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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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[2023] ZAKZDHC 2
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## Body Corporate of Green Meadow Country Estate v eThekwini Municipality (Leave to Appeal) (D 7917/2020)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 2 (27 January 2023)
Body Corporate of Green Meadow Country Estate v eThekwini Municipality (Leave to Appeal) (D 7917/2020)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 2 (27 January 2023)
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sino date 27 January 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL LOCAL
DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
No: D 7917/2020
In
the matter between:
BODY
CORPORATE OF GREEN MEADOW
COUNTRY
ESTATE
APPLICANT
and
THE
eTHEKWINI MUNICIPALITY
RESPONDENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, and released to SAFLII.
The
date for hand down is deemed to be 27 January 2023(Friday) at 11:00am
ORDER
In
the results, the following order is made:
1
The applicant is granted leave to appeal the judgment delivered on 22
August
2022 to the full court of the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the
High Court.
2
The costs of the application for leave to appeal are to be costs in
the
appeal.
JUDGMENT
IN THE APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
Mathenjwa
AJ
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal to the full court of this
division against
the judgment delivered on 22 August 2022.
[2]
Section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides that:
‘
Leave to appeal
may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are of the
opinion that—
(a)
(i) the appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments
on the matter under consideration;
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section 16(2)
(a)
; and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in
the case, the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.’
[3]
The Supreme Court of Appeal had the opportunity to consider what
constitutes reasonable
prospect of success in
S
v Smith
,
[1]
where Plasket AJA held that:
‘
What the test of
reasonable prospects of success postulates is a dispassionate
decision, based on the facts and the law, that a
court of appeal
could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of the
trial court. In order to succeed, therefore, the
appellant must
convince this court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal and that those prospects are not
remote, but have a
realistic chance of succeeding. More is required to be established
than that there is a mere possibility of
success, that the case is
arguable on appeal or that the case cannot be categorised as
hopeless. There must, in other words, be
a sound, rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects of success on appeal.’
(Footnotes omitted.)
[4]
The grounds for leave to appeal are to a large extent based on new
issues that were
not raised and ventilated at the hearing of the
matter. For this reason, it is appropriate to briefly state the
applicant’s
case as presented in its founding papers and
argument at the hearing of the matter. The applicant contended that
it was billed
on the incorrect tariff with respect to its water
consumption in that the respondent had charged for the total
consumption of water
used by the applicant without regard to the fact
that such water is being consumed by a single household. The reading
on the bulk
meter, so the argument went, which is owing by the
applicant as a whole was being incorrectly attributed as a whole to
each individual
owner of the units comprising the applicant. The
applicant referred to the following provisions of the policy in
paragraph 5 of
its heads of argument:
‘
5.1 clause 2.4.2
of the respondents’ water policy recognises sectional title
development as being representative of individual
units;
5.2 clause 2.4.4 of the
policy provides for the option of installation of a bulk, or
individual meters;
5.3 in either unit with
5.2 above, the respondent would measure water consumption of
individual units;
5.4 each unit within this
development would be charged based on this metered consumption.’
[5]
I pointed out in paragraph 3 of
the judgment that the applicant amended its relief sought
at the
hearing of the matter and introduced a new ground, namely, that the
respondent ought to have charged the applicant on the
rate for
commercial consumer instead of domestic consumer. Thus, in the
context of this case and based on the narrowing down of
contested
issues, I handed down a brief judgment.
[6]
It is appropriate to state the provisions of the policy that the
applicant relied
upon at the hearing of the matter:
Clause 2.4.2 of the
Respondent’s Water policy titled “Sectional Title
Developments” provides that: ‘Sectional
Title
developments comprises a number of units which are built within a
single subdivision. The development may be divided into
separate
exclusive use areas for each unit with the remainder as common
property. The development is administered by a Body Corporate
in
terms of the Sectional Title Act’. Clause 2.4.4 titled “Water
to New Sectional Title Developments” provides
as follows:
‘
(a) Developers of
new sectional title developments are required to:
(i) pay for the
installation of individual water connections, metered at the road
boundary
Or
(ii) pay for the
installation of a bulk water connection, metered at the road
boundary, and also pay for the installation of individual
water
meters located on the water pipes feeding each separate unit.
(iii) the individual
meters will be installed by the municipality on private property.
(iv) the water pipes
feeding each separate unit will be laid by the developer.
(b) where option (a)(ii)
is chosen by a developer, the Municipality will read the individual
meters and bulk meter. The Body Corporate
will be charged monthly for
both the municipality to undertake the reading of the individual
meters and for the water consumption
recorded at the bulk meter less
the sum of the water consumption recorded at the individual meters.
No fixed charge will be paid
for the bulk meter but the Body
Corporate will be billed at the tariff rate for non-domestic
customers.
(c) each unit will be
charged for water by the Municipality according to the level of
service chosen, based on the metered consumption
for each unit.
(d) in the event of
non-payment of the monthly distribution charge by the Body Corporate,
any water connection in the name of the
Body Corporate will be
disconnected and the debt will be handed over for collection. The
supply to the whole complex will be disconnected
after each
individual customer supplied through the bulk meter has been given 14
days’ notice of the intention to disconnect
the water supply
and the outstanding debt has not been paid.
(e) in the case of
existing developments, supplied through a bulk meter, the Body
Corporate may apply for the installation of separate
meters to each
dwelling unit, subject to payment of the prescribed charges (see also
items.2.4.9).
(f) in the case of
existing development supplied through bulk meters, where the account
is in arrears and subject to disconnection
for non-payment of the
account, the Head: Water and Sanitation or authorised delegate may
elect to require the installation of
separate meters to each unit and
the payment of the prescribed charges.’
[7]
The main ground of appeal is essentially that the court erred in
arriving at a conclusion that the applicant’s reliance
on the
provisions in the respondent’s policy was misplaced and that
the court erred in finding that the respondent’s
policy did not
exclude the applicant from the category of domestic users. To my
mind, there is no substance on this ground. It
is apparent from the
wording of the respondent’s water policy that clause 2.4.2 does
nothing other than defining a sectional
title development.
Furthermore, it is apparent that clause 2.4.4 (a)(i) to (iv) of the
policy is a directive to developers of a
new sectional title
development, and it is common cause that the applicant is neither a
developer nor a new sectional title development,
therefore, to my
mind clauses 2.4.4 (a)(i) to (iv) does not apply to the applicant who
is an existing, and not a new, sectional
title development. Further,
the applicant did not refer to any clause in the respondent’s
policy to support the contention
that it is a commercial consumer.
[8]
The applicant further submits
that this court ought to have found that clause 2.4.4 (c)
of the
policy envisaged within a sectional title development that only
individual units with individual meters could be charged
for water by
respondent according to the level of service chosen based on a
metered consumption for each unit; could be charged
at a domestic
tariff. The court ought to have found, the argument went, that clause
2.4.4.(b) of the policy envisaged that where
a sectional title
development used a bulk meter then ‘no fixed charge would be
paid for bulk meter but the Body Corporate
would be billed at a
tariff rate for non-domestic customers’.
[9]
It is instructive to point out
that the applicant’s counsel did not make any submissions
about
how the clauses of the policy he referred to should be interpreted.
Further, no submission was made to this court as to how
the cited
clauses of the policy supported the applicant’s case.
Therefore, the court did not consider the propositions that
were put
forward by counsel for the applicant, because these propositions were
not advanced at the hearing of the matter. Nevertheless,
in my view,
these propositions are farfetched. It is common cause that the
applicant is charged on a single bulk meter, therefore
the provisions
of clause 2.4.4 (b) is not applicable and the non-domestic rate
should not apply to the applicant. The applicant
correctly submits
that in terms of clause 2.4.4 (e) it is allowed to apply for
installation of a separate meter to each unit, but
the applicant had
not made such application. Based on their own submission, it’s
not clear how the applicants could have
been charged for individual
consumption of water per unit, if they opted not to apply for the
installation of individual meter
connection to their units.
[10]
The applicant submits that the court ought to have
arrived at a conclusion that the respondent’s policy
needed to
be uniformly applied to existing and new developments;
the
court
ought to have found that the policy requires adherence
to matters which fall within the municipal competence; it must be
read to
assess and achieve the objectives of the Municipality
uniformly and rationally; the provision of the policy must properly
be contextualised,
be construed consistently with the constitution
and to preserve constitutional validity. The court erred in not
arriving at a conclusion
that the tariff for domestic consumption
only applied where all or part of the water, through a connection, is
applied without
the intervention of individual brake pressure tanks
supplied by eThekwini Municipality.
[11]
In oral argument at the hearing of this application, counsel for the
applicant contended that since the
court, in its judgment, did not
make any reference to the respondent’s policy, then the court
has not interpreted the policy.
He relied on the Constitutional Court
judgment of
Barnard
Labuschagne Inc v Commissioner, South African Revenue Services and
Another
[2]
in support of the contention that the failure by this court to
interrogate and interpret the respondent’s policy could be
a
ground of appeal. It seems to me that the relevant provision that
could possibly support the counsel’s contention is found
in
paragraph 29 of the judgment where Rogers AJ held that:
‘
Since all the
relevant authorities were drawn to the High Court’s attention,
it is unacceptable that it did not discuss them
and either follow
them or explain why it thought they were distinguishable. In the
light of the authorities to which the High Court
was referred, it is
difficult to fathom the court’s statement, when refusing leave
to appeal, that there were no conflicting
judgments on
rescindability.’
I
have pointed out above that the counsel who represented the applicant
at the hearing of this matter merely referred to certain
clauses of
the respondent’s policy without discussing and making
submissions as how these clauses support applicant’s
case.
[12]
While I am not persuaded that there is any merit
in the grounds of appeal and the submissions advanced in
support
thereof, I can rely on the guidance of the Supreme Court of Appeal on
how I should approach an application for leave to
appeal. In
R
v Kuzwayo
,
[3]
in a matter for leave to appeal pertaining to a criminal case it was
held explained:
‘
That test must; to
the best of the ability of the trial judge, be applied objectively.
By that is meant that he must disabuse his
mind of the fact that he
himself has no reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused: he
must ask himself whether there is a
reasonable prospect that the
judges of appeal will take a different view. This applies to
questions both of fact and law: there
is, in this respect, no
distinction between a question of fact and a question of law’.
[13]
I am mindful of the fact that this matter involves an interpretation
of the respondent’s
water policy. The Supreme Court of Appeal
held that interpretation of a document is an objective process of
attributing meaning
to the words used in the document. (See
Natal
Joint Municipality Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4)
SA 593
(SCA) para 18.) Therefore, it is in the interest of justice
that leave to appeal be granted as there is a reasonable prospect
that
another court may interpret the respondent’s policy
differently and come to a different decision.
[14]
In the results, the following order is made:
1
The applicant is granted leave to appeal the judgment delivered on 22
August
2022 to the full court of the KwaZulu-Natal Division of the
High Court.
2
The costs of the application for leave to appeal are to be costs in
the
appeal.
MATHENJWA
AJ
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Adv. MI Veerasamy
Instructed
by:
Peackock, Liebenberg & Dickson Inc.
Durban
For
the Respondent:
Adv. N Ntuli
Instructed
by:
Luthuli Sithole Attorneys
Durban
Date
of hearing:
6 December 2022
Date
of judgment:
27 January 2023
(electronically)
[1]
S
v Smith
[2011]
ZASCA 15
;
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA) para 7.
[2]
Barnard
Labuschagne Inc v Commissioner, South African Revenue Services and
Another
2022
(5) SA 1 (CC).
[3]
R
v Kuzwayo
1949 (3) SA 761
(A) at 765.
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