Case Law[2022] ZASCA 10South Africa
Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v Lekwa Ratepayers Association and Others; Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd and Others (870/2020) [2022] ZASCA 10; [2022] 1 All SA 642 (SCA); 2022 (4) SA 78 (SCA) (21 January 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Constitutional Law and Administrative Law – Cooperative governance – Section 41 of the Constitution and section 40 of the Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act 13 of 2005 require Organs of State to make reasonable effort in good faith to settle intergovernmental disputes.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v Lekwa Ratepayers Association and Others; Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd and Others (870/2020) [2022] ZASCA 10; [2022] 1 All SA 642 (SCA); 2022 (4) SA 78 (SCA) (21 January 2022)
Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v Lekwa Ratepayers Association and Others; Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd and Others (870/2020) [2022] ZASCA 10; [2022] 1 All SA 642 (SCA); 2022 (4) SA 78 (SCA) (21 January 2022)
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sino date 21 January 2022
THE SUPREME COURT
OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 870/2020
In
the matter between:
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
LEKWA
RATEPAYERS ASSOCIATION NPC
FIRST RESPONDENT
LEKWA
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
THIRD RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF ENERGY
FOURTH RESPONDENT
PREMIER
OF
MPUMALANGA
FIFTH RESPONDENT
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR
COOPERATIVE
GOVERNANCE AND TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS,
MPUMALANGA
SIXTH RESPONDENT
In
the matter between:
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
VAAL
RIVER DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
NGWATHE
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
THIRD RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF
ENERGY
FOURTH RESPONDENT
PREMIER
OF FREE STATE
FIFTH RESPONDENT
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR
COOPERATIVE
GOVERNANCE AND TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS,
FREE
STATE
SIXTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v
Lekwa Ratepayers Association and Others; Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v
Vaal River Development Association (Pty)
Ltd and Others
(870/20)
[2022] ZASCA 10
(21 January 2022)
Coram:
Dambuza, Van der
Merwe and Gorven JJA and Meyer and Kgoele AJJA
Heard:
23 November 2021
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties’ legal representatives via e-mail,
publication on the
Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00
on 21 January
2022.
Summary:
Constitutional Law and Administrative Law –
Cooperative governance – Section 41 of the Constitution and
section
40
of the
Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act 13 of 2005
require Organs of State to make reasonable effort in good faith to
settle intergovernmental disputes.
Interdict –
Interim interdict – Appealable - although it is generally
considered not in the interests of justice to permit an
appeal
against an interim interdict, there are limited circumstances where
the interests of justice dictate that an interim interdict
be
appealable.
Interdict –
Interim interdict - Prima facie right - whether residents of two
municipalities have established the requisite prima
facie right at
the level required for interim relief to restrain Eskom from
implementing its unilateral decisions to
reduce
its bulk electricity supply to municipalities to historic, outdated
and inadequate contractually agreed supply levels without
prior
compliance with the
constitutional and
statutory imperatives relating to intergovernmental dispute
resolution mechanisms
, which
rendered municipalities unable to fulfil their constitutional
obligations owed to their citizenry resulting in a catastrophe
unfolding
with hospitals, schools,
households and businesses severely disrupted and with damage to the
environment as a result of water sources
being contaminated due to
damage to the municipal water and sewage systems.
P
rima
facie right
on the facts
established
by
demonstrating prospects of success in review proceedings in due
course to review and set aside Eskom’s decisions
on
the basis that they undermine constitutional and statutory
imperatives.
___________________________________________________________________
ORDER
___________________________________________________________________
On
appeal from:
High Court, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria (Millar AJ sitting as court of first instance):
1.
The appeal in
Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v
Lekwa Ratepayers Association and Others
(High
Court case no. 35054/2020)
is
dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
2.
The appeal in
Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v
Vaal River Development Association and Others
(High
Court case no. 31813/2020)
is
dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
___________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
___________________________________________________________________
Meyer AJA
(Dambuza, Van der Merwe and Gorven JJA and Kgoele AJA concurring):
[1]
This appeal arises from two applications brought in the Gauteng
Division of the High
Court, Pretoria: One under case number 31813/20
by the Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd against Eskom
Holdings SOC Limited
(Eskom), Ngwathe Local Municipality (Ngwathe
municipality), the National Energy Regulator of South Africa (NERSA),
the Minister of
Energy (the Minister), the Premier of the Free State
province and the Member of the Executive Council for Cooperative
Governance
and Traditional Affairs for the Free State province (the
Ngwathe application). The other under case number 35054/20 by the
Lekwa
Ratepayers Association NPC against Eskom, the Lekwa Local
Municipality (Lekwa municipality), the Minister, the Premier of the
Mpumalanga
province and the Member of the Executive Council for
Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs for the Mpumalanga
province (the
Lekwa application). The Ngwathe application concerns a
reduction of Eskom’s bulk electricity supply to Parys and
Vredefort, and
the Lekwa application a reduction of its bulk
electricity supply to the towns Standerton, Sakhile, Meyerville, and
surrounds.
[2]
Eskom took decisions to reduce its bulk electricity supply to the
Ngwathe and Lekwa
municipalities to historic, outdated and inadequate
contractually agreed ‘Notified Maximum Demand’ supply levels (NMD
supply
levels) as a result of those municipalities’ failure to
honour their payment obligations to Eskom over prolonged periods of
time
and the inability of Eskom and those municipalities to reach
agreements on the terms of Eskom agreeing to increase the NMD supply
levels to meet those municipalities’ present additional demand
requirements, despite the residents represented by the Vaal River
Development Association (Pty) Ltd (the Ngwathe residents) and those
represented by the Lekwa Ratepayers Association NPC (the Lekwa
residents) being paying consumers on pre-paid electricity. An NMD
supply level is the ‘maximum demand notified in writing’ by
the
consumer (municipality concerned) and accepted by the licensee
(Eskom) as the maximum demand bulk electricity which the particular
municipality requires Eskom to be able to supply on demand.
[3]
In the Ngwathe and Lekwa applications, the residents, through their
associations, sought
interim interdicts against Eskom to inter alia
restore the bulk supply of electricity to the Ngwathe and Lekwa
municipalities to
those levels supplied before the implementation of
the decisions to reduce the bulk supply to within the contractually
agreed NMD
supply levels, pending applications to review and set
aside those decisions of Eskom, either in terms of the Promotion of
Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) or legality reviews. Each
application was opposed only by Eskom. Although the two applications
were
not formally consolidated, they were heard together.
[4]
On 28 August 2020, the High Court (Millar AJ) granted an order that,
pending the finalisation
of the Ngwathe application and the final
adjudication of the Ngwathe residents’ review application, which
was to be instituted
on or before 30 October 2020, Eskom ‘is to
increase, alternatively restore the maximum electricity load supply
to Parys and Vredefort
to the level supplied prior to Eskom’s
recent implementation of the current limited 95% of 21 MVA to Parys
and 4.3 MVA to Vredefort;
thus interdicting and prohibiting Eskom
from implementing its decision to limit electricity supply to Ngwathe
per Parys and Vredefort
to the Notified Maximum Demand (“NMD”) of
95% of 21 MVA in Parys and 4.3 MVA in Vredefort pending an agreement
acceptable to
Eskom on the settlement of arrears owed by [the Ngwathe
municipality] (“the decision”)’. Eskom and the Ngwathe
municipality
were further ‘jointly and severally ordered to, within
5 days of the order, alternatively a time period set by the Court,
restore
the bulk electricity supply equipment to enable both
transformers at Parys to be available and to render sufficient
capacity at Parys,
alternatively to install infrastructure to permit
and allow electricity supply to Parys to the levels experienced prior
to recent
limitation associated with the NMD of 21 MVA for Parys
following upon implementation of the decision’. Eskom was also
‘directed
to provide and assist the [Ngwathe municipality] to
enable ringfeed of supply to Parys, to serve as back-up and to serve
as a source
in cases of emergency ensuring that adequate alternative
capacity is available at the aforesaid towns’.
[5]
In the Lekwa application, the High Court granted an order that,
pending the finalisation
of the Lekwa application and the final
adjudication of the Lekwa residents’ review application, which was
also to be instituted
on or before 30 October 2020, Eskom ‘is to
increase, alternatively restore the maximum electricity load supply
to Lekwa Local Municipality
(“Lekwa”) per the towns of
Standerton, Sakhile, Meyerville and surrounds to the level supplied
prior to Eskom’s recent implementation
of the current limited 55
MVA, being at least 67 MVA; thus interdicting and prohibiting Eskom
from continuing with implementing its
decision to limit electricity
supply to Lekwa to the Notified Maximum Demand (“NMD”) of 55 MVA
(“the decision”)’. The Lekwa
municipality was also interdicted
‘from implementing rotational load shedding premised on a
limitation linked to NMD of 55 MVA
to Standerton, Sakhile, Meyerville
and surrounds’. The appeal, with leave of the High Court, is
against the orders made in both
applications.
[6]
Eskom and the Ngwathe and Lekwa residents are all ad idem t
hat
the present matter is one of those exceptional cases where the
interests of justice demand that the interim interdicts granted
by
the High Court should be appealable. I agree. This appeal raises an
issue of special public importance. It is whether the residents
have
established the requisite prima facie right at the level required for
interim relief to restrain Eskom from implementing its
unilateral
decisions to
reduce
its bulk electricity supply to municipalities to historic, outdated
and inadequate contractually agreed NMD supply levels as
a result of
municipalities’ failure to honour their payment obligations to
Eskom over prolonged periods of time and the inability
of Eskom and
those municipalities to reach agreements on the terms of Eskom
agreeing to increase the NMD supply levels to meet those
municipalities’ present additional demand requirements, pending the
finalisation of review applications to set aside such decisions
under
PAJA or the principle of legality. Electricity is one of the most
common and important basic municipal services and has become
virtually indispensable, particularly in urban society. Citizens have
a right to receive basic services, and this includes electricity.
[1]
[7]
As I said in
Old
Mutual Limited and Others v Moyo and Another
,
[2]
after a review of the authoritative judgments on this question:
‘
Although it is generally
considered not in the interests of justice to permit an appeal
against an interim interdict since it will
defeat the interim nature
of the order and undermine ‘a necessarily imperfect procedure,
which is nevertheless usually best designed
to achieve justice’, it
is now settled that there are limited circumstances where the
interests of justice dictate that an interim
interdict be
appealable. (See for example
Cipla
para 37 [
Cipla
Agrimed (Pty) Ltd v Merck Sharp Dohme Corporation and others
2018
(6) SA 440
(SCA)],
Department of Home Affairs and another v Islam
and others
[2018] ZASCA 48
para 10 and
Velocity Trade Capital
(Pty) Ltd v Quicktrade (Pty) Ltd and others
[2019] 4 All SA 986
(WCC), para 30
et seq
. Also see the Constitutional Court
judgments in cases such as
S v S
paras 46-47 [
S v S and
Another
2019 (6) SA 1
(CC)],
Tshwane City v Afriforum and
Another
2016 (6) SA 279
(CC) para 40,
Children’s Institute v
Presiding Officer, Children’s Court, Krugersdorp, and Others
2013 (2) SA 620
(CC) para 16 and
National Treasury and Others v
Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC) para 25, although it should be borne in mind that the operative
standard for determining whether leave to appeal should be granted
by
the Constitutional Court is the interests of justice.) In
deciding what is in the interests of justice, each case has to
be
considered in the light of its own facts. (
Member of the
Executive Council for Development and Planning and Local Government,
Gauteng v Democratic Party and others
1998 (4) SA 1157
(CC), para
32.) In other words, it is a fact-specific enquiry. (
S
v S
para 47).’
[8]
I now turn to
the facts relevant to the
determination of this appeal; they are straightforward and
essentially uncontentious. The generation, transmission
and
distribution of electricity is regulated by the Electricity
Regulation Act 4 of 2006 (ERA). The NERSA is a regulatory authority
established in terms of s 3 of the National Energy Regulator Act 40
of 2004 (NERA). In terms of s 3 of the ERA, it has been designated
as
the custodian and enforcer of the regulatory framework of the ERA. As
the regulator, it is empowered, inter alia, in terms of
s 4
(a)
(i)
(aa)
of the ERA read with its s 1 definitions, ‘to issue licences for
the operation of generation [“the production of electricity
by any
means”], transmission [“the conveyance of electricity through a
transmission power system excluding trading”] and distribution
facilities [“the conveyance of electricity through a distribution
power system excluding trading”]’.
[9]
Eskom, an organ of state, is licensed by NERSA to generate, transmit
and distribute
electricity countrywide. Currently, it is the only
entity licensed to supply electricity to municipalities in the
country. Municipalities,
for their part, are licensed by NERSA to
reticulate electricity supplied to them in bulk by Eskom. They, in
turn, supply and on-sell
the electricity to the end-users within
their areas of jurisdiction. The municipalities reticulate the bulk
electricity supplied
by Eskom to their municipal grids through their
electricity supply networks to the end-users.
[10]
The contractual relationship between Eskom on the one hand and
municipalities on the other is, apart
from the ERA, also regulated in
terms of written electricity supply agreements concluded between
them. The written electricity supply
agreement under which Eskom
currently supplies electricity to the Lekwa municipality was
concluded between the Electricity Supply
Commission (Escom),
established under the Electricity Act 42 of 1922, and the Standerton
municipality on 26 January 1981, which is
more than forty years ago.
In terms thereof, the parties agreed that the notified maximum demand
of the Standerton municipality at
the date of signing that agreement
was 55 MVA. The written electricity supply agreement under which
Eskom supplies electricity to
the
Ngwathe
municipality
was concluded between Eskom
and the Ngwathe municipality on 29 September 2008, which is more than
thirteen years ago. In terms thereof,
the parties agreed that the
notified maximum demand of the Ngwathe municipality at the date of
signing that agreement was 21 MVA
for Parys and 4,3 MVA for
Vredefort.
[11]
The written electricity supply agreements concluded between Eskom and
the two municipalities provide
that, should a municipality at any
time require any increase in the NMD supply level in force from time
to time, it shall give adequate
notice in writing to Eskom of the
additional demand which it requires Eskom to supply and the date at
which the additional demand
is required. If Eskom accepts the NMD
supply level in force from time to time, it will be increased by the
additional demand required
by the municipality.
[12]
Provisions relating to the NMD supply levels form not only part of
the electricity supply agreements
contemplated in the ERA, but also
the rules and licence conditions prescribed by NERSA – ‘the
Notified Maximum Demand (NMD) and
maximum export capacity (MEC)
rules’ (the NERSA rules) – and Eskom’s extensive Notified
Maximum Demand Rules (Eskom’s NMD
rules). Paragraph 2 of the
NERSA rules states:
‘
According to the agreement the
licensee is required to provide the contracted amount of Notified
Maximum Demand capacity, and the
customer must never exceed this
capacity. When customers exceed their monthly Notified Maximum
Demand . . ., a network excess
charge is imposed for the excess.
This is due to the fact that a customer that exceeds the Notified
Maximum Demand does so
without permission. They use capacity
that is not allocated to their point of delivery, put the network
under strain, hamper
the ability to do proper network and capacity
planning. Moreover, they place the network and other customers’
electricity
supply and the licence at risk.’
[13]
It is common cause that the NMD supply levels in force for the Lekwa
and Ngwathe municipalities are hopelessly
outdated. Their actual
consumption of and need for electricity far exceed the agreed NMD
supply levels. The Lekwa municipality requires
more than 20%
additional bulk electricity supply; for example, an informal
settlement was electrified, and corporate users settled
after the NMD
supply levels were determined and agreed. The Ngwathe municipality
requires approximately 5% additional bulk electricity
supply. The
cause for the additional demand required by the Ngwathe municipality
is in dispute and Eskom maintains it is the result
of illegal
connections to the municipality’s electricity supply network.
[14]
The two municipalities can aptly be described as ‘dysfunctional’
and ‘delinquent’. I have mentioned
that the residents involved in
this litigation are all paying consumers for pre-paid electricity.
However, the Ngwathe and Lekwa
municipalities have failed to honour
their payment obligations towards Eskom
for
years. As of the end of June 2020, the Ngwathe municipality’s
arrear indebtedness to Eskom amounted to R1 259 417 112.66,
and that of the Lekwa municipality to R1 125 526 024
as of 31 July 2020. Both municipalities are indisputably in breach
of
their electricity supply agreements with Eskom.
[15]
Nevertheless, Eskom did not previously limit electricity supply to
the two municipalities to their contractually
agreed NMD supply
levels. Instead, it continued to raise penalties in the form of
contractually agreed network excess charges for
the monthly
exceedance of their NMD capacities.
Both
municipalities applied for increases in their NMD supply levels to
meet their additional electricity demands. However, Eskom
refused to
agree to such increases because the municipalities defaulted on their
payment obligations and an agreement could not be
reached on the
terms upon which Eskom would agree to such NMD supply level
increases.
[16]
In February 2020, Eskom decided to reduce the bulk electricity supply
to the recalcitrant Ngwathe and
Lekwa municipalities. On 10 July
2020, Eskom implemented its decisions. The implementation thereof
caused rotational load shedding
in the respective municipalities in
addition to the national load shedding applied by Eskom whenever the
national grid faced overloading.
Consequently, Parys experienced load
shedding for approximately more than 11 hours a day in certain
instances, and the affected towns
in the Lekwa municipality
experienced municipal load shedding for up to two hours at a time on
average three times a day.
[17]
Apart from an ensuing environmental disaster, each of the affected
towns within the Ngwathe and Lekwa
municipalities experienced an
unfolding catastrophe with socio-economic and humanitarian
consequences that adversely impacted the
health and well-being of
individuals within their jurisdictions. The effects of the additional
municipal electricity interruptions
to industries, businesses,
professional practices and the like threatened them with closure or
relocation with the concomitant loss
of jobs. Hospitals could not
function adequately, and the lives of patients requiring oxygen were
placed at risk. The frequency and
duration of the municipal
electricity disruptions paralysed essential services, such as water
supply to households and the functioning
of sewage works. Once the
electricity was disrupted, the water treatment plants as well as
those pumping water to ensure adequate
water pressure came to a
standstill with the result that taps ran dry, households ran out of
water, bulk water usage facilities –
industrial and commercial,
such as the poultry industry and abattoirs in or close to the
affected towns – ceased functioning. Sewage
could then also not be
pumped into the sewage processing plants but instead spilt into the
streets of the affected towns, with the
severe associated risk to the
health of the communities, and into the Vaal River.
[18]
The Vaal River is the third largest river in South Africa (1 120
km long) after the Orange River
(2 200 km long) and the Limpopo
River (1 750 km long) and is the main water source for the
Witwatersrand area. It has its
source near Breyten in Mpumalanga
province, east of Johannesburg and about 30 kilometres north of
Ermelo, and then flows westwards
to its conjunction with the Orange
River southwest of Kimberley in the Northwest Cape. The construction
of the Vaal Dam was completed
in 1938. The dam receives its water
inter alia from the Vaal River and ensures water supply throughout
the year even when the Vaal
River is not full. The river for many
years regularly experiences pollution of its upper reaches, which
affects users downstream.
The Vaal River passes through inter
alia Standerton and Parys in its upper reaches. The frequent
electricity disruptions caused water
treatment plants in Parys and
Standerton to be dysfunctional for lengthy periods of time, resulting
in thousands of litres of raw
sewage pouring into the Vaal River.
This contributed to the gradual destruction of the Vaal River system
from those points of sewage
pollution and downstream inter alia to
the Vaal Dam.
[19]
Efforts on the part of the Ngwathe and Lekwa residents – inter alia
through letters of demand; a meeting
between representatives of the
Lekwa residents, Eskom and the Ngwathe municipality; and calls by the
Ngwathe residents for the Executive
of the Free State province to
intervene – in order to resolve the impasse and disputes between
Eskom and the two municipalities,
proved fruitless and brought no
relief to the Ngwathe and Lekwa residents. Negotiations between Eskom
and the two municipalities
to increase their contractually agreed NMD
supply levels followed but did not result in any agreement being
reached. The amount owing
to Eskom by each municipality is not
disputed. However, issues such as the monthly prepayment for the
additional bulk electricity
supply and the liability for repairs to
and the upgrading of the infrastructure to accommodate the increase
of the contractually
agreed NMD supply levels were not resolved.
Hence, the initiation by the Ngwathe and Lekwa residents, through
their associations,
of each application in the High Court.
[20]
In finding that the residents have established a prima facie right to
the interim interdictory relief
they sought,
the
High Court (Millar AJ) concluded thus:
‘
37. While
there is no specific reference in Grootboom [
Government
of the Republic of South Africa v Grootboom and Others
2001
(1) SA 46
(CC) para 35] to the provision of access to and the supply
of electricity, it is self-evident that the supply of electricity is
the
cornerstone upon which all the realization of other rights is
based. Homes cannot be built without electricity. Water cannot be
pumped
and sewerage reticulation cannot operate without electricity.
Healthcare and in particular the operation of a healthcare facility
which requires at a minimum running water and electricity to operate
essential life-saving equipment cannot be realized without the
supply
of electricity. In essence, the “
inherent
dignity”
and very “
right
to life”
of the residents of the
municipality is affected by the supply of electricity.
38. The fact that Eskom
relies on the contractual relationship that it has with the
respective municipalities does not detract
from the fact that it is a
state-owned enterprise. It is wholly owned by the state and
exists with the benefit of an ostensible
monopoly on the supply of
electricity, not only for the purpose of generating income for the
state but also for the promotion of
the rights of individual
citizens.
39. Accordingly, even
though the applicants are themselves not parties to the contracts
between Eskom and the municipalities,
Eskom’s enforcement of the
terms of those contracts, in the present instance in regard to
limitation of supply to NMD, infringes
on the rights of the
applicants and offer no defence to the applicants’ assertion that
Eskom is subject to PAJA.
40. The applicants have the
right to the supply of electricity by Eskom. In the present matters
however the question is not
whether Eskom is supplying electricity or
not but rather whether it is supplying sufficient electricity. It
seems to me at the very
least that enjoying a clear right to be
supplied with electricity, the right to be supplied with sufficient
electricity to meet the
most basic threshold of the individual rights
in the bill of rights must at least be a prima facie right. To find
otherwise would
render those rights and the obligation on the State
and its organs – which include Eskom – to fulfil them, nugatory.’
(Footnotes omitted.)
[21]
The real question for determination in this appeal is whether the
High Court was correct in finding that
the residents have established
a prima facie right to grant the interim interdictory relief, which
it granted. It is indisputable
that the other requisites have been
met. It is trite that at the level for the granting of an interim
interdict, an applicant must
establish
a
prima facie right, one that may even be open to some doubt.
A
prima facie right may
on the facts
be established - through the application of the principles set out in
Webster v Mitchell
1948
(1) SA 1186
(W) at 1189, read with the
caveat
in
Gool v Minister of Justice and Another
[1955] 3 All SA 115
(C);
1955 (2) SA 682
(C)
at 688D-E, and as subsequently further qualified in
Ferreira
v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell and Others
1995
(2) SA 813
(W);
1995 (4) BCLR 437(W)
and endorsed by the
Constitutional Court in
South African Informal
Traders Forum and Others v City Of Johannesburg and Others; South
African National Traders Retail Association
v City of Johannesburg
and Others
2014 (4) SA 371
(CC);
2014 (6)
BCLR 726
;
[2014] ZACC 8
, para 25 -
by
demonstrating prospects of success in the review proceedings in due
course.
[22]
In
Resilient
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd and Others
(
Resilient
(GJ)),
[3]
Resilient applied for an interim interdict pending a review that was
brought against a decision of Eskom to cut electricity supply
to the
Gamagara Local Authority (Gamagara) on a phased discontinuance basis
for non-payment by Gamagara in breach of the electricity
supply
agreement between Eskom and Gamagara. Van der Linde J found that the
facts showed that a humanitarian crisis would result
from Gamagara’s
electricity supply disconnection.
[4]
He found that Eskom was, on a proper construction of s 21(5) of the
ERA,
[5]
read with the
electricity supply agreement between Eskom and Gamagara, entitled to
interrupt the supply of electricity to Gamagara
for non-payment. But,
he found that ‘given the nature and source of Eskom’s power, its
exercise is, however, administrative action
for the purposes of s 33
of the Constitution and PAJA, and constrained, if not by the
requirement of reasonableness, then – at
best for Eskom - by the
baseline standard of rationality’.
[6]
Van der Linde J held that in the light of the catastrophic
socio-economic and humanitarian consequences that were to follow,
Eskom’s
decision was not rationally connected to the purpose for
which the power to do so was given. He considered that conclusion
sufficient
to establish for Resilient a prima facie right, though
open to some doubt, for a review down the line of Eskom’s
decision.
[7]
[23]
In
Eskom
Holdings Soc Limited v Resilient Properties (Pty) Ltd and others
(
Resilient
(SCA)),
[8]
two municipalities, the Emahlaleni Local Municipality (ELM) and the
Thaba Chuweu Municipality (TCLM) faced the threat of having their
bulk electricity supply from Eskom interrupted due to decisions taken
by Eskom to incrementally interrupt the supply of bulk electricity
to
those municipalities and ultimately to terminate the supply, as a
result of their persistent failure over several years to pay
for the
bulk electricity supplied by Eskom in breach of their contractual
obligations. The evidence presented established that
those
electricity disruptions and ultimate termination would have ‘a
devastating effect as they “threatened the very fabric of
society”,
with hospitals, schools, households and businesses severely
disrupted’ and with damage to the environment as a result
of water
sources being contaminated due to the damage to the municipal water
and sewage systems.
[24]
In dismissing the appeals against the judgment of the Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Hughes
J), reviewing and
setting aside those decisions of Eskom, Petse DP, who wrote the
unanimous judgment of this Court, comprehensively
referred to the
applicable constitutional and statutory framework, which requires no
repetition in this judgment. In summary, electricity
is a component
of the basic services that municipalities are constitutionally and
statutorily obliged to provide to their residents.
[9]
The provincial executive, and ultimately the national executive, are
constitutionally and statutorily enjoined to intervene inter
alia if
a municipality, as a result of a crisis in its financial affairs, is
in serious or persistent breach of its obligations to
provide basic
services or to meet its financial obligations.
[10]
Eskom has the power under s 21(5) of the ERA to interrupt the supply
of electricity to a municipality.
[11]
Before Eskom decides to invoke its powers under s 21(5), it must be
mindful of its constitutional obligations
as an Organ
of State.
‘
As
an Organ of State, Eskom bears certain constitutional duties.
The relationship between Eskom on the one hand and the ELM
and the
TCLM on the other is more than merely a contractual one regulated
purely in terms of the ESA’s [electricity supply agreements]
that
the parties concluded. Eskom supplies bulk electricity to the
Municipalities which, in turn, have a concomitant duty to
supply it
to the end-users. The unique feature of this relationship is
that Eskom, as an Organ of State, supplies electricity
to local
spheres of government to secure the economic and social well-being of
the people. This then brings the relationship within
the purview of
the IRFA [Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act 31 of 2005]
.’
[12]
Organs of State are
constitutionally and statutorily required to make reasonable efforts
in good faith to settle intergovernmental
disputes.
[13]
[25]
This Court further held that there was a dispute between Eskom on the
one hand and the ELM and the TCLM
on the other as contemplated in s
41 of the Constitution and ss 40 and 41 of the IRFA
[14]
and that ‘Eskom’s decision to interrupt or terminate bulk
electricity supply to the entire Municipality without prior
compliance
with Sections 40 and 41 of the IRFA, is inimical to the
constitutional obligations that it bears’.
[15]
Petse DP inter alia said this:
‘
[74] As to the question
whether there is a dispute between Eskom on the one hand and the ELM
and the TCLM on the other, the following
bears emphasis. It is true
that there is no real dispute as to the existence of the debts owed
to Eskom by both the ELM and the TCLM.
Nor is there a dispute as to
the inability of these Municipalities to make any meaningful payments
themselves due to their parlous
financial state. The real disputes
concerned the manner in which these two Municipalities could be
enabled or empowered to pay their
debts to Eskom and thus whether it
was appropriate in the circumstances to interrupt the supply of
electricity to exact payment from
them. It was in relation to these
disputes that Eskom and the affected Municipalities, in collaboration
with the other State role
players, were constitutionally obliged to
make ‘every reasonable effort’ to avoid or settle, but failed to
do so.
[75] I am therefore persuaded
that there was a live dispute between Eskom on the one hand and the
ELM and the TCLM on the other, in
relation to the manner as to how
the debt would be liquidated and the remedies available to Eskom in
the event of default. That the
two Municipalities involved signed
acknowledgments of debt detailing how the debt was to be liquidated
cannot assist Eskom. This
must be so because the acknowledgments of
debt themselves under the heading “Default” provided in terms
that “Eskom may
with due regard to all legislation . . .
take
whatever legal remedies available to it including disconnection of
supply of electricity . . . (my emphasis). In the context
of
the facts of these proceedings the “relevant legislation” is the
IRFA, section 139 of the MFMA and PAJA.
. . .
[80] It must therefore perforce
follow that Eskom is under a constitutional duty to ensure that
Municipalities, which are solely dependent
on it for electricity
supply, are enabled to discharge their obligations under the
Constitution. Thus, it goes without saying that
Eskom cannot act in a
way that would undermine the ability of the [m]unicipalities to
fulfil their constitutional and statutory obligations
to the
citizenry. For as Froneman J said in
Allpay Consolidated
Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and others v Chief Executive Officer,
South African Security Agency and others
[[2014] ZACC 12;
2014
(4) SA 179
(CC);
2014 (6) BCLR 641
(CC) para 49]:
“
Organs
of state have obligations that extend beyond the merely contractual.
In terms of s 8 of the Constitution, the Bill of Rights
binds all
organs of state. Organs of state, even if not state departments or
part of the administration of the national, provincial
or local
spheres of government, must thus “respect, protect, promote and
fulfil the rights in the Bill of Rights”.’
[81] . . .
Eskom
itself realised that the parlous state in which the ELM and the TCLM
are warranted intervention by the provincial government
and, if need
be, the national government. But this avenue was not explored because
Eskom was not prepared to wait for that process
to unfold. The irony
about Eskom’s obdurate stance was that it had indulged the ELM and
the TCLM for far too long. Eskom had inexplicably
failed to make any
serious attempt for more than ten years to act in terms of
legislative prescripts like s 51(1) of the PFMA. As
already
indicated, s 41(3) requires organs of state to exhaust all other
remedies to resolve disputes before they approach a court.
True, in
this instance, Eskom never approached a court. Instead, it took the
impugned decisions to interrupt electricity supply to
the
municipalities, hoping that doing so would coerce the municipalities
to pay for the electricity supplied over several years.
This, Eskom
asserts, had the desired effect in the Sabie matter that was settled
between the parties. In taking this route, Eskom
in effect
circumvented the consequences that flow from the prohibition
contained in ss 40 and 41 of the IRFA against instituting
proceedings
in a court to settle intergovernmental disputes if the dispute has
not been declared a formal intergovernmental dispute,
and all efforts
to resolve that dispute have not been exhausted in terms of chapter 4
of the IRFA and proved unsuccessful. Nothing
less than a ‘reasonable
effort, in good faith’ to resolve the dispute will suffice.’
[26]
This Court concluded
[16]
that
the High Court correctly reviewed and set aside Eskom’s decisions
on the basis that they were irrational and
under
s 6(2)
(e)
(iii)
of PAJA.
[17]
This is so, Petse
DP said, because Eskom’s avowed purpose for the interruptions of
the supply of electricity was to collect the
outstanding debt and to
reduce and manage the rate of escalation of the debt. Furthermore,
the court held that:
[18]
‘
Eskom’s
decision to interrupt bulk electricity supply to the ELM and the TCLM
was used as a leverage to extract payment. This drastic
measure, with
its catastrophic consequences . . . was decided upon at a time when
Eskom knew full well that it would not result in
the financially
strapped municipalities settling their debt, at least within the
short space of time allowed by Eskom when they had
all along
struggled to do so for several years, and since 2002 in the case of
the TCLM. And these measures were adopted by Eskom
against the
backdrop that Eskom itself had come to realise that without the
intervention of both the national government and the
provincial
government it was beyond the power of the ELM and the TCLM to turn
their fortunes around on their own. Eskom sought to
justify its
decisions by contending that the other reason why it embarked on its
chosen course was to contain the spiralling of the
debt. I have
already explained above that Eskom, as an organ of state, cannot act
in a manner that renders another organ of state
unable to discharge
its constitutional and statutory obligations. It must therefore
follow that Eskom’s impugned decisions were
irrational.’
Furthermore,
Eskom’s
decisions constitute administrative action as contemplated in s 1 of
PAJA, and they ‘failed to take into account relevant
considerations
that should have informed those decisions’.
[19]
[27]
Eskom argues that it is
distinguishable
because
Resilient
(SCA) was concerned with phased
interruptions and ultimate terminations of bulk electricity supply to
municipalities, instead of a
reduction of bulk electricity supply to
contractually agreed
NMD
supply levels and finds no application in casu. It, therefore,
raises similar arguments in this matter to those raised by
it in
Resilient
(SCA),
such as that it was merely enforcing its rights arising from the
electricity supply agreements between it and the Ngwathe and
Lekwa
municipalities; an increase in the NMD supply levels are in terms of
those electricity supply agreements, Eskom’s NMD rules
and the
NERSA rules not merely for the asking but requires its approval; it
has the power in terms of
s
21(5) of the ERA to interrupt or reduce the supply of electricity to
an entire municipality; it is the Ngwathe and Lekwa municipalities
that are constitutionally and statutorily obliged to provide basic
services to their residents and the residents, therefore, ought
to
have approached a court and obtained a mandamus against each
municipality. Eskom’s attempt at distinguishing
Resilient
(SCA) from the present matter is
artificial.
Resilient
(SCA)
is a case in point, and the principles enunciated therein are of
equal application in this matter.
[28]
The facts in
Resilient
(SCA),
Resilient
(GJ) and the
instant matter are similar. I accept that the potential of a
humanitarian crisis and adverse environmental consequences
established in the
Resilient
cases
should Eskom have implemented its decisions to incrementally
interrupt and ultimately terminate the bulk electricity supply
to the
municipalities involved are more severe than the horrendous
consequences that were prima facie established to have been unfolding
in casu. However, Eskom permitted the Ngwathe and Lekwa
municipalities for years to exceed their contractually agreed NMD
supply
levels and decided to reduce the bulk electricity supply to
them to their contractually agreed NMD levels during February 2020,
which
decisions it implemented on 10 July 2020. Despite Eskom’s
protestations to the contrary, it is clear at the level of a prima
facie
right that is required for an interim interdict that it took
and implemented those decisions
to
collect the outstanding debt owed to it by the Ngwathe and Lekwa
municipalities and to reduce and manage the rate of escalation
of the
debts in the event of it agreeing to increase the NMD supply levels
to meet their present
additional
electricity demands.
[29]
Although there is no real dispute as to the existence of the debts
owed to Eskom by both the Ngwathe
and Lekwa municipalities or as to
the inability of these recalcitrant and dysfunctional municipalities
to make any meaningful payments
themselves due to their parlous
financial state, disputes between Eskom on the one hand and the
Ngwathe and Lekwa municipalities
on the other, as contemplated in s
41 of the Constitution and inter alia ss 40 and 41 of the IRFA, have
prima facie arisen in relation
to the manner in which the debt would
be liquidated, the remedies available to Eskom in the event of
default, and the terms upon
which Eskom would agree to increase their
historically agreed NMD levels to meet their present electricity
supply demands.
[30]
Those intergovernmental disputes triggered the constitutionally and
statutorily required dispute resolution
mechanism for Organs of State
prescribed in the IRFA,
and
all efforts to resolve those disputes should have been exhausted in
terms of chapter 4 of the IRFA. But the dispute resolution
mechanism
was prima facie not followed
. It has been prima facie
established that
Eskom
itself realised that the parlous state of the Ngwathe and Lekwa
municipalities warranted intervention by the provincial government
and, if need be, the national government. This avenue was not
explored because Eskom was not prepared to wait for that process to
unfold.
[31]
Eskom, therefore, was not constitutionally and statutorily permitted
to unilaterally reduce the bulk
electricity supply to the Ngwathe and
Lekwa municipalities to their historic contractually agreed NMD
levels without it and the two
municipalities, in collaboration with
the other state role-players, first making every reasonable effort to
settle the intergovernmental
disputes.
Had
the dispute resolution mechanism been followed, it may well have
resulted in the intervention of both the provincial and national
levels of government, without which the Ngwathe and Lekwa
municipalities are unlikely to turn their fortunes around on their
own.
Instead, Eskom’s decisions to reduce the bulk
electricity supply rendered the Ngwathe and Lekwa municipalities
unable to fulfil
their constitutional obligations owed to their
citizenry, which resulted in a catastrophe unfolding
with
hospitals, schools, households and businesses severely disrupted and
with damage to the environment as a result of water sources
being
contaminated due to the damage to the municipal water and sewage
systems.
[32]
The residents, therefore, have established a prima facie right at the
level required for interim relief
that Eskom’s decisions and
implementation thereof are judicially reviewable and that they have
prospects of success in having them
set aside on the basis that they
undermine constitutional and statutory imperatives. All the
requirements for granting interim interdictory
relief having been
established, the High court correctly granted the interim interdicts
in all the circumstances of each case.
[33]
In the result, the following order is made:
1.
The appeal in
Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v
Lekwa Ratepayers Association and Others
(High
Court case no. 35054/2020)
is
dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
2.
The appeal in
Eskom Holdings Soc Ltd v
Vaal River Development Association and Others
(High
Court case no. 31813/2020)
is
dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
P
A MEYER
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
Appellant’s
counsel:
SL Shangisa SC (assisted by L Rakgwale)
Instructed
by:
Maponya Attorneys, Arcadia, Pretoria
Maponya
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
First Respondent’s
counsel:
H van Eeden SC (assisted
by DH Wijnbeek)
Instructed
by:
Lou van Wyk Inc., Parys
Andreas
Peens Attorneys, Koster
C/o Rosendorff Reitz
Barry CAJ van Rensburg, Bloemfontein
[1]
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2009]
ZACC 30
;
2010 (3) BCLR 212
(CC);
2010 (4) SA 55
(CC) paras 34 and
40.
[2]
Old Mutual Limited and
Others v Moyo and Another
[2020] ZAGPJHC 1;
[2020] 4 BLLR 401
(GJ);
[2020] 2 All SA 261
(GJ);
(2020) 41 ILJ 1085 (GJ) para 103.
[3]
Resilient Properties
(Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited and Others
[2018] ZAGPJHC 584; 2019 (2) SA 577 (GJ); [2019] 2 All SA 185 (GJ).
[4]
Resilient
(GJ),
paras 44-47.
[5]
Section
21(5) of the ERA reads as follows:
‘
A
licensee may not reduce or terminate the supply of electricity to a
customer, unless-
(a)
the customer is insolvent;
(b)
the customer has failed to honour, or
refuses to enter into, an agreement for the supply of electricity;
or
(c)
the customer has contravened the
payment conditions of that licensee.’
[6]
Ibid
para
74.
[7]
Ibid
paras 77-80.
[8]
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
v Resilient Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others; Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
v Sabie Chamber of Commerce and Tourism
and Others; Chweu Local
Municipality and Others v Sabie Chamber of Commerce and Tourism and
Others
[2020] ZASCA
185; [2021] 1 All SA 668 (SCA); 2021 (3) SA 47 (SCA).
[9]
Resilient
(SCA)
paras
29-34 (sections 151(1), 151(2), 151(3), 152 and 154(1) of the
Constitution; ss 4(2)
(f)
,
73(1), 73(2) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of
2000 (Municipal Systems Act); s 9(1)
(a)
(iii)
of the Housing Act 107 of 1997 (Housing Act).)
[10]
Ibid
paras
35-36(sections 2, 139(1), 139(2), and 139 (3) of the Local
Government: Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003 (MFMA);
ss
139(5) and 139(7) of the Constitution.)
[11]
Ibid
paras
47-60.
[12]
Ibid
para
79.
[13]
Ibid
paras 61-67(section 41 of the Constitution provides in relevant part
that:
‘
(1) All spheres of
government and all Organs of State within each sphere must –
(a)
preserve the peace, national unity and the indivisibility of the
Republic;
(b)
secure
the well-being of the people of the Republic;
(c)
provide effective, transparent, accountable and coherent
government for the Republic;
. . .
(h)
cooperate
with one another in mutual trust and good faith by –
. . .
(ii) assisting and
supporting one another;
(iii) informing one
another of, and consulting one another on, matters of common
interest;
(iv) coordinating
their actions and legislation with one another;
(v) adhering to
agreed procedures; and
(vi) avoiding legal
proceedings against one another.
(2) An Act of
Parliament must-
(a)
establish
or provide for structures and institutions to promote and facilitate
intergovernmental relations; and
(b)
provide
for appropriate mechanisms and procedures to facilitate settlement
of intergovernmental disputes.
(3) An organ of
state involved in an intergovernmental dispute must make every
reasonable effort to settle the dispute
by means of mechanisms and
procedures provided for that purpose, and must exhaust all other
remedies before it approaches a court
to resolve the dispute.
(4) If a court is
not satisfied that the requirements of subsection (3) have been met,
it may refer a dispute back to
the organs of state involved.’
The
Intergovernmental Relations Framework Act 31 of 2005 (IRFA) is the
legislative measure contemplated in s 41(2) of the Constitution.
Disputes arising between different spheres of government and other
organs of state are subject to the strictures of IRFA.
(See
the preamble, long title, ss 4, 40 and 41 of the IRFA.) Section 40
of the IRFA provides as follow:
‘
(1)
All Organs of State must make every reasonable effort -
(a)
to
avoid intergovernmental disputes when exercising their statutory
powers or performing their statutory functions; and
(b)
to
settle intergovernmental disputes without resorting to judicial
proceedings.
(2) Any
formal agreement between two or more Organs of State in different
governments regulating the exercise
of statutory powers or
performance of statutory functions, including any implementation,
protocol or agency agreement, must include
dispute-settlement
mechanisms or procedures that are appropriate to the nature of the
agreement and the matters that are likely
to become the subject of a
dispute.’
And
s 41 of the IRFA provides as follows:
‘
(1)
An Organ of State that is a party to an intergovernmental dispute
with another government or Organ of
State may declare the dispute a
formal intergovernmental dispute by notifying the other party of
such dispute declaration in writing;
(2)
Before declaring a formal intergovernmental dispute the Organ of
State in question must, in good faith make
every reasonable effort
to settle the dispute, including the initiation of direct
negotiations with the other party or negotiations
through an
intermediary.’
[14]
Resilient
(SCA)
paras 72-77.
[15]
Ibid
para
80.
[16]
Ibid
paras
85-91.
[17]
Section
6(2)
(e)
(iii)
of PAJA provides that ‘[a] court or tribunal has the power to
judicially review an administrative action if . . . the action
was
taken . . . because irrelevant considerations were taken into
account or relevant considerations were not considered’,
[18]
Resilient
(SCA)
para
88.
[19]
Ibid
para
91.
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