Case Law[2024] ZASCA 51South Africa
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Vresthena (Pty) Ltd and Others (1346/2022) [2024] ZASCA 51; 2024 (6) SA 159 (SCA) (18 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
18 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Civil Practice – Appealability of interim orders - order held to be final in nature and appealable; municipal law – deliberate non-payment of services - appellant failed to establish a prima facie right to continue to receive electricity without payment.
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: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZASCA 51
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Vresthena (Pty) Ltd and Others (1346/2022) [2024] ZASCA 51; 2024 (6) SA 159 (SCA) (18 April 2024)
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Vresthena (Pty) Ltd and Others (1346/2022) [2024] ZASCA 51; 2024 (6) SA 159 (SCA) (18 April 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
Links to summary
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2024_51.html
sino date 18 April 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
MUNICIPALITY – Electricity –
Constitutional
duties
–
Reciprocal
obligations of supply and implementing debt collection measures –
Owner of units in retail park alleging
that body corporate
dysfunctional – Obtaining order for reconnection when
arrears owing to City – Contract between
City and body
corporate – Owners of sections had no right to receive
electricity without payment – High Court’s
order
impermissibly interfered with constitutional obligation on City to
ensure collection of revenue for services provided
– Appeal
upheld – Constitution, ss 152(1) and 153 – Local
Government: Municipal Systems Act 23 of 2000,
ss 4(2) and 73.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 1346/2022
In the matter between:
CITY OF TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
APPELLANT
and
VRESTHENA (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
(Registration No
2001/05148/07)
THE BODY CORPORATE OF
ZAMBEZI
RETAIL
PARK
SECOND RESPONDENT
ZAMBEZI RETAIL PARK
INVESTMENTS
(PTY)
LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
THUMOS PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD
FOURTH RESPONDENT
ZRJ PROPERTIES (PTY)
LTD
FIFTH RESPONDENT
In Re:
VRESTHENA (PTY) LTD
(Registration No
2001/05148/07)
APPLICANT
CITY OF TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE BODY CORPORATE OF
ZAMBEZI RETAIL
PARK
SECOND RESPONDENT
ZAMBEZI RETAIL PARK
INVESTMENTS (PTY)
LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
THUMOS PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD
FOURTH RESPONDENT
ZRJ PROPERTIES (PTY)
LTD
FIFTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
City of Tshwane
Metropolitan Municipality
v
Vresthena (Pty) Ltd and Others
(1346/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 51
(18 April 2024)
Coram:
MOCUMIE, MBATHA and HUGHES JJA and
KATHREE-SETILOANE and KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard:
10 November 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication
on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down of the judgment is deemed to be 11h00
on 18 April 2024.
Summary:
Civil Practice – Appealability of
interim orders - order held to be final in nature and appealable;
municipal law –
deliberate non-payment of services - appellant
failed to establish a prima facie right to continue to receive
electricity without
payment.
ORDER
On
appeal from;
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Ndlokovane AJ sitting as a court of first
instance):
1
Condonation is granted and the appeal is reinstated.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs, such costs to include the costs
consequent upon the
employment of two counsel where applicable.
3
The orders of the high court are set aside and replaced by the
following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs, such costs
to
include the costs consequent upon the employment of two counsel where
applicable.’
JUDGMENT
Mbatha
JA (Mocumie and Hughes JJA and Kathree-Setiloane and Keightley AJJA
concurring):
[1]
The issues before this Court
are whether the order granted by the Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Pretoria, per Ndlokovane AJ
(the high court) is appealable and
if so, whether this Court should grant condonation, reinstate the
appeal and consider the merits
thereof.
Background
[2]
A brief summary of the
history is required. The Zambezi Retail Park Centre (the Retail Park)
is a large commercial property situated
at
Erf 5 Derdepoort,
R573 Meloto & R513 Zambezi. The Zambezi Retail Park Sectional
Title Scheme was established in 2006 comprising
eight sections. On 8
July 2010 the scheme was extended to include section 9. Section 1 to
4, 7 and 8 in the building are owned
by the First Respondent,
Vresthena (Pty) Ltd (Vresthena), which leases them to various
business entities. The management of the
scheme in terms of the
Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986 (the Act) vests in the Body
Corporate’s trustees elected on 19 June
2018.
[3]
The
City provides electricity to the aforementioned properties, through
the Body Corporate of Zambezi Retail Park (the Body Corporate).
It is
common cause that historically a petrol station, situated within the
scheme, has always had a separate account with the City
and a
separate electricity connection. Save for the petrol station, the
owner of which is not a party to this appeal, the City
supplies
electricity through a single supply point to the different sectional
title units. The Body Corporate is billed accordingly.
As of January
2022, due to the continuous failure by the Body Corporate to pay for
services, the City implemented credit control
measures, which
included the disconnection of electricity in an attempt to collect
the outstanding revenue. These measures were
resisted by Vresthena.
Consequently, Vresthena filed an urgent application in the high
court. In Part A, which dealt with urgent
relief, it sought an order
compelling the City to accept and reconsider its application for a
separate electricity connection for
its sections of the Retail Park.
In addition, it sought restoration of the electricity and water
supply to the Retail Park. The
relief in Part B, which was not sought
urgently, was conditional on the application for a separate
electricity connection being
rejected by the City. In that case,
Vresthena recorded in Part B that it would seek an order reviewing
the rejection.
[4]
On
20 June 2022, the high court granted the following order in respect
of the urgent, Part A, relief:
‘
1.
The matter is certified as semi-urgent and the parties may approach
the opposed motion
Registrar for an expedited hearing date on the
opposed motion roll where the remainder of the relief, and Part B
will be dealt
with.
2.
Pending the hearing, the first respondent is ordered to restore
electricity and/or
water supply to the property known as Erf 5
Derdepoort, R573 Meloto & R513 Zambezi within 14 days of this
order.
3.
The first respondent is ordered to provide an updated and accurate
reconciliation
of the second respondent’s electricity
consumption account, reflecting the current and due outstanding
amount, to the second
respondent’s attorney of record by 24
June 2022.
4.
In the event that the second respondent wishes to dispute any of the
amounts
reflected on the reconciliation referred to in paragraph 2
above, then and in that event:
4.1
the second respondent will declare a formal dispute in terms of the
Credit Control By-laws
of the
first respondent within 10 days after the receipt of the
reconciliation as contemplated in paragraph 2 above, which [dispute]
will be served via email on the following addresses:
4.1.1
M[…]
4.1.2
W[…]
4.1.3
c[…]a
4.2
The first respondent will provide the second respondent with a
written response to the aforementioned dispute within 14 days
after
receipt of such dispute.
4.3
The necessary adjustments will be made on the account of the second
respondent.
4.4
This does not affect the rights of any party to follow any process
that is available to them in law.
5.
The applicant is ordered to table a resolution to the second
respondent and its
members within 7 days of the order being granted,
to the effect that:
5.1
The second respondent will monitor
alternatively
appoint an
independent service provider to monitor, the consumption of each of
the section owners.
5.2
The second respondent will account to the owners and collect payment
[from each] section owner’s consumption of electricity.
5.3
The second respondent will pay over the funds so collected from
members to the first respondent timeously.
5.4
Each section owner will be liable for, and will duly pay, its
electricity consumption to the second respondent and should any
member of the second respondent fail to do so, the second respondent
be authorised to internally disconnect the electricity supply
to the
non-paying section.
6.
In the event that the first respondent fails to comply with paragraph
2 of this
order timeously, the applicant is authorised to instruct an
electrician and/or service provider to reconnect the electricity
and/or
water supply in such event, the applicant reserves its right
to claim such reasonable costs from the first respondent.
7.
For as long as the electricity is connected to Erf 5 Derdepoort, R573
Meloto
& R513 Zambezi, the applicant will make payment of its
consumption to the first respondent unless the parties come to an
alternative
arrangement.
8.
In relation to the proceedings of 16 June 2022, each party will pay
their own
costs.
9.
Both parties are authorised to approach this Honourable Court in the
future,
if need be, on the same papers, duly supplemented for further
relief as the case may be necessary.’
For
the sake of clarity, the reference to ‘first respondent’
in the order is to the City, and the ‘second respondent’
is a reference to the Body Corporate. Dissatisfied with the outcome
of the application the City sought leave to appeal. The appeal
serves
before us with leave of the high court.’
Appealability
of the order
[5]
Vresthena submitted that the
order was not appealable on the basis of its interim nature. In that
regard, it submitted that: (a)
the order caters for the interim
period until the remainder of the relief in Part A and Part B have
been determined on an expedited
basis; (b) that in terms of paragraph
9 of the order the parties may supplement their papers and approach
the court for further
relief; (c) that its application for a separate
supply of electricity was attached to its court application and upon
the granting
of the order the City would decide on the application;
(d) if the application is granted, nothing will prevent the City from
pursuing
the Body Corporate for arrear amounts; (e) and if the
application is not granted only then would the matter proceed to the
balance
of Part A and Part B.
[6]
In addition, Vresthena
advanced the argument that the order is not definitive of the rights
of the parties in that paragraph 1 of
the order in Part A dispenses
with the argument that the order dispossesses the City of a
substantial portion of the relief sought.
Additionally, it submitted
that as the order falls outside of the
Zweni
triad, it is not
appealable on other grounds. Lastly, Vresthena contended that
paragraph 1 of Part A opened the door to any of the
litigants to
approach the court on an expedited hearing date on the opposed motion
roll where the remainder of the relief, and
Part B will be dealt
with.
[7]
To
the contrary, the City contended that the order is appealable in that
it is final in effect and falls within the
Zweni
triad.
[1]
It submitted that the order granted by the high court is not purely
interlocutory as it cannot be corrected, altered or set aside
by the
judge who granted it at any time before the final judgment. In
addition, it argued that the order failed to take into account
the
constitutional obligation that rests on the City to collect
outstanding revenue for the purpose of providing basic services
to
the residents in its area of jurisdiction, as contemplated in the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, Act 108 of 1996
(the
Constitution) and other relevant legislation. The order was granted
in favour of Vresthena even though it did not meet all
the
requirements of an interdict, in particular the consideration of
other possible remedies at the disposal of Vresthena.
The
legal principles regarding the appealability of court orders
[8]
The
traditional approach to appealability of court orders is generally
regarded as being that set out in
Zweni
.
In that case it was held that for an order to be appealable, ‘the
decision must be final in effect and not susceptible to
alteration by
the court that granted the order, it must be definitive of the rights
of the parties and it must have the effect
of disposing of at least a
substantial portion of the relief sought in the proceedings’.
[2]
These principles have been confirmed in various decisions as
extrapolated in the judgment of this Court in
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v McLachlan and Others
.
[3]
However,
as noted recently by this Court, there have subsequently been
significant developments in our law in this regard.
[4]
In
City of Cape
Town v South African Human Rights Commission
[5]
it was held that:
‘
After
confirming that the interests of justice were paramount in assessing
the appealability of an interim order, the Constitutional
Court in
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others
went
on to set out what factors a court should consider in assessing where
the interests of justice lay:
“
.
. . To that end, [a court] must have regard to and weigh carefully
all the germane circumstances. Whether an interim order has
a final
effect or disposes of a substantial portion of the relief sought in a
pending review is a relevant and important consideration.
Yet, it is
not the only or always decisive consideration. It is just as
important to assess whether the temporary restraining order
has an
immediate and substantial effect, including whether the harm that
flows from it is serious, immediate, ongoing and irreparable.”
The
interests of justice standard will inevitably involve a consideration
of any irreparable harm. To successfully appeal an interim
order an
applicant will have to show that it will suffer irreparable harm if
the interim appeal were not granted. Even so, stated
the
Constitutional Court in International Trade Administration Commission
v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Limited, irreparable harm although
important, is not the sole consideration and the interests of justice
require an evaluation of a number of factors:
“
.
. . The test of irreparable harm must take its place alongside other
important and relevant considerations that speak to what
is in the
interests of justice, such as the kind and importance of the
constitutional issue raised; whether there are prospects
of success;
whether the decision, although interlocutory, has a final effect; and
whether irreparable harm will result if the appeal
is not granted . .
.”
The
first enquiry is to ascertain whether the orders granted by the high
court have a final effect. For this it is necessary to
compare the
orders granted in respect of Part A and the orders sought in Part B,
to ascertain to what extent they overlap.’
[9]
In
TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd and others
(
TWK
),
[6]
this Court dealt with the issue of appealability and, in particular
the role of the overarching principle of the interests of justice.
It
favoured the doctrine of finality as the lodestar guiding the
determination of whether an order is appealable because:
‘…
It
allows for the orderly use of the capacity of this Court to hear
appeals that warrant its attention. It prevents piecemeal appeals
that are often costly and delay the resolution of matters before the
high court. It reinforces the duty of the high court to bring
matters
to an expeditious, and final, conclusion. And it provides criteria so
that litigants can determine, with tolerable certainty,
whether a
matter is appealable. These are the hallmarks of what the rule of law
requires.’
[7]
The
sentiments expressed in
TWK
,
regarding avoiding the piecemeal adjudication of an appeal and its
consequences, were affirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Cloete
and Another v S; Sekgala v Nedbank Limited
[8]
where
it held that:
‘
In
any event, this Court has held that in considering whether to grant
leave to appeal, it is necessary to consider whether “allowing
the appeal would lead to piecemeal adjudication and prolong the
litigation or lead to the wasteful use of judicial resources or
costs”. Similarly, in TAC I, this Court stated that “it
is undesirable to fragment a case by bringing appeals
on individual
aspects of the case prior to the
proper
resolution of the matter in the court of first instance”. This
is one of the main reasons why interlocutory orders
are generally not
appealable while final orders are.’
[10]
TWK
did
not consider the Constitutional Court’s judgment in
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
,
[9]
which affirmed the role of the interests of justice in this Court’s
consideration of the question of appealability. The effect
of
Lebashe
is
that just because an order is interlocutory is not decisive as to its
appealability.
[10]
This Court
recently held in
Nedbank
Limited and Another v Survé and Others
[11]
that ‘(i)n a matter where no case was made out for an interim
interdict and the order accordingly ought never to have been
granted
in the first place, along with other relevant considerations,
interests of justice might well render an interim interdict
appealable despite the
Zweni
requirements
not having been met’. In
Lebashe
,
the Constitutional Court was moved to consider an interim order
appealable because of the grave prejudice it caused to the
constitutional
protection of freedom of expression.
[12]
In
Survé
this
Court similarly found an interim order that was based on a prima
facie finding, by the equality court, that the interdicted
party had
committed an act of unfair racial discrimination, to be appealable.
In arriving at that decision, this Court took into
account the
serious reputational repercussions for the interdicted party in
allowing an order to stand in circumstances where it
ought never to
have been made in the first place.
[13]
[11]
In sum, then, on the
jurisprudence as it stands, an interim order may be appealable,
taking into account a range of factors. The
Zweni
requirements play an
important role in determining the issue of appealability in a
particular case, but they are not immutable.
The interests of justice
continue to play a substantial role in the inquiry. What those
interests are involves a finely weighed
consideration of relevant
factors in each case.
Evaluation
[12]
With
regard to the orders granted by the high court in Part A and Part B
in this matter, one of the questions that need to be considered
is
whether the orders are final in nature, more particularly in their
effect, rather than their form.
[14]
I agree with the City’s submissions that what needs to be
considered is the consequences of the orders and the conditions
brought about by what Vresthena considers to be interim orders. The
effects thereof which may not be capable of being undone and
a fresh
order may be required to reverse the final effect thereof.
[13]
The orders that were granted
by the high court have a number of shortcomings. First, the order
does not make reference to the application
for an additional
electricity service connection as sought by Vresthena in paragraph 1
of Part B of the notice of motion. Second,
the duration of the order
is indefinite which means that it shall endure until such time that
the legal process in Part B is completed.
This leaves all the parties
in a state of uncertainty. Third, there is no causal link between the
order granted by the court in
Part A and Part B of the notice of
motion. Part A directs the City to continue to supply electricity and
water to the entire Retail
Park pending the resolution of Part B.
However, Part B is directed only at a possible review of a possible
decision by the City
to refuse Vresthena’s application for a
separate supply to the units or sections owned by it. What is more,
there is no time
frame laid down for the anticipated review or for
Vresthena to file its application with the City for a separate
electricity supply
as contemplated in s 7 of its By-laws. Therefore,
the court order does not set out steps to regulate Part B of the
application.
Fourth, the restoration of electricity without the
provision for the payment of arrears creates an anomaly in that the
City is
forced to provide electricity to the property where payment
is not being made. Lastly, the chilling effect of the order is that
it compels the City to act contrary to the prevailing law and its
constitutional mandate: it must continue to supply electricity
to
users who are in arrears and have a history of non-payment for the
foreseeable future, and at the same time the City is denied
the
statutory power to terminate services without approaching a court to
obtain leave to do so. These characteristics of the order
demonstrate
that its effect is final in nature. At the very least, for reasons I
traverse below, this is one of those cases where
the relief sought
ought to have never been granted, and the order is appealable on this
basis too.
[14]
I do not agree with the
argument submitted on behalf of Vresthena on a number of grounds. The
doctrine of finality as envisaged
in
TWK
cannot be blindly
applied to an interim order which is final in effect and where a
grave injustice would result. It was submitted
on behalf of Vresthena
that Part A of the order balanced the competing interest of the
parties, pending the hearing of Part B,
in that electricity will be
provided and Vresthena will pay the City for the electricity
consumed, whilst the dispute relating
to the accuracy of the account
can be registered and reviewed in the interim. As alluded to already,
this argument is flawed as
it does not address the payment of
arrears. In addition, the argument is made against the backdrop that
the electricity would be
restored to the entire Retail Park.
Disturbingly, however, the order places no direct obligation on other
owners to pay for their
consumption of electricity. It merely directs
the applicant to place a resolution before the Body Corporate as to
how payment to
it, and hence to the City, should be dealt with in
future. In other words, the City is obliged to reconnect services to
all owners
without a concomitant obligation on all of them to pay for
the services they use. Lastly, there was no mention that Vresthena
has
made any arrangements for the payment of arrears to the City or
the Body Corporate. The order simply insulates the Body Corporate
and
its members from payment for the consumption of electricity. This is
bound to lead to irreparable harm to the City.
[15]
Vresthena’s argument
that Part B would be determined on an expedited basis is misplaced as
the order is silent on the time
frames. Vresthena relies on paragraph
9 of the order in Part A which states that ‘both parties are
authorized to approach
this honourable Court in the future, if needs
be, on the same papers duly supplemented for further relief as the
case may be’.
The order as framed is disjunctive. As it stands,
paragraph 9 refers to the variation of the orders which have no
relation to each
other. This would have the effect that Vresthena and
the Body Corporate would enjoy
carte
blanche
the
supply of the electricity to the Retail Park without making payments
to the City. I conclude by making a finding that the order
is thus
appealable.
[16]
This finding on
appealability of the order has a direct link to the determination of
the application for condonation for the late
filling of the notice of
appeal and reinstatement of the appeal by the City. Having considered
the opposed application on this,
I find the explanation reasonable
and that there are indeed strong prospects of success on the merits.
Consequently, condonation
is granted and the appeal is reinstated.
The
merits of the application
The
law
[17]
In Vresthena’s
application for an interdict, it sought an order directing the City
to continue to restore and continue to
supply the whole Retail Park
with electricity while it applied for a separate electricity supply
point. The question is whether
the high court erred in finding that
it had met the requirements for an interdict of this nature,
particularly in light of the
City’s powers and obligations in
respect of the supply of electricity.
[18]
It is important that I
should set out the relevant provisions of the law that govern the
supply of electricity to the people of
South Africa. The duty of the
municipality to provide electricity is regulated by the Constitution,
statutes and By-laws. The relevant
provisions of the Constitution are
as follows:
‘
152.
Objects of local government
(1)
The objects of local government are—
(
b
)
To ensure the provision of services to communities in a
sustainable manner
;. . .
(2)
A municipality must strive, within its financial and
administrative capacity, to achieve the
objects set out
in subsection (1)
.
153.
Developmental duties of municipalities
A
municipality must—
(
a
)
Structure and manage its administration and budgeting and planning
processes to give priority to the basic needs of the community,
and
to promote the social and economic development of the
community;
and . . .
156.
Powers and functions of municipalities
(1)
A municipality has executive authority in respect of, and has the
right to administer—
(
a
)
The local government matters listed in Part B of Schedule 4 and
Part B of Schedule 5;
and …
(2)
A municipality may make and administer By-laws for the effective
administration of the matters which it has the right to administer.’
(Emphasis Added.)
[19]
The
provision of electricity is a local government competency. Amongst
the general duties of a municipality set out in s 73(1)
(c)
of
the Local Government Municipal Systems Act 23 of 2000 (the Systems
Act), is that a municipality ‘must ensure that all members
of
the local community have access to at least the minimum level of
basic services’. Section 73(2)
(c)
requires
a municipality to be financially sustainable. In order to realise
that goal, Chapter 9 of the Systems Act regulates credit
control and
debt collection measures for services rendered by the municipality.
Section 96 of the Systems Act
[15]
places the debt collection responsibility on the municipality. As a
result, in terms of s 98 of the Systems Act, a municipal council
must
adopt By-laws to give effect to its credit control and debt
collection policy, its implementation and enforcement.
[16]
[20]
It is apposite that I should highlight the
relevant provisions of the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
Standard Electricity
Supply By-laws (2013) (the By-laws):
‘
1.
Definitions
“
Consumer”
means
the occupier of any premises of which the Municipality has agreed to
supply or is actually supplying electricity. . .
4.
Supply by agreement
(1)
No person may use and no person is entitled to use an electricity
supply (new or existing) or consume electricity from the Municipality
unless or until such a person has:
(a)
entered into an agreement in writing with the Municipality for the
supply and consumption of electricity
, and the agreement,
together with the provisions of these By-laws, in all respects
governs the supply and consumption of electricity
to and by the
relevant person with whom the municipality concludes such agreement;
and . . .
(3)
If in respect of any premises, an applicant, occupier or consumer
is not the registered owner of the premises, an agreement in writing
between the owner of the premises and the consumer for the rendering
of a connection is required beforehand. The agreement reached
binds
both the consumer and the owner of the premises. . .
18.
Payment of charges
(1)
The consumer is liable for all electricity supplied, whether
metered or unmetered, to his or her premises, including electricity
supplied on a prepayment basis, at the prescribed tariff, a
copy of which is obtainable from the Municipality during
normal office hours at the prescribed fee.
(2)
The Municipality must render an account to the consumer on a
regular basis in respect of electricity which is metered by means of
a conventional meter
(excluding consumers with unmetered
electricity supply in accordance with an agreement with the
Municipality). The municipality
must provide on the account all
information (meter readings, dates, etc) on which the account is
based.
(3)
All accounts envisaged in sub-section (2) are
deemed payable on
the due date reflected on the account and, on the consumer's failure
to pay, the Municipality must notify the
consumer and eventually
disconnect the electricity supply to the premises of the consumer.
The account as issued is considered the first notification of the
amount payable.
(4)
As regards the accounts envisaged in sub-section 2,
an error or
omission on any account from the Municipality or failure by the
Municipality to render an account does not relieve the
consumer of
the obligation to pay the amount due for electricity supplied to and
consumed at the premises
. The onus is on the consumer to ensure
that the account rendered is in accordance with the prescribed
tariff, charges and fees
for and in respect of the electricity
supplied to the premises.
.
. .
21.
Right to disconnect and suspend supply and the purchase of
electricity on a prepayment basis
(1)
The Municipality and the contractor acting on the instruction of
the Municipality, shall have the right, after giving notice, to
disconnect, suspend, curtail or reduce the electricity supply to any
premises
and/or suspend, curtail, reduce, or halt the purchase of
electricity by a consumer on a prepayment basis if –
(a)
the consumer or another person liable for payment for the supply
of electricity to the premises and/or for payment for any other
municipal services in respect of the premises, fails to pay any
charge due to the Municipality in respect of any electricity supplied
and/or any other municipal service provided by the Municipality in
respect of the premises, has failed to effect payment timeously
to
the Municipality.’ (Emphasis Added.)
Evaluation
of the merits
[21]
I have taken into account
that Vresthena does not have a contract with the City. The contract
is between the City and the Body Corporate.
The Body Corporate, which
Vresthena alleges to be dysfunctional did not bring the application.
Although the Body Corporate was
cited as the second respondent, it
did not oppose the application nor did it file any supplementary
affidavits in support of the
application by Vresthena.
[22]
It is common cause that
there is a history of non-payment for electricity services since the
time when the property was under the
control of the previous owner of
the relevant sections Div Prop 11 (Pty) Ltd and Div Prop 12 (Pty) Ltd
(Div Prop), and thereafter
their liquidators. As long ago as 11
December 2015, the City was ordered to reconnect the electricity
supply to Div Prop’s
sections and Div Prop was ordered to
settle the amount of R2.7 million owed to the City in tranches. On 15
January 2016 Mystra
(Pty) Ltd (Mystra), which owned the Super Spar
and Tops, applied for a separate electricity account. The application
was, however,
declined by the City engineer. The reason given was
that no separate connections can be given to sectional title
sections, as the
contract was with the Body Corporate. In terms of
the court order, the liquidators had until September 2017 to settle
their debt
with the City, which they did.
[23]
On the 3 October 2017, the
Body Corporate had applied for a new account with the City and
entered into a new agreement for the provision
of services for the
Retail Park. On 14 February 2018, the City disconnected electricity
due to non-payment. Mystra and Vresthena
brought an urgent
application to court for the reconnection of the electricity supply,
and they sought a separate electricity supply.
They did not cite the
Body Corporate in that application.
[24]
The most significant
development was that on 19 June 2018 a special general meeting of the
Body Corporate was held, where new trustees
were elected. They were
given the mandate to address the electricity issue. According to
Vresthena they did nothing. Vresthena
alleged that on 19 February
2019 they applied for a prepaid meter, which application was declined
by the City. The City always
maintained a view that owners of the
sections must sort out the governance with the Body Corporate that
had a contract with the
City. The City maintained that by January
2022 the
Retail
Park
owed
it an amount in excess of R24 million. No payment had been made
since November 2017 when the Body Corporate took over
from the
liquidators. The bulk supply system, according to the City was chosen
by the Body Corporate and as a result, Vresthena
could not seek to
have a separate meter installed. Vresthena countered by stating that
they were not liable for the entire amount
to the City as part of the
debt had prescribed.
[25]
The
Constitutional Court in
Mkontwana
v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
[17]
held
that electricity is a component of basic services and that
municipalities are constitutionally and statutorily obliged to
provide their residents with electricity. However, non-payment for
such services has a negative impact on the provision of such
services
by the municipalities. In that regard citizens have to pay for such
services. As a form of credit control, any municipality
has a
statutory right to terminate such services on notice. Section 102 of
the Systems Act gives municipalities a discretion to
implement any
debt collection and credit control measures provided for in the Act.
The City relies on s 21 of the Standard Electricity
Supply By-law
(2013) (the Electricity By-Law), which reaffirms its right to
disconnect the supply of electricity.
[26]
Section 4(1) of the
Electricity By-law provides that the provision of electricity is
governed by the agreement between the City
and the relevant person
who has concluded the agreement with the City. Section 4(3) provides
for cases where the applicant is not
the registered owner of the
premises. In that case, there must be an agreement in writing between
the parties which binds both
the consumer and the owner of the
premises. Section 18 regulates the payment for all the electricity
supplied, whether metered
or unmetered. The City is obligated to
render an account to the consumer on a regular basis. In the event
that the consumer fails
to pay, the City must notify the consumer and
eventually disconnect the electricity supply to the premises of the
consumer, which
is in terms of s
18(3). Section 18 (4)
provides that ‘[a]s regards the accounts envisaged in
sub-section 2, an error or omission from the Municipality
or failure
by the Municipality to render an account does not relieve the
consumer of any obligation to pay for the amount due for
electricity
supplied to and consumed at the premises. The onus is on the consumer
to ensure that the account rendered is in accordance
with prescribed
tariff, charges and fees in respect of` the electricity supplied to
the premises’.
[27]
In
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
[18]
(
Joseph
)
the
Constitutional Court held that municipalities are obliged to provide
electricity to residents in their area as a matter of public
duty.
The duty to provide electricity is set out in ss 152(1) and 153 of
the Constitution read together with the duties of the
municipal
councils set out in ss 4(2) and s 73 of the Systems Act. This creates
a reciprocal obligation. If debts are not paid
to the municipality it
has a constitutional duty to implement debt collection measures. The
Constitutional Court in
Joseph
as
per Yacoob J held that ‘it is important for unpaid municipal
debt to be reduced by all legitimate means’.
[19]
In a separate concurring judgment O’Regan J affirmed that
‘[t]here can be no doubt that municipalities bear an important
constitutional obligation and a statutory responsibility to take
appropriate steps to ensure the efficient recovery of debt’.
[20]
[28]
Vresthena
submitted that since
the disconnection of electricity on 13 April 2022, the Body Corporate
endeavoured to negotiate the outstanding
account with the City, but
to no avail. It submitted that part of the debt was no longer
claimable as it had prescribed. The responsibility
for the payment of
electricity rested squarely on the Body Corporate, that is the Body
Corporate manager, the Retail Park and no
one else, as it had entered
into a contract for a bulk supply of electricity with the City as
from October 2017. The owners of
the various sections of the
Sectional Titles Scheme are in terms of the
Sectional Titles Act,
obliged
to pay their levies to the Body Corporate, who in turn must
pay for electricity and other services.
[29]
Vresthena
has not given any
reasons why the Body Corporate has failed to make payment for the
consumption of the electricity in the
Retail Park. There
was no averment by Vresthena that, they, as owners of various
sections, have made payments to the Body Corporate,
nor compelled the
Body Corporate to perform its mandate. They simply allege that the
Body Corporate is dysfunctional and expect
the municipality to
regulate the Body Corporate’s affairs. A municipality has no
right to interfere in the affairs of the
Sectional Titles Scheme. I
find it disturbing that instead of compelling the Body Corporate,
whom Vresthena cited as a second respondent,
to perform its mandate,
it failed to do that. Vresthena and other owners have a remedy in
terms of the
Sectional Titles Act, which
entitles them to appoint new
and effective trustees, but they have not resorted to that.
[30]
In its founding affidavit,
Vresthena merely states that new trustees were appointed, and their
mandate was to sort the electricity
issue out, but nothing happened.
The Retail Park is a business complex which leases premises to ‘blue
chip companies’,
but its Body Corporate fails to pay the
necessary dues to the City. This means that the City is financing
Vresthena and other sectional
title owners in their business
interests.
[31]
Electricity
is a basic municipal service.
[21]
Section 2
of the
National Energy Act 34 of 2008
provides that its
object amongst others, is to ensure an uninterrupted supply of energy
to the nation and to facilitate energy
access to improve the quality
of life of South African people. However, the right to access
electricity is not absolute. Non-payment
for the provision of
electricity impacts negatively on the supply thereof. Chapter 9 of
the Systems Act regulates the credit control
and debt collection
processes of the municipality, which ensures the viability of the
municipalities.
[32]
From this it may be
concluded that Vresthena and the other owners of the sections had no
right, even prima facie, to continue to
receive electricity without
payment for those services. The City was enjoined to implement the
credit and debt collection measures
against the Body Corporate and
terminate the supply of electricity to the Retail Park. The order of
the high court failed to take
this into account. It assumed, despite
the history of ongoing non-payment over many years, that Vresthena
and the other owners
had a right to receive electricity and ordered
the restoration of its supply without imposing the reciprocal
obligation on the
owners for payment of the substantial arrear
amount. It even sanctioned the illegal reconnection of electricity by
civilians other
than the City. The high court failed to consider
whether Vresthena had other alternatives, when it clearly did. As
already alluded
to, Vresthena and the other owners have recourse
against the Body Corporate. It is not enough for them to say that the
Body Corporate
is dysfunctional and, therefore, it cannot take steps
to rectify the situation regarding payment to the City for the
electricity
consumed by the commercial owners of sections in the
Retail Park.
[33]
In effect, the high court’s
order impermissibly interfered with the constitutional obligation on
the City to ensure the collection
of revenue for the services it
provides. Consequently, the high court should not have granted the
order as it did not satisfy the
requirements of an interdict.
[34]
As a result, the following
orders are made:
1
Condonation is granted and the appeal is reinstated.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs, such costs to include the costs
consequent upon the
employment of two counsel where applicable.
3
The orders of the high court are set aside and replaced by the
following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs
consequent upon the employment of two counsel where applicable.’
_____________________
Y T MBATHA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the applicant: M A
Dewrance SC and N Erasmus
Instructed by:
Diale Mogashoa Attorneys, Pretoria
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
For the respondent: M
Louw
Instructed by: Wiese and
Wiese Inc, Pretoria
Hendre Conradie Inc,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order of the Republic of South Africa
[1992]
ZASCA 197; [1993] 1 All SA 365 (A).
[2]
Ibid
para 12.
[3]
FirstRand Bank Ltd v
McLachlan and Others
[2020]
ZASCA 31
;
2020 (6) SA 46
(SCA)
paras
21-22.
[4]
Cyril
and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
[2024]
ZASCA 32
para 7.
[5]
City of Cape Town v
South African Human Rights Commission
[2021]
ZASCA 182
paras 10-12.
[6]
TWK Agriculture
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2023]
ZASCA 63
;
2023 (5) SA 163
(SCA) para 19.
[7]
Ibid para 21.
[8]
Cloete
and Another v S; Sekgala v Nedbank Limited
[2019]
ZACC 6
;
2019 (5) BCLR 544
(CC);
2019 (4) SA 268
(CC) para 57.
[9]
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2022]
ZACC 34; 2023 (1) SA 353 (CC0; 2022 (12) BCLR 1521 (CC).
[10]
Cyril
para
8.
[11]
Nedbank
Limited and Another v Survé and Others
[2023]
ZASCA 178
;
[2024] 1 All SA 615
(SCA) para 18.
[12]
Lebashe
para
45.
[13]
Survé
para
30.
[14]
Lebashe
para
41.
[15]
Debt collection
responsibility of municipalities.
—
A
municipality—
(
a
)must
collect all money that is due and payable to it, subject to this Act
and any other applicable legislation; and
(
b
)
for this purpose, must adopt, maintain and implement a credit
control and debt collection policy which is consistent with its
rates and tariff policies and complies with the provisions of this
Act.
[16]
By-laws to give
effect to policy.
—
(1)
A municipal council must adopt By-laws to give effect to the
municipality’s credit control and debt collection policy,
its
implementation and enforcement.
(2)By-laws
in terms of
subsection
(1)
may
differentiate between different categories of ratepayers, users of
services, debtors, taxes, services, service standards and
other
matters as long as the differentiation does not amount to unfair
discrimination.
[17]
Mkontwana v Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
[2004]
ZACC 9
;
2005 (1) SA 530
(CC);
2005 (2) BCLR 150
(CC) paras 35 and
38.
[18]
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2009]
ZACC 30; 2010 (3) BCLR 212 (CC) 2010 (4) SA 55 (CC).
[19]
Ibid 42.
[20]
Ibid 43.
[21]
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2009]
ZACC 30
;
2010 (3) BCLR 212
(CC)
2010 (4) SA 55
(CC) para 34.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Vresthena (Pty) Ltd and Others (1124/2022) [2023] ZASCA 104; 2023 (6) SA 434 (SCA) (22 June 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 104Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa99% similar
City Of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Copperleaf Country Estate (Pty) Ltd and Another (245/2023) [2024] ZASCA 69 (3 May 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 69Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Malvigenix NPC t/a Wecanwin and Others (90/2023) [2024] ZASCA 76 (16 May 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 76Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another v Seale and Another (121/2024) [2025] ZASCA 156 (20 October 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 156Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Tshepo Gugu Trading CC and Another (1054/2022) [2024] ZASCA 81 (28 May 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 81Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar