Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 579South Africa
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2024/048808) [2024] ZAGPJHC 579 (20 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
20 June 2024
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: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 579
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2024/048808) [2024] ZAGPJHC 579 (20 June 2024)
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2024/048808) [2024] ZAGPJHC 579 (20 June 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_579.html
sino date 20 June 2024
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024-048808
1.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
2.REVISED.
In
the matter between:
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LTD
Applicant
and
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
CITY
POWER JOHANNESBURG SOC LTD
Second Respondent
THE
NATIONAL ENERGY REGULATOR OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Third Respondent
NATIONAL
TREASURY
Fourth Respondent
Coram:
Maenetje AJ
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email and uploading on
Caselines. The date and time for handdown is deemed to be 10h00 on 20
June 2024.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Maenetje
AJ:
## Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The applicant (
Eskom
) brings this urgent application to hold
the first respondent (
the COJ
) to its obligations to pay
Eskom’s electricity accounts as and when they fall due. When
the application was launched the
COJ owed Eskom an amount of R1 073
593 894,34 for an unpaid electricity account due for payment on 28
and 29 April 2024. The amount
relates to bulk electricity that Eskom
supplied to the COJ. The bulk electricity supply is in terms of
Electricity Supply Agreements
binding between Eskom and the COJ.
[2]
By the time that the application was heard, there was a further
amount of over R1 billion for the month of May 2024 that
remained
unpaid by the COJ. The COJ has decided to withhold these payments
from Eskom because it alleges that Eskom owes it an
amount in excess
of R3,4 billion in respect of previous over-billing. The COJ contends
that the April and May 2024 payments to
Eskom are set off against the
amount of over R3,4 billion owed to it by Eskom for previous
overbilling. The exact amount allegedly
owed by Eskom from the
alleged overbilling is R3 416 383 079,00.
[3]
In response to Eskom’s application, the COJ and the second
respondent (
City Power
) brought a counter application to be
heard as an urgent application at the same time as Eskom’s
application. That counter
application is based on the contention that
Eskom is indebted to the COJ and City Power in the amount of over
R3,4 billion for
overbilling. They contend that this amount of R3,4
billion is due and payable by Eskom and is set-off against the April
and May
2024 accounts from Eskom. On this approach of the COJ and
City Power, they will withhold all payments to Eskom for electricity
supply up to the amount of over R3,4 billion in respect of previous
overbilling.
[4]
In addition to the usual order for urgency, the specific relief that
Eskom seeks is as follows:
“
2. That the
first and/or second respondents’ failure to pay Eskom’s
electricity accounts as and when the accounts
fall due be declared
unlawful and unconstitutional.
3. That the
first respondent alternatively, the second respondent, further
alternatively, the first and second respondents
jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absorbed be ordered to pay
Eskom the sum of R1 073 593 894,38.
4. That the
first respondent alternatively, the second respondent, further
alternatively, the first and second respondents
jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved are liable to pay
interest on the aforesaid sum of R1 073 593
894.38 at a rate per
annum equal to the prevailing prime rate charged by the First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd, plus 2½%
alternatively,
at a rate prescribed in terms of the
Prescribed Rate of Interest Act
55 of 1975
calculated from date the application is served until date
of final payment.
5. That NERSA
be directed to immediately investigate, consult and identify remedial
measures to address and possibly
overcome the first and/or second
respondents’ failure to pay Eskom for the bulk electricity it
supplies.
6. That NERSA
produce a report within 30 days from the date of this order or within
any other period the Court deems
appropriate, which reflects the
following:
6.1. NERSA’s
findings regarding the cause of the first and/or second respondents’
inability to pay Eskom for the bulk
electricity it supplies.
6.2. The remedial steps
which NERSA proposes to address and overcome (if possible), the first
and/or second respondents’ failure
to pay Eskom for the bulk
electricity it supplies.
6.3 NERSA’s
recommendations regarding the timeframes required to introduce,
implement and finalise the remedial measures proposed
by NERSA to
address and overcome the first and/or second respondents’
failure to pay Eskom for the bulk electricity it supplies.
7. That pending the
implementation and finalisation of remedial measures proposed by
NERSA:
7.1. That on or
before the 14
th
day of every month after this order is
granted, the first and/or second respondents must serve on Eskom and
file with the Registrar
of this [Court] a signed statement which
reflects the following:
7.1.1. The
previous month’s electricity sales.
7.1.2. The
previous month’s income generated through electricity sales.
7.1.3. The
previous month’s expenses incurred in respect to its
electricity business.
7.1.4. The
revenue minus expenses generated by the electricity business of the
first and/or second respondents’ electricity
business
.”
[5]
In their counter application, the COJ and City Power seek the
following substantive relief:
“
2. That it
be declared that:
2.1.
as at 25 February 2024, the Applicant (hereinafter referred to as
“Eskom”) was indebted to the CoJ in the
sum of R3 416 383
079.00 inclusive of VAT (“the Eskom debt”) for over –
billing of bulk electricity;
2.2.
the whole debt claimed by Eskom for bulk electricity supplied to the
CoJ for the month of March 2024 in the sum of R1
073 593 894.38
was discharged by set-off.
3.
Eskom is interdicted from interrupting the bulk electricity supply to
CoJ on the pretext of alleged non-payment by CoJ
of Eskom’s
invoices for the supply of bulk electricity.
4. In the
alternative to paragraphs 2 – 3 above
:
4.1
Eskom’s (main) application is stayed in terms of
Section 6(2)
of the
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965
;
4.2.
The disputes, differences or questions arising on the papers filed of
record are referred for determination in accordance
with the
arbitration agreement between Eskom and COJ;
4.3.
The Chairperson of the Arbitration Foundation of Southern Africa (or
his successor or nominee) [“the Chairperson”]
is
requested to appoint a suitably qualified tribunal for the
arbitration as the Chairperson may deem appropriate for the just
and
expeditious determination thereof (including a right of appeal to an
appeal panel constituted by three suitably qualified panelists
as
directed by the Chairperson);
4.4.
Eskom is interdicted, pending the final determination of the
arbitration proceedings described above, from interrupting
the bulk
electricity supply to CoJ on the pretext of alleged non-payment by
CoJ of Eskom’s invoices for the supply of bulk
electricity.”
[6]
Due to the existence of disputes of fact that cannot be resolved on
the papers, the COJ and City Power do not persist
with the relief
sought in prayers 2.1 and 2.2 of the notice of counter application.
[7]
Each of the parties contests the urgency of the other’s
application. I must therefore decide the question of urgency
first.
## Urgency
Urgency
[8]
Eskom addresses the question of urgency in its founding affidavit. It
sets out its well documented financial difficulties.
It states that
its inability to collect debts presents a material risk of
potentially catastrophic consequences, not just to it
but also to the
South African economy. It sets out in detail why such consequences
may materialise if it is not able to collect
debts when they fall
due. It is not necessary to repeat the details that it sets out in
this regard. Eskom’s centrality
to the South African
economy is well documented. The same applies to its financial
difficulties.
[9]
The amounts that Eskom alleges the COJ and City Power owes it are
significant. The amounts are also significant in the
light of the
alleged set-off. The COJ and City Power will withhold up to R3,4
billion and above in payments to Eskom on their case
for set-off.
Failure to collect such big amounts, if they are indeed due and
payable, would have a significant impact on Eskom’s
financial
position. In these circumstances, I accept the contention that Eskom
cannot be expected to wait to obtain substantial
redress in due
course in respect of the claim for the payments of accounts. The
impact on the public interest in the meantime would
be significant.
[10]
The same does not apply to the relief that Eskom seeks in prayers 2,
5 to 7.1.4 of its notice of motion. There is no
valid reason why such
relief cannot be obtained in due course in the event of ongoing
disputes between the parties.
[11]
For their part, the COJ and City Power contend that there is a threat
that Eskom may interrupt the supply of bulk electricity
to them if it
does not obtain urgent relief. This would have catastrophic
consequences to the residents of the COJ who are supplied
electricity
by the COJ and City Power. Assuming, but not deciding for purposes of
urgency, that this threat exists, the counter
application is also
urgent. I shall return to the threat when considering the
interdictory relief that the COJ and City Power seek.
They must meet
the requirements for the interdictory relief that they seek.
[12]
I therefore conclude that an adequate case has been made out for the
Court to exercise its discretion to hear Eskom’s
main
application and the counter application brought against it on an
urgent basis.
The
merits of Eskom’s application
[13]
Both the main application and counter application turn on the proper
interpretation of the relevant provisions of the
Electricity Supply
Agreements binding on the parties.
[14]
Eskom relies on the terms of the Electricity Supply Agreements for
relief. It attaches copies of the Main Agreement and
Eskom’s
Standard Terms and Conditions of Supply which it says constitute
parts of the Electricity Supply Agreements and were
applicable at the
relevant time. A copy of the Main Agreement is attached as “FA3.1”
and a copy of Eskom’s Standard
Terms and Conditions of Supply
is attached as “FA3.2” to the founding affidavit. These
attachments are referenced at
paragraph 44 of Eskom’s founding
affidavit. Eskom then summarises at paragraph 46 of its founding
affidavit what it contends
are the material and express terms of the
Electricity Supply Agreements on which it relies. It does so as
follows:
a) Eskom shall
supply electricity to the COJ at a certain point of delivery at rates
determined in Eskom’s list of standard
prices subject to
approval by NERSA.
b) Eskom shall take
readings of the electricity meters at regular intervals and submit
accounts on the last day of each calendar
month and the accounts
shall become due and payable on the day the account is received by
the COJ.
c) The COJ shall
make payment of each electricity account by no later than fifteen
calendar days from the date the account
is received, and should
payment not be received by the due date, Eskom may forthwith and
without further notice, discontinue the
supply of electricity to the
COJ and/or terminate the agreement.
d) The COJ must pay
its electricity accounts even if it disputes the accounts, provided
that the account will be corrected
if it is later revealed that there
was an error on the account.
[15]
In their replying affidavits, the COJ and City Power admit that the
Electricity Supply Agreements remain in force. They
also admit the
material terms of the Electricity Supply Agreements as alleged in
paragraphs 44 to 46 of Eskom’s founding
affidavit to the extent
that those terms as summarised are consistent with the terms of
annexures FA3.1 and FA3.2 to the founding
affidavit.
[16]
In the founding affidavit, Eskom does not identify the specific
clauses of the Electricity Supply Agreements that it
relies upon. In
answer to the COJ and City Power’s counter-application, and in
reply to the COJ and City Power’s answering
affidavit to its
application, it makes it clear that it relies on clause 9(c) of
Eskom’s Standard Terms and Conditions of
Supply. Eskom contends
that this clause does not permit set-off. It requires the COJ to pay
its electricity accounts even if it
disputes the accounts, provided
that the account will be corrected if it is later revealed that there
was an error on the account.
This is an allegation that it already
made in its founding affidavit as indicated above, but without
specifying the relevant clauses
of the Electricity Supply Agreements.
[17]
Annexure FA3.2 to the founding affidavit is headed Standard
Conditions for Supply of Electricity in Bulk. It is common
cause that
it does not contain clause 9(c) on which Eskom relies. It actually
does not contain a clause dealing with the payment
of accounts. Eskom
attaches annexure RA3 to its answering affidavit to the counter
application and replying affidavit to the answering
affidavit filed
by the COJ and City Power. This annexure contains Eskom’s
Standard Terms and Conditions of Supply, which
in turn contain clause
9(c). The case for Eskom is that this clause of Eskom’s
Standard Terms and Conditions of Supply was
omitted from annexure
FA3.2. It explains this in paragraph 31 of its answering affidavit to
the counter application and replying
affidavit to the COJ and City
Power’s answering affidavit to its founding affidavit. The COJ
and City Power dispute that
RA3 is part of FA3.2. They say it is a
separate and distinct document from annexure FA3.2. They made a
number of submissions in
oral argument to support this contention.
This dispute is ultimately immaterial because I conclude that clause
9(c) is not applicable
on the common cause facts.
[18]
Eskom alleges that the COJ is in breach of the Electricity Supply
Agreements by withholding payments due in April 2024.
On the other
hand, the COJ and City Power contend that set-off operates to the
extent of the alleged over-billing in the amount
of over R3,4
billion. Other than for the contention regarding set-off, the COJ and
City Power do not dispute the account and that
it would otherwise
have been due and payable in the absence of a claim for set-off. In
other words, no genuine dispute of fact
arises in the absence of the
alleged set-off. This robust approach is justified on the facts as
pleaded.
[19]
Eskom advanced three arguments on why automatic set-off does not
operate under the Electricity Supply Agreements.
[20]
The first argument is that under clause 9(c) set-off does not apply.
The COJ and City Power are required to continue
to pay accounts even
when these are disputed. The accounts that Eskom submits are not
final. They are subject to adjustments should
errors with the
accounts be discovered later.
[21]
The second argument is that on 27 February 2024 the parties agreed on
the same process as envisaged in clause 9(c).
[22]
The third argument is that the COJ and City Power have failed to make
out a prima facie case that set-off automatically
applies for
purposes of a referral to arbitration. Under clause 9(c) the parties
explicitly or tacitly agreed that set-off would
not automatically
apply.
[23]
The COJ and City Power advanced four arguments in answer to the case
for Eskom.
[24]
The first argument is that the agreement attached to the founding
affidavit, i.e., FA3.2, is not the correct version
of the contract
between the parties. It does not contain clause 9(c). The
contract that contains clause 9(c) is attached
to Eskom’s
replying affidavit, as RA3. RA3 is not an extract from FA3.2. It is
distinct from annexure FA3.2. Eskom was required
to make out its case
in its founding affidavit.
[25]
The second argument is that the alleged oral agreement of 27 February
2024 is only pleaded in the replying affidavit
and not in the
founding affidavit. Eskom was required to make out its case in the
founding affidavit. In any event, the alleged
oral agreement of 27
February 2024 predates the letter of 12 March 2024 in which the COJ
declared a dispute. The COJ would not
have declared the dispute if it
had allegedly concluded the oral agreement of 27 February 2024.
[26]
The third argument is that clause 9(c) does not exclude automatic
set-off. It also does not apply to the present case
because the COJ
and City Power do not dispute the accounts due in April and May 2024.
They acknowledge the accounts but contend
that the amounts billed are
automatically set-off against part of the over R3,4 billion owed by
Eskom to them in overbilling.
[27]
The fourth is that the constitutional relief is not urgent. I have
already accepted this argument.
[28]
I
turn to the proper interpretation of clause 9(c).
In
Capitec
,
[1]
the SCA again summarised the proper approach to interpretation.
Referencing
Endumeni,
[2]
it
said:
“
Endumeni
simply gives expression to the view that the words and concepts used
in a contract and their relationship to the external
world are not
self-defining. The case and its progeny emphasise that the meaning of
a contested term of a contract (or provision
in a statute) is
properly understood not simply by selecting standard definitions of
particular words, often taken from dictionaries,
but
by understanding the words and sentences that comprise the contested
term as they fit into the larger structure of the agreement,
its
context and purpose
.
Meaning is ultimately the most compelling and coherent account the
interpreter can provide, making use of these sources of
interpretation.
It is not a partial selection of interpretational
materials directed at a predetermined result
.”
[3]
(emphasis added)
[29]
The starting point is the language used in the provision.
[30]
Clause 9(c) falls under a section of the Standard Conditions for
Supply of Electricity in Bulk headed “
PAYMENT OF ACCOUNTS
”.
The full section states the following:
“
(a)
Accounts for all charges payable under this Agreement shall be made
up in respect of each month and shall be delivered
to the Consumer as
soon as possible after the end of each month in respect of which the
charges are payable, and the accounts shall
be due and payable when
rendered.
(b) Should
payment not be made within a period of 15 (fifteen) days from the
billing date, the amount outstanding shall bear
interest from due
date to date of payment at a rate per annum equal to the prime
overdraft rate, this being defined as the ruling
discount rate as
determined by the South African Reserve Bank plus 2
(two
and one half per centum).
(c) Should the
Consumer dispute an account, he shall not be entitled to defer
payment thereof beyond the due date; but such
account shall
thereafter be adjusted if necessary
.”
[31]
The wording of clause 9(c) is clear. It applies in the event that a
consumer, in this case the COJ, disputes an account.
In that event
the consumer is required to pay the account when it falls due. But
the account may thereafter be adjusted. It would
clearly be adjusted
if the consumer was correct in disputing the account – for
instance, if the consumer contends that it
is being overcharged.
There is nothing in the purposes of the Electricity Supply Agreements
or the context in which the clause
appears to find otherwise.
[32]
Eskom does not allege in its founding affidavit that the COJ disputes
the account
that fell due for payment in April 2024. The
correspondence between the parties that Eskom attaches to the
founding affidavit shows
clearly that the COJ has always accepted its
indebtedness to Eskom in the amounts reflected in the relevant
accounts. Counsel for
the COJ and City Power confirmed this position
when he submitted that his clients do not dispute any of the accounts
in issue and
therefore clause 9(c) does not apply. They contend only
that the indebtedness has been extinguished by automatic set-off. In
my
view, clause 9(c) does not apply to the present case. It would
apply if the COJ and City Power’s defence for their failure
to
pay was that they dispute the relevant accounts. But this is not
their case, nor is it the case that Eskom has pleaded in its
founding
affidavit.
[33]
This means that the COJ and City Power accept that the relevant
account fell due in April 2024. I have already found
that the COJ and
City Power do not raise a genuine dispute of fact in this regard. The
account is due and payable on the terms
alleged by Eskom in its
founding affidavit which the COJ and City Power admitted in their
answering affidavit. Had clause 9(a)
been specifically referred to in
the founding affidavit, the April 2024 account would have been
payable on the basis of that clause.
It is not necessary to resolve
the issues regarding annexure RA3 because the COJ and City Power have
not properly placed in dispute
the alleged material terms of the
Electricity Supply Agreements as pleaded by Eskom in paragraph 46 of
its founding affidavit.
They have also not properly placed in dispute
that, absent set-off, the March 2024 account was due on 28 and 29
April 2024 as Eskom
alleges in its founding affidavit.
[34]
Because of the conclusion that I have reached, I do not have to
consider the two additional arguments that Eskom has
advanced in
support of its claim. I need only turn to the defence of set-off
raised by the COJ and City Power. I consider this
under the counter
application below.
The
counter application
[35]
Counsel for the COJ and City Power confirmed that these parties no
longer persist with prayers 2.1 and 2.2 of the notice
of counter
application. They did so because of the existence of disputes of fact
that cannot be resolved on the papers regarding
the alleged
over-billing and the amounts allegedly owed to them by Eskom as a
result of the alleged over-billing. This concession
was correctly
made and this relief was correctly abandoned in the urgent motion
proceedings.
[36]
The abandonment of prayers 2.1 and 2.2 in the notice of counter
application means I cannot find on the papers that:
i as at 25
February 2024, Eskom was indebted to the COJ in the sum of
R3 416 383 079,00 inclusive of VAT for
over-billing of
bulk electricity; and
ii the whole debt
claimed by Eskom for bulk electricity supplied to the COJ for the
month of March 2024 in the sum of R1 073 593 894,38
was discharged by set-off.
[37]
On the common cause facts then, the only defence to Eskom’s
claim by the COJ and City Power, being automatic set-off,
cannot be
determined in these proceedings. This means that the COJ and City
Power do not have a valid defence against Eskom’s
claim on the
common cause facts.
[38]
I do not have to determine the relief in prayer 4 of the notice of
counter application. There is no basis for me to stay
Eskom’s
main application given that there is no dispute that the debt is due
and payable since I cannot determine the case
on set-off. The COJ and
City Power are free under the Electricity Supply Agreements to refer
a dispute to arbitration regarding
their claim for set-off or for
payment by Eskom to them of the amount of over R3,4 billion. I do not
have to compel them to refer
the dispute to arbitration and prescribe
the rest of the conditions in prayer 4 of the notice of counter
application.
[39]
I turn to
the interdictory relief in the counter application. Eskom made it
clear that it preferred to institute these urgent proceedings
instead
of exercising its powers to interrupt electricity supply to the COJ
and City Power. The COJ and City Power contended that
if the urgent
application does not succeed Eskom may make good on a threat to
interrupt the supply of electricity to them. It was
on this basis
that they sought the interdictory relief in prayer 3 of the notice of
counter application. Once the Court grants
Eskom relief, there would
be no basis upon which the COJ and City Power could reasonably
apprehend that Eskom would interrupt electricity
supply to them. They
would not satisfy the requirements for the final interdict that they
seek.
[4]
[40]
In conclusion then, it is common cause that the March 2024 account
was due and payable in April 2024 to Eskom by the
COJ if I cannot
find that the amount due was automatically set-off. Since it is
accepted that I cannot determine the alleged set-off
and grant the
relief sought in prayers 2.1 and 2.2 of the notice of counter
application, there is no real defence to Eskom’s
claim. I have
already found that the relief sought by Eskom in prayers 2, 5 to 7 of
the notice of motion are not urgent.
[41]
Eskom does not in the founding affidavit allege facts to support the
claim for interest at the rate sought in prayer
4 of Eskom’s
notice of motion. I therefore have no basis upon which to order the
COJ and City Power to pay interest at the
rate sought in prayer 4 of
Eskom’s notice of motion.
[42]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
(1) The first
respondent, alternatively the second respondent, further
alternatively the first and second respondents jointly
and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, are ordered to pay the
applicant the sum of R1 073 593 894,38.
(2) The first
respondent, alternatively the second respondent, further
alternatively the first and second respondents jointly
and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, are ordered to pay interest
on the amount of R1 073 593 894,38
at a rate
prescribed in terms of the
Prescribed Rate of Interest Act, 55 of
1975
calculated from the date the application was served on the first
and second respondents until date of final payment.
(3) The first
respondent, alternatively the second respondent, further
alternatively the first and second respondents jointly
and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, are ordered to pay the
applicant’s costs of the application.
(4) The first and
second respondents’ counter application is dismissed with
costs.
NH
MAENETJE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing
7 June 2024
Date
of judgment
20 June 2024
For
the applicant:
L Uys
Instructed
by GMI Attorneys
For
the first and second respondents:
CHJ Badenhorst SC
PJ Kok
Instructed
by Kunene Ramapala Inc
[1]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA).
[2]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18.
[3]
At
para 50.
[4]
See
Pilane
and Another v Pilane and Another
2013 (4) BCLR 431
(CC) para 39 on requirements for a final
interdict.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Eskom Holding SOC Limited Ltd v Sokweba and Others (101726/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 935 (18 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 935High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Eskom Holdings SOC LTD v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2024/048808) [2024] ZAGPJHC 794 (12 August 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 794High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Eskom Holdings Soc LTD v Babcock Ntuthuko Engineering (Pty) Ltd (A2023/099598) [2024] ZAGPJHC 990 (3 October 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 990High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2024/075944) [2024] ZAGPJHC 882 (6 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 882High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Eskom Holding SOC Limited v Santam Limited and Another (2021/51709; 2023/104516) [2025] ZAGPJHC 725 (21 June 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 725High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar