robarts Flagship Trust v Drakenstein Municipality (A08/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 140 (27 May 2024)
Robarts Flagship Trust v Drakenstein Municipality (A08/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 140 (27 May 2024)
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sino date 27 May 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
Case
No.:
A08/2024
In the matter between:
ROBARTS
FLAGSHIP TRUST
Appellant
v
DRAKENSTEIN
MUNICIPALITY
Respondent
Coram
:
Salie,
J et Kusevitsky, J
Date of
Hearing
:
24 May
2024
Written Judgment
delivered
:
27 May
2024
Attorney for
Appellant
:
NGH
Attorneys
Ref: Mr N G Haupt
Counsel for
Respondent
:
Adv. M
Roman
Attorney for
Respondent
:
Marlo
Laubscher Attorneys
Ref:
Mr M Laubscher
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 27 MAY 2024
SALIE, J:
1]
This is an appeal against an order by the Paarl Magistrate’s
Court on 1
December 2023 which granted judgment against the appellant
for payment of prepaid meter electricity charges provided by the
municipality
and levied to commercial property situate at 348A Main
Road, Paarl.
2]
The factual background which forms the matrix of this appeal is
briefly summarized
as follows:
2.1]
The appellant is the registered owner of Erf 3[…], Paarl,
represented by the trustee,
Mr. Robarts. (“Robarts”).
The property is divided into six units which are rented out to
different tenants.
A prepaid electrical meter was installed in
one of the shops on the property in 2009 which accrued arrear charges
from 2012.
Summons was issued in October 2021 and served on the
appellant in February 2022 for the arrears which had accrued from
2012 to
2021 in the amount of R71 052,68. I shall refer to the
respondent as the municipality unless the context indicate otherwise.
2.2]
The particulars of claim set out the claim as an amount for
outstanding electricity prepaid fixed
charges levied against business
consumers for the property in question. The amount outstanding
had accrued between the period
of 2012 and 2021. From the
schedule annexed to the particulars the charges are described as a
fixed daily charge reconciled
at the end of each financial year
commencing 2012 until 2021. The unpaid amount had evidently
accrued over the 9 year period
as a result of the fact that no
prepaid electricity purchases were made during this period against
which the daily fixed charge
could be set off.
2.3]
The version of Robarts is that he had no knowledge of the
installation of the prepaid meter as
the tenants of the trust were
liable for their own electrical consumption. He testified that his
lease agreement with his tenants
operated on the basis that the
tenants had their own prepaid meter for their unit/shop. At
record page 68, line 520, Robarts
testified in regard to the trust
tenants:
“
But
when the tenants have got their own meter for the internal shop,
that
is their problem
.
I only charge operational costs which include electricity for the
common areas, for the lighting, for the security fencing…”
(emphasis own)
2.4]
That the prepaid meter for this unit had been installed at the behest
of one, Mr. W.J. Swart
(“Swart”) in 2009, was in all
probability on behalf of the tenant whom leased and occupied the
premises at that time.
The latter conclusion had not been
placed in dispute. Robarts however took issue with the fact that he
gave no authorization for
the prepaid meter installation and that
Swart would have done so as an agent or representative of the
appellant’s tenant.
The costs levied in respect of the
prepaid meter was maintained through the consumption of prepaid usage
until the said tenant
vacated in and during 2012. The tenant vacated
the premises sometime during 2012 without informing the appellant as
the landlord.
2.5]
Robarts attended at the municipal offices in 2018, after his
discovery of the prepaid meter,
and requested its removal, however
the municipality refused to remove it until the debt in respect
thereof had been paid by the
trust as the registered owner. He
maintained however that as the trust had not applied for the meter,
it is not responsible
for the costs levied in respect of the said
prepaid meter. During his testimony (at record page 70, line
599) he stated that:
“
They
all have prepaid meters. They would have their own arrangement
with the municipality.”
2.6]
The point of departure for the appellant is that on the basis that he
was not aware of the installation
of this prepaid meter (nor gave his
consent or as per his testimony “
delegated authority”
(record page 67, line 468), he was not apprised of the accruing costs
in respect thereof after the tenant had vacated in 2012 and
disputes
the liability for and on behalf of the trust as the registered
owner. An amount in lieu of the unpaid prepaid meter
costs was
added to his monthly municipal account in March 2021 under the
heading “
Sundry Services ADJ Daily fixed charges”
and summons issued in respect thereof. (Record page 65, line
420). This amount was R73 963.25, later adjusted on the
account
by the municipality to R71 052.68 as the exact amount due for the
period and in accordance with the aforesaid schedule.
I shall
deal with this aspect in more detail later.
2.7]
Mr. Brandt (“Brandt”), senior accountant at Drakenstein
Municipality, testified as
a witness for the municipality regarding
the functioning of prepaid electricity meter systems. He explained
that the basic daily
charge of the prepaid meter had accrued and
could not be set off against the prepaid purchase of electricity as
no electricity
had been purchased during the period 2009 until 2021.
Accordingly, the interval between 2012 and 2021 accumulated the
arrear
amount which forms the subject of the dispute. The
municipality does not generate invoices for the prepaid meters, so no
monthly accounts are sent out in respect of the accruing costs. At
the time when this meter was installed, the municipality accepted
instructions from tenants to install a prepaid meter on presentation
of a lease agreement. However, since July 2013 the municipality
adopted the policy that it would no longer engage with tenants as it
resulted in the possibility of prepaid meter debt accruing
without
the owner’s knowledge but in respect of which the owner is
liable.
2.8]
Brandt testified further that a request for a removal of a meter
would only be done if the costs
levied to the prepaid meter had been
settled. This method had been implemented by the municipality
as a means to collect
outstanding debt. On this basis, Robarts’
request for the removal was met with the same policy, that being,
that the
meter could only be removed upon full settlement of the cost
due in respect thereof, which Robarts refused to do. In the
result, the municipality issued this action for the recovery of the
amount so due.
3]
The amended plea set out a main defence and two special defences:
3.1]
The appellant denied that it was liable to the respondent in respect
of any prepaid meter charges
on the basis that the appellant did not
request the installation thereof, nor did it bear any knowledge of
the meter prior to October
2018. Furthermore, it pleaded that
it had no use for the meter. In amplification, the appellant
pleaded that one, WJ
Swart, (upon whose instruction the municipality
attended to installation of the meter) had no authority to act on
behalf of the
registered owner and placed the municipality to the
proof thereof.
3.2]
In respect of the special pleas, the appellant pleaded that, in the
event that it be found that
the trust is indebted to the
municipality:
3.2.1]
The municipality failed to mitigate its losses
when in and during
October 2018 the appellant, through Robarts, notified it that the
appellant had not authorized the installation
of the meter, denied
liability and requested that the meter be removed. In light of the
refusal of the municipality to remove the
meter, the appellant raised
the special plea that the costs accruing from October 2018 ought not
to be for the account of the appellant;
3.2.2]
The second special plea raised the defence of
prescription on the
basis that the debt claimed by the municipality commenced during
November 2012. Summons commencing action
to recover the debt
was only served on the appellant during February 2022. On the
basis that the service of summons interrupted
prescription, any debt
due to the municipality for the period prior to March 2019 had
prescribed in terms of the
Prescription Act No 68 of 1969
.
Judgment
a quo
:
4]
The magistrate reasoned (at paragraph 12) thereof that he was not
persuaded by
the appellant’s evidence. On the basis that he
found that the parties’ versions amount to two mutually
destructive
versions, he found that he was not persuaded by the
evidence of the appellant [defendant a quo]. In the result it was
held that
the defenses raised were baseless, lacked merit and that in
its determination no
bona fide
defenses were raised,
dismissing the version by the appellant as a fabrication and which
fell to be rejected. It concluded
that the claim had to succeed
and granted judgment in favour of the municipality for the full
amount together with 7% interest
calculated from 18 February 2022 and
costs.
5]
I find the magistrate’s reasoning in the judgment highly
problematic.
The finding of the court a quo amounts to a
blanket conclusion of the merits of the matter without considering
the three defences
raised. Adjudication of the matter by mere
finding that the versions are mutually destructive was misdirected.
It bears mentioning,
for the reasons I set out below, that the
testimony of Robarts in respect of the prepaid meter installation had
an inherent contradiction.
In the premise, the dispute
regarding the installation of the meter could and ought to have been
determined by a critical evaluation
of Robart’s testimony.
However, that finding would not be dispositive of the matter and it
is of no consequence.
For the reasons set out below the
magistrate did not apply his mind to the various applicable legal
principles and the facts relevant
to the determination of the
dispute.
Discussion of the
applicable legal principles:
6]
In the consideration of the matter and in particular the basis upon
which liability
is denied, I proceed to set out the applicable legal
principles:
6.1]
The
Local Government Municipal Systems Act 31 of 2000
(“the
Act”) places a statutory duty upon municipalities to provide
services to the whole of the community within their
jurisdictions.
The municipalities achieve this Constitutional prerogative through
generation of revenue from the provision
of the services that they
are in turn mandated to provide.
6.2]
Section 118 of the Act creates the amounts so due to the municipality
over the immovable property
as security for the payment of the monies
due to it
by an owner
of an immovable property for rates,
taxes, services and consumption charges and deemed as a right of
preference. In context
of this case, the municipal charges
relate to electricity consumption. In
BOE Bank v City of
Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
2005 (4) SA 336
(SCA)
it
was held, inter alia, that “
preference”
extends to
all debts owed to the municipality which have not prescribed.
Furthermore, it held that the municipality may thus
enforce its
preferent right on municipal rates and taxes accumulating for a
period of 30 years and in respect of services and consumption
charges, a period of 3 years. On appeal to the Constitutional
Court it was held that the section does not survive the debt
to
accrue to the new owner.
6.3]
The issue relevant to the subject of this matter is that it is the
owner of the immovable property
who is liable for the consumption
costs due to the municipality. This would be in line with a
purposive interpretation of
the enabling legislation given that
municipalities have an obligation to service the community within its
jurisdiction and concomitant
duties to collect all money due and
payable to it and must implement credit control and debt collection
policies consistent with
the act. In
Mkontwana v
Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality (CCT 57/03)
[2004] ZACC 9
;
2005 (1) SA 530
(CC);
2005 (2) BCLR 150
(CC)
the court held
that (paragraph 41):
“
It
is self evident that the exact character of the relationship between
the owner and the consumption charge will vary depending
on whether
the property is occupied by the owner, a tenant, a usufructuary, a
fiduciary or an unlawful occupier. However,
there is a level at
which the owner and the debt are usually connected or related
regardless of the nature of the relationship
between the owner and
the occupier and of whether the property is lawfully occupied.
This is
because the owner is bound to the property by reason of the fact of
ownership
which…. entails certain rights and responsibilities.
Both the owner and the consumption charge are closely related
to the
property and the property is always the link between the owner on the
one hand and the consumption charge in respect of
water and
electricity provided by the municipality on the other.”
(emphasis own)
6.4]
At paragraph 53 of
Mkontwana
the Court deals with
occupation and consumption by tenants, as well as other category of
occupiers, inter alia unlawful occupiers.
The Court’s
discussion regarding consumption costs relating to landlord and
tenant is particularly relevant in this matter.
“
The
relationship between the owner and the consumption charge is so close
as to justify a reasonable expectation that the owner
would choose a
responsible tenant, monitor payment by the tenant of consumption
charges that are due and ensure that the agreement
of tenancy is
appropriately crafted. An agreement could provide, for example,
that the consumption charges must be regularly
paid by the tenant,
that proof of payment is given to the owner and that eviction or
other consequences would follow if there is
non-payment.
There
is therefore no basis to suggest that it would be unreasonable for
the owner to bear the risk.
”
(emphasis own)
6.5]
It follows that for the appellant herein as the owner of the
property, the consumption costs
stemming from the prepaid electricity
installed by or on behalf of the appellant’s tenant, remains
the ultimate responsibility
of the appellant as the owner. The
evidence of Robarts was that all the units functioned with a prepaid
meter and he adopted
an approach that the tenants would have their
own arrangement with the municipality. Clearly Robarts was not
unaware of the
installation of the prepaid meter, which contradicts
the basis of his denial of liability, that being that he did not
authorize
nor did he know about the prepaid meter installation by the
tenant of this unit. However, even if he was not aware and had
not authorized the installation of the meter, the responsibility of
the consumption costs would ultimately rest on him. In
any
event, the issue herein is not that the consumption cost during the
occupation of the tenant was unpaid. It is common
cause that
the costs mounted only from November 2012 when the tenant had vacated
from the property. The amount in question
relates to costs
which had accrued after the tenant had vacated.
6.6]
It does not behoove the appellant as the owner to adopt an attitude
that it was not aware of
the prepaid meter, that it had no use of the
prepaid meter and is accordingly not liable. The appellant as
the owner bears
the incidental risks to its property. This
would be similar to where the property is damaged or destroyed.
In any event,
in my view, it is evident that the appellant had the
responsibility to inspect the premises after its tenant vacated and
engage
the municipality regarding the prepaid meter so as to ensure
that it be removed should it not wish to incur further costs. In
Mkwontana
it was held (at paragraph 101) thereof that
by keeping a close eye on the extent of service charges, owners can
take timely steps
to ensure that indebtedness does not get out of
hand.
6.7]
The
Drakenstein Municipality Electricity Supply By-law, 2014
enacted under the provisions of section 156 of the Constitution
defines “
customer”
as the occupier, a person who
has a valid existing agreement with the municipality for supply to
such premises or if there is no
such person or occupier,
the owner
of the premises
. (emphasis own). In any event, absent an
occupier, the owner is defined as the customer in the by-law and
under an obligation
to give notice to the municipality in terms of
section 42 of the by-law titled: “
Change of Occupier”
6.8]
I understand from the facts of this matter that the prepaid meter
levies had accrued from the
period after the last purchase of prepaid
electricity was made by the tenant. Simultaneous to the
tenant’s vacation,
no further electricity purchases were made
and in the result the daily levies charged in respect of the meter
had accrued for the
account of the appellant as the owner of the
premises and as the customer. It follows that the appellant
would have incurred
liability for prepaid meter daily charges which
had been levied in respect of the prepaid meter from 2012, subject to
what is stated
hereafter in this judgment.
Special Plea:
Mitigation of loss
6.9]
As regards the special plea raised that the municipality ought to be
held liable for the costs
accrued after October 2018 when the
appellant requested the meter’s removal, my considered view is
that the municipality
is under the obligation to collect all money
due and payable to it. It follows that it is an incidental power to
its credit control
and debt collection obligation that it is
authorized to adopt policies in line with this obligation. The
municipality’s
refusal to remove the prepaid meter upon the
appellant’s request cannot be faulted. I consider this
policy to be consistent
with both its constitutional obligation and
the act as well as being consistent with policy implementation to
collect amounts due
to the municipality. That the municipality
is empowered to disconnect services in terms of section 19 of the
by-law must
be given a purposive interpretation. The section empowers
the municipality with the election to disconnect the supply of
electricity
with reasonable written notice (s19(b)) where a customer
fails to pay any amounts due to the municipality in connection with
electricity
supply. However each case should be based on its
own merits.
6.10] I find
the appellant’s submission that the above provision places an
obligation upon the municipality to
disconnect supply or remove the
prepaid meter misguided. This provision is to protect the
municipality from supply where
it may pose risk if the supply is not
disconnected; in circumstances of tampering; non-payment of service;
contravention of the
by-law and refusal of access by the customer to
the municipality to inspect the metering equipment. The purpose
of the provision
is clearly to protect the municipality in its supply
of services to the community and protection in the event of
non-payment.
The same reasoning applies to the provisions under
section 42 of the by-law titled: “
Change of Occupier
”.
The sections cannot be seen to remove or limit the municipality’s
incidental power to ensure payment of arrear
costs such as in the
case herein. The law affords municipalities a range of tools to
ensure that charges are paid. Section
156(5) of the
Constitution gives the municipality the right to exercise any power
concerning a matter reasonably necessary for,
or incidental to, the
effective performance of its functions. The dictionary meaning
of “
incidental power”
defines same as a type of
power that is necessary to achieve a specific goal, even though it
may not be explicitly granted.
Clearly the municipality is
constitutionally empowered to implement the policy against removal of
prepaid systems until the outstanding
payment is due so as to achieve
its debt collection imperative subject to the proviso that the arrear
amount debt must still be
valid in law. For this reason,
it follows that the special plea denying liability from October 2018
on the basis that
the municipality failed to mitigate its loss must
fail.
6.11] In
terms of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
and related
case law, rates and sewage costs prescribes after 30 years. In
the case of water and electricity charges, the
debt so due is
extinguished after the lapse of 3 years. Prescription starts to
run as soon as the debt is due. The
prepaid meter accrues a
daily
tariff from the last date of purchase. It follows that
as the charge levied in respect of the meter falls due on a daily
basis,
prescription starts to run daily from each and every date.
6.12] In
Argent Industrial Investment (Pty) Ltd v Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality (17808/2016) [2017] ZAGPJHC 14;
2017 (3) SA
146
(GJ)
the court had to consider whether the municipality’s
claim for water consumption had prescribed. It was held
that a consumer who receives a bill for municipal charges for
electricity or water for any period older than 3 years cannot be held
liable for the amounts older than 3 years because same had
prescribed.
6.13] The
principle of prescription is trite law and I view the municipality’s
claim for the prepaid meter consumption
for the whole of the period
of 2012 to 2021 opportunistic. I pause to mention that even on a
cursory glance, the municipality would
have appreciated that billing
for costs spanning just under a period of a decade cannot be valid
claim. The municipality
simply mounted this cost to the
appellant’s municipal costs and demanded payment. In line
with the principle of good
governance and credit control policy which
it is constitutionally mandated to do, this act was abusing its
positions towards its
customer/ consumer, the appellant. A simple
journal entry, adjusting the amounts for the preceding 6 years,
thereby holding the
appellant liable for the preceding period of 3
years would have been appropriate and in fact it had been incumbent
on the municipality
to do. Instead it maintained a proverbial
“
David and Goliath”
position by summarily billing
the appellant for the full period of 9 years. Whilst the
municipality does not issue monthly
accounts for the prepaid meter
system as per the testimony of Brandt, it does not alleviate the
municipality from its obligation
to assess the costs running and
accruing on a prepaid meter over an unduly long period, as in this
case, for almost a decade.
It is untenable a position
(particularly so in the light of its duty to maintain good governance
and credit control policies) to
one day, after almost a decade,
arbitrarily add the costs of the past decade of a prepaid meter for
payment. The account issued
for March 2021 adds the costs headed as
“
Sundry Services”
at R73 963.25 due and payable on
15 April 2021. The municipality has a litany of measures available to
it to ensure payment of the
services due to it. However, such
protection and power must be exercised in a manner which is
reasonable and constitutional,
taking appropriate, reasonable and
lawful steps to collect amounts due.
6.14] It
follows that the municipality cannot sit on its laurels for years
without notifying the owner of the accruing
costs, followed by an
invoice for almost immediate payment after almost a decade of
accruing daily charges. Whilst I set
out above that the
municipality ought to have adjusted their invoice and demanded
payment only for the period of 3 years prior
March 2021 as the
amounts before then March 2019 had clearly prescribed, the
municipality was once again confronted with a special
plea raising
this issue. It ought to have readily conceded the special plea
of prescription. It had not done so and
maintained its
steadfast position to hold the appellant liable for the full period
of 9 years. This leaves a consumer in the untenable
position to pay
the full amount as invoiced alternatively face the risk and
consequences of disconnection of services in respect
of all or other
municipal services to which the consumer is accounted for, legal
action and other debt collection measures which
in this case included
a substantial pro rata amount for the prescribed period of 6 years.
The municipality is obliged to
give effect to its Credit Policy which
must be interpreted with the values enshrined in our Constitution,
the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act and good governance as it
is required to do in the Municipal Act. The municipality’s
silence on the defence
of prescription is telling both in the trial
court as well as this appeal. The heads of argument filed in
this appeal for
the respondent makes no reference to the defence on
prescription. The conduct on the part of the municipality is
remiss and
a relevant fact in the consideration of costs, which I
deal with hereunder.
6.15] In the
circumstances taking into account the trite principles of
prescription, I am satisfied that the appellant
could only be held
liable for amounts which had not yet prescribed. In the
premise, the special plea of prescription
must succeed. The
remaining issues on appeal must fail.
6.16] The
municipal manager is the head of the administration of a municipality
and has various duties, inter alia,
giving guidance and advice to the
municipality and also acts as the accounting officer. I am
fortified by the conduct of
the municipality
apropos
the
prescribed period of 6 years and its persistence in invoicing the
appellant in respect thereof as well as the prevalence of
these type
of municipal conduct in the management of prepaid electricity meters,
that a copy of this judgment be placed with the
Drakenstein
Municipality Manager.
6.17]
At the completion of the submissions made by counsel for the
municipality in respect of the special defence of
prescription, an
adjournment was requested by counsel to consult with his instructing
attorney who was present in Court.
After the adjournment,
counsel informed the Court that in the premise where the Court uphold
the prescription point, that the municipality
makes the concession
that it could only claim for the prepaid meter expenses which had not
prescribed, in other words, for costs
levied after February 2019,
representing 3 years prior to the service of the summons in February
2021. I am of the view that
the concession was properly made.
The parties also agreed that if this Court is to uphold the
prescription defence on appeal,
that the municipality would present
an invoice to the appellant for electricity consumed in respect of
the meter for the period
28 October 2019 until 29 October 2021.
A draft order to that effect was submitted to the Registrar after the
hearing of the
matter. I include the terms thereof in the order
below.
Costs:
7]
In light of the fact that the appellant only remains liable for the
debt over
a period of 3 years as opposed to 9 years, it follows that
the appellant is substantially successful in this appeal.
Together
with my reasoning as set out in paragraph 6.14 to 6.16
above, I am satisfied that the municipality be ordered to pay the
costs
of the appellant on scale A.
Order:
8]
For the reasons aforesaid and in all circumstances of this appeal, I
make the
following order:
(a)
The
appeal is upheld to the extent of the order set out in paragraph (b)
below with costs to be paid by the respondent on scale
A.”
(b)
The order of the magistrate’s court dated 1 December 2023 is
herewith set aside and
substituted as follows:
“
The
plaintiff is ordered to:
(i)
Reverse all amounts for
the electricity prepaid fixed charges added to Municipal Account 0[…]
(“the defendant’s
account”) on the invoice dated 26
March 2021 (“the invoice”) and in respect of meter
number: 0[…] (“the
meter”);
(ii)
The plaintiff is
directed to present an invoice to the defendant for electricity
consumed in respect of the meter, for the period
as from 28 October
2019 until 29 October 2021;
(iii)
The defendant is held
liable for the amount due and payable in the invoice in (ii) above,
payable within 21 days from date of presentation
of the invoice.
(iv)
The plaintiff is
ordered to pay the defendant’s costs of suit.”
(c)
The Chief
Registrar of this Court is herewith directed to serve a copy of this
judgment on the Drakenstein Municipality Manager
within 7 days
hereof.”
________________________________
SALIE,
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
WESTERN
CAPE
I agree:
________________________________
`
KUSEVITSKY, J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
WESTERN
CAPE
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