Case Law[2022] ZASCA 171South Africa
Pioneer Foods (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited & Others (325/2021) [2022] ZASCA 171 (1 December 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
1 December 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal – section 16(2)(a)(i) of Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – mootness of appeal – issues of law in appeal settled by an earlier judgment of this Court – disputes overtaken by events – appeal moot – no discrete legal issue of public importance that would affect matters in the future.
Judgment
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## Pioneer Foods (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited & Others (325/2021) [2022] ZASCA 171 (1 December 2022)
Pioneer Foods (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited & Others (325/2021) [2022] ZASCA 171 (1 December 2022)
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sino date 1 December 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
No: 325/2021
In
the
matter
between:
PIONEER
FOODS (PTY)
LTD
APPELLANT
and
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LIMITED
FIRST RESPONDENT
WALTER
SISULU LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
SECOND RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Pioneer Foods (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited
& Others
(325/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 171
(1 December 2022)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, MAKGOKA and HUGHES JJA and BASSON and WINDELL AJJA
Heard:
8 November 2022
Delivered:
1 December 2022
Summary:
Appeal – section 16(2)(
a
)(i) of
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
– mootness of appeal –
issues of law in appeal settled by an earlier judgment of this Court
– disputes overtaken
by events – appeal moot – no
discrete legal issue of public importance that would affect matters
in the future.
ORDER
On appeal from:
Gauteng
Division
of the High Court,
Johannesburg
(Mbongwe AJ, sitting
as a court of first instance):
1
The appeal is dismissed.
2
There is no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Makgoka
JA (
Van der Merwe and Hughes JJA and Basson and Windell AJJA
concurring):
[1]
On 8
November 2022 when this matter was called, counsel for the appellant,
Pioneer Foods (Pty) Ltd (Pioneer) and for the first respondent,
Eskom
Holdings Soc Limited (Eskom)
[1]
were invited to address the Court on the submission by Eskom in its
heads of argument that the appeal had become moot. Upon hearing
counsel, this Court dismissed Pioneer’s appeal with no order as
to costs, and undertook to furnish reasons later. These are
the
reasons for the order, which are premised on our finding that the
appeal has become moot, and that there is no basis to exercise
this
Court’s discretion to hear it.
Section 16(2)(
a
)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides that:
‘
When
at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that the
decision sought will have no practical effect or result,
the appeal
may be dismissed on this ground alone.’
[2]
Pioneer appealed, with the leave of this Court, against the
order of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the
high
court) which dismissed its application to review and set aside
certain decisions of Eskom to implement intermittent electricity
supply interruptions in the area of jurisdiction of the second
respondent, the Walter Sisulu Local Municipality (the Municipality).
[3]
Eskom supplies electricity to the Municipality, which, in
turn, distributes electricity to the end-users in its area of
jurisdiction.
The Municipality fell into arrears with payment for
electricity to Eskom. The arrears eventually amounted to over R100m.
As part
of its measure to exert pressure on the Municipality to pay
the arrears, Eskom took decisions to implement intermittent
electricity
supply interruptions in the area of jurisdiction of the
Municipality between July 2017 and January 2018 (the impugned
decisions).
The notices for the interruptions were published by Eskom
in local newspapers.
[4]
Pioneer is a producer of food and beverages. It runs a maize
mill located within the area of the Municipality, and was as such
affected
by Eskom’s electricity supply interruptions. After
unsuccessful attempts to resolve the issue with Eskom, Pioneer
launched
a two-part application in the high court in January 2018.
In Part A, which it brought on an urgent basis, it sought and
obtained,
interim interdictory relief against Eskom from implementing
its decision of 2 January 2018 to interrupt the supply of
electricity
to Pioneer’s business premises.
[5]
In Part B, Pioneer sought the judicial review and setting
aside of the relevant Eskom decisions. It relied on various grounds
including
that Eskom was not entitled to interrupt the supply of
electricity to the Municipality solely for the purpose of coercing
the latter
to pay its debt. Pioneer also contended that where Eskom
sought to interrupt the supply of electricity, it had to comply with
the
substantive and procedural requirements of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (the PAJA). Pioneer also sought
an order that Eskom should supply electricity to its business
premises, alternatively to the Municipality. In the further
alternative, Pioneer sought orders: (a) compelling the Municipality
to pay the outstanding debt to Eskom; and (b) compelling Eskom
and
the Municipality to agree to a payment plan to ensure uninterrupted
supply of electricity to its business premises.
[6]
In response, Eskom raised a preliminary point that Pioneer’s
application was premature, based on the provisions of s 30 of
the
Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006 (the ERA). That section
provides for the resolution of disputes by the third respondent,
the
National Energy Regulator of South Africa (NERSA) in relation to any
dispute arising out of the ERA. Section 30(1)(
b
)
reads:
‘
[Nersa]
must, in relation to any dispute arising out of this Act –
…
if
it is a dispute between a customer or end user on the one hand and a
licensee, registered person, a person who trades, generates,
transmits or distributes electricity on the other hand, settle that
dispute by such means and on such terms as [NERSA] thinks fit.’
[7]
Eskom
contended that since the PAJA was applicable to each of the decisions
which Pioneer sought to impugn, s 30 was the ‘internal
remedy’
envisaged in s 7(2) of the PAJA which Pioneer had to first exhaust
before launching the review application.
[2]
I refer to this as ‘the prematurity defence.’
Substantively, to justify the lawfulness of its decisions, Eskom
relied on s 21(5) of the ERA. The section, among other things,
grants
Eskom the right to
reduce
or terminate the supply of electricity to a customer if the latter
has ‘
failed
to honour, or refuses to enter into, an agreement for the supply of
electricity,’ or ‘contravened [its] payment
conditions.’
I refer to this as ‘the s 21(5) defence.’
[8]
Part B came before the high court in July 2020, and judgment
was delivered on
12 October 2020.
The high court held that Pioneer, as a customer of the Municipality,
had no locus standi to seek the orders it
did against Eskom, as the
electricity supply agreement was between Eskom and the Municipality.
Despite this finding, the high court
proceeded to determine the
merits of the application. It upheld both of Eskom’s two
defences referred to above. With regard
to the ‘prematurity
defence’, the high court stated that ‘the engagement of
[NERSA] is part of the internal problem
resolution processes
envisioned in section 7(2) of the PAJA…’ and that the
failure to comply with it, was fatal to
Pioneer’s application.
[9]
As
to the s 21(5) defence, the high court, with reliance on
Rademan
v Moqhaka Local Municipality
[3]
held that
Eskom
was empowered by s 21(5) of the ERA to interrupt the supply of
electricity to a defaulting customer such as the Municipality.
The
high court also held that Eskom had followed proper procedures,
including
the PAJA and regulatory provisions,
when
it gave notices to implement the electricity supply interruptions.
Consequently, the high court dismissed Pioneer’s application
with costs.
[10]
On
29 December 2020, judgment in
Eskom
v Resilient Properties and Two Similar Matters
[4]
(
Resilient
)
was delivered. This Court provided clarity on two issues raised in
this appeal, namely, whether: (a) Eskom was in law entitled
to invoke
s 21(5) of the ERA without a court order authorising it to do so; (b)
s 30 of the ERA provides for an internal remedy
envisaged in the PAJA
which must be exhausted before resorting to the courts.
[11]
As
to the first issue, this Court concluded that s 21(5) of the ERA
empowers Eskom to reduce or terminate the supply of electricity
to
its customers in the circumstances spelt out in the section. And that
it may exercise that power without prior authorisation
by a court.
[5]
As to the second issue, this Court rejected Eskom’s contention
that s 30 constituted an internal remedy envisaged in s 7
of the
PAJA. It explained that the section ‘cannot apply to a dispute
where Eskom seeks to interrupt bulk electricity supply
to a
municipality which, although willing to settle its indebtedness, is
unable to do so because it is not only facing financial
crisis but
also contests Eskom’s right to interrupt electricity.’
[6]
[12]
Additionally,
in
Resilient
,
this Court also made another important finding (which did not feature
in the present case). It held that Eskom was obliged to
resolve its
disputes with the municipalities to which it supplies electricity,
through the framework of the Intergovernmental Relations
Framework
Act 13 of 2005 (the IRFA). This Court alluded to the unique nature of
the relationship between Eskom and such municipalities.
Eskom as an
organ of state, and the municipalities as local spheres of
government, bear constitutional obligations to provide communities
with electricity, and any interruption thereof, implicates the
municipalities’ ability to discharge its obligations.
[7]
[13]
This
brought the relationship within the purview of the IRFA.
[8]
Therefore, before taking the decision to interrupt electricity supply
to the municipalities failing to pay for the electricity
supplied,
Eskom is required to comply with ss 40 and 41(3) of the IRFA, which
require organs of state to exhaust all other remedies
to resolve
disputes before they approach a court.
[9]
Thus, Eskom should bear in mind that terminating the supply of
electricity to an entire municipality in the circumstances provided
for in s 21(5), would have the effect of collapsing the entire
municipality, rendering it unable to fulfil its constitutional and
statutory mandate to provide basic services.
[10]
[14]
The effect of this Court’s judgment in
Resilient
is that the jurisprudential issues in this appeal, namely the
application of s 21(5) and whether s 30 constitutes an internal
remedy envisaged in s 7(2) of the PAJA, have now been decided. This
Court has also clarified Eskom’s obligation to comply
with the
relevant provisions of the IRFA before it decides to interrupt
electricity supply to the municipalities. Furthermore,
it is common
cause that as an organ of state, Eskom’s decision to interrupt
electricity to municipalities, constitutes ‘administrative
action’ envisaged in s 1 of the PAJA, and that accordingly, it
must in each instance comply with both the substantive and
procedural
fairness requirements of the PAJA. In this Court, counsel for Eskom
gave an assurance of Eskom’s commitment in
this regard.
[15]
What then, is left of the dispute between the parties? The
impugned decisions, which were time-bound, have come and gone, and it
is not possible for Eskom to implement them again. Whether they were
tainted by procedural and substantive irregularities, as Pioneer
asserted, is immaterial now. An order in respect of those decisions
would have no practical effect. If in future it needs to implement
electricity supply interruptions, Eskom would have to take new
decisions, which would have to comply with the relevant provisions
of
the IRFA and the PAJA.
[16]
Viewed
in light of the above, the appeal has become moot, and it must
therefore be dismissed on this basis alone in terms of s
of
16(2)(
a
)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act. However
, this Court has a discretion to
enter into the merits of an appeal, notwithstanding the mootness of
the issue as between the parties
when ‘a discrete legal issue
of public importance arose that would affect matters in the future’
and on which adjudication
of this Court is required.
[11]
In the present case, no such issue arises. For all these reasons, the
appeal was dismissed. With regard to costs, we deemed it
fair that
there should not be any order in respect thereof.
T
MAKGOKA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellant:
JPV McNally SC (with
him BL Manentsa)
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel, Johannesburg
Honey Attorneys Inc.,
Bloemfontein
For
first respondent: SL Shangisa SC (with
him L Rakgwale)
Instructed
by:
Ngeno & Mteto
Inc., Pretoria
Kramer Weihmann &
Joubert Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Both
the
second
respondent, the Walter Sisulu Local Municipality and third
respondent,
the
National Energy Regulator of South Africa (NERSA) did not
participate in the appeal.
[2]
Section
7(2)
of the PAJA reads: ‘[No] court or Tribunal shall review
an administrative action in terms of this Act unless any internal
remedy provided for in any other law has first been exhausted.’
[3]
Rademan
v Moqhaka Local Municipality
[2013]
ZACC 11; 2013 (4) SA 225 (CC).
[4]
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)
(
Resilient).
[5]
Ibid
para 55.
[6]
Ibid
p
ara
84.
[7]
Ibid
para
80.
[8]
Ibid
para
79.
[9]
Ibid
para
81.
[10]
Ibid
para
58.
[11]
Qoboshiyane
NO and Others v Avusa Publishing Eastern Cape (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012] ZASCA 166
;
2013 (3) SA 315
(SCA) para 5.
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