Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 904South Africa
Rubbers and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (2022/905) [2024] ZAGPJHC 904 (30 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
30 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Rubbers and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (2022/905) [2024] ZAGPJHC 904 (30 August 2024)
Rubbers and Others v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (2022/905) [2024] ZAGPJHC 904 (30 August 2024)
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sino date 30 August 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022/905
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED:
NO
30 August 2024
In
the matter between:
PHILIPPE
RUBBERS N.O
First
Applicant
RACHEL
CATHARINA RUBBERS N.O
Second
Applicant
DANIELLE
RUBBERS N.O
Third
Applicant
DAMIEN
RUBBERS N.O
Fourth
Applicant
THE
BEST TRUST COMPANY (JHB) (PTY) LTD N.O
Fifth
Applicant
and
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Respondent
Judgment
Mdalana-Mayisela
J
Introduction
1.
The
applicants
are trustees of the Phina Property Trust, Registration number
IT6234/2004 (“the Trust”) with registered address
at 1[…]
T[…] C[…], S[…], Johannesburg. The Trust is the
registered owner of Portion […] of Holding
1[…] L[…]
P[…] AH (“the Property”) since 26 March 2010. The
property has been categorized as Property
Rates: Agricultural
Business for rating purposes by the Municipal Valuer of the
respondent. The Trust has an account, number 5[…]
with the
respondent for rates and municipal services provided by the
respondent.
2.
The respondent is the City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality, a municipality as described
in Section 2 of the Local Government:
Municipal System Act, 2000,
duly established in terms of Notice No. 6766, promulgated in the
Provincial Gazette Extraordinary of
1 October 2000 in terms of
section 12(1) read with
section 14(2)
of the
Local Government:
Municipal Structures Act, 1998
, as amended, having its principal
place of business at 158 Civic Boulevard, Braamfontein.
3.
The applicants seek an order
that the respondent takes any and all necessary measures to ensure
that
inter alia,
the following adjustments are made to the Trust’s account
within 14 days from the date of this order:
3.1
Writing
off all charges billed to the account in respect of the illegal use
property rates tariff for the period 1 April 2019, alternatively
1
May 2019 to date of compliance with this order;
3.2 The respondent
re-bill the property rates based on the Agricultural Business tariff
for the period of 1 April 2019, alternatively
1 May 2019 to date of
compliance with this order;
3.3 Reversing
any/all interest, VAT and ancillary charges on the Trust’s
account in respect of the abovementioned amounts
that stand to be
reversed or written off;
3.4 Within 14 days
after the order is granted, furnishing the Trust with an. adjusted
municipal account showing all reversals
made;
3.5
That
the respondent refrain from terminating or restricting the supply of
any service to the property, or threatening to terminate
or restrict
the supply of any service to the property, in respect of the disputed
charges on the account arising from being billed
on the unlawful use
tariff, until the dispute has been resolved; and
3.6
That
the respondent pends or refrain from any debt collection, or threats
of debt collection of the disputed charges on the account,
until the
dispute has been resolved.
4.
The application is opposed by the respondent on
the following grounds:
4.1
The order sought in sub-paragraphs 3.1 to
3.4 is incompetent in law as the Trust
has
not impugned the validity of the legal instruments which empowers the
respondent to apply the illegal use tariff on the property;
4.2
The interdictory relief sought
is not competent in law. It is precluded by
section 26
read with
section 50(6) of the Rates Act; and
4.3
The Trust has not made out a
case for the debatement of account.
Common
cause issues
5.
The following issues are common cause:
5.1
The Trust is the registered owner of the
property;
5.2
The property has been categorized as Property
Rates: Agricultural Business for rating purposes and same is noted as
such on the
Trust’s municipal invoices;
5.3
The
respondent charges the Trust for
inter alia
property rates in relation to the property on account number 5[…].
The Trust is responsible for payment of all the amounts
billed for
rates (and others) on the account.
5.4
The respondent is charging the Trust for property
rates based on the illegal use tariff as from April or May 2019 to
date.
Issues
for determination
6.
The parties have agreed that the issues requiring
determination are as follows:
6.1
Whether the Trust is utilizing the property in
breach of the assigned zoning rights of Agricultural Business;
6.2
Whether
the illegal use tariff has been applied to the Trust municipal
account correctly;
6.3
Whether
the Trust is entitled to the writing off and reversal of the charges
of illegal use from 1 April or 1 May 2019 to date of
compliance with
the order; and
6.4
Whether
the applicants have met the requirements for a final interdict.
Illegal
use tariff
7.
I deal with the issues mentioned in
sub-paragraphs 6.1 to 6.3 under this heading. Section 8 of the Local
Government: Municipal Property
Rates Act 6 of 2004 (“the Rates
Act”) permits the respondent to levy different rates for
different categories of property
and requires it to specify the rates
and categories in its rates policy. In preparing the valuation roll
the municipal valuer determines
the category into which the property
is to be placed as provided by the respondent’s rates policy.
The property in issue
has been categorized as Agricultural Business
in terms of the respondent’s 2018 General Valuation Roll. The
respondent’s
Rates Policy of 2018/2019 (“the Rates
Policy”) defines Agricultural Business as follows:
“
(k)
Agricultural Business: Agricultural holdings
and
farm portions from which a business or commercial activity is
undertaken shall be categorized as business and commercial.
Agricultural
holdings and farm portions where an industrial or
horticultural activity is undertaken shall be categorized as business
and commercial.”
8.
I deal first with the issue of whether the Trust
is utilizing the property in breach of the assigned zoning rights of
Agricultural
Business. In the title deed the property is defined as
an agricultural holding and a single dwelling house. The respondent
contended
that the Trust is utilizing the property for a purpose not
authorized by its land use scheme. It provided three conflicting
versions
for this contention.
9.
First
, it stated that
the Trust is using the property as an office park based on the
evidence obtained during the inspections by its
officials, and it
issued a warning to the Trust to cease using it as such. The
respondent has failed to provide evidence in support
of this
contention in its answering affidavit. The reports by the officials
stating their factual findings and conclusions that
the property is
used as office park are not attached to the answering affidavit. The
confirmatory affidavits to the allegations
made in the answering
affidavit about their involvement are also not attached to the
answering affidavit.
10.
The respondent simply attached a copy of the
previous application brought by it against the Trust, which was
abandoned after the
answering affidavit thereto was filed by the
Trust. The respondent referred the court to the portions of the
founding affidavit
filed in the previous application. The deponent to
the previous application is not the same as the deponent to the
answering affidavit
in the current application. The deponent to the
answering affidavit has no personal knowledge of the averments made
in the founding
affidavit filed in the previous application. The
confirmatory affidavit of the deponent in the previous application is
not attached
to the answering affidavit. The applicants have objected
to the admissibility of the copy of the previous application on the
basis
that it is hearsay evidence. The objection is upheld.
11.
The applicants have disputed that the property is
utilized as an office park. They stated that it is used for
residential purposes
and there are three home offices or studies,
which are used by the first applicant and her two children. They
further stated that
if the property were to be used as an office
park, not only three of the forty-eight rooms would be used as
offices. There would
be no bedrooms or living room in the property.
They attached photographs, depicting the front of the property, the
bedroom, living
space and home offices.
12.
The unsubstantiated allegation made by the
respondent that the property is used as an office park cannot stand
and it must be rejected.
13.
Second
, the respondent
contended that the Trust is using the property as a guest house on
the strength of the application made by the
Trust dated 10 July 2019
for rezoning of the property to be used for purposes of a guest house
and/or boutique hotel and ancillary
uses. This contention was also
disputed by the applicants. I find it difficult to understand the
basis for this contention because
nowhere in the aforesaid
application did the Trust mention that it was using the property as a
guesthouse. The Trust in the aforesaid
application stated that the
property has already been built to be used as a guest house and/or
boutique hotel and ancillary uses
after its rezoning has been
approved. The property is a very large building consisting of
multiple bedrooms and amenities. The
applicants submitted that the
title deed makes no reference to the size of the building, as such
its provisions have not been contravened.
Furthermore, the erection
of the large dwelling unit and outhouses on the site are not contrary
to the current zoning of the property,
which allows for a dwelling
unit thereon. I find that the contention made by the respondent that
the property is currently used
as a guest house has no merit.
14.
Third
, the respondent
contended that the property was used unlawfully as a storage based on
another previous application made by the
Trust for the relaxation of
building lines on the property. In the aforesaid previous
application, the respondent made a decision
that “
the
proposed structures for storage purposes are in contravention of the
zoning
of the
property
.” The respondent submitted
that these two previous applications made by the Trust for rezoning
of the property “
were in acknowledgement
of the continuance of the land use contraventions with the land use
applications being the Trust’s
efforts to regularise the
contraventions
.” I fail to understand
on what basis the respondent is making this submission because the
aforesaid previous applications
were in respect of future utilization
of the property. I reject the contention that the property has been
used unlawfully as a
storage.
15.
For the reasons stated above, I find that the
respondent has failed to prove that the Trust is utilizing the
property in breach
of the assigned zoning rights of Agricultural
Business.
16.
I turn to deal with the issue of whether the
illegal use tariff has been applied to the Trust municipal account
correctly. The Rates
Policy provides for the application of penalty
tariff for unauthorized use of the property as follows:
“
Unauthorized
use
(i)
This category comprises
all properties that are used for a purpose (land use) not permitted
by the zoning thereof in terms of any
applicable Town Planning Scheme
or Land Use Scheme; abandoned properties and properties used in
contravention of any of the Council’s
By-laws and Regulations,
which include the National Building Regulations and Building
Standards Act, 103 of 1977 and any Regulations
made in terms thereof.
(ii)
The rate applicable to
this category will be determined by the City on an annual basis. The
City reserves the right to increase
this penalty tariff higher than
other tariffs.”
17.
It is common cause that the respondent is
charging the Trust for the property rates based on the illegal use
tariff as from April
alternatively May 2019 to date. The applicants
are not certain whether the illegal use tariff was charged from April
or May because
the Trust did not receive the municipal account
invoice in April. It is not in dispute that the respondent sent
notices of land
use contravention to the Trust by registered post
before the illegal use tariff was applied. However, the applicants
contended
that such notices were not received, they became aware of
them during the previous application brought by the respondent.
18.
The respondent averred that the Trust did not
lodge an objection in terms of section 50(1)(c) of the Rates Act to
the entry on the
valuation roll and that is fatal to the application.
The applicants denied that they were obligated to lodge the aforesaid
objection.
They contended that the aforesaid provision is not
applicable in this case because the rating category as reflected on
the municipal
account invoices is still set out correctly, and the
respondent is entitled to charge the illegal use tariff without
changing the
category of the property.
19.
The respondent further averred that based on the
unauthorized use of the property by the Trust, it applied the illegal
use tariff.
It stated that it has the statutory and constitutional
authority to impose an illegal use tariff on the property as it did,
which
has not been challenged by the applicants in this application.
It is common cause that the applicants have not challenged the
validity
of the legal instruments empowering the respondent to levy
the illegal use tariff where the property is used for unauthorized
purposes.
However, the applicant’s case is that the respondent
has no legal basis to levy such tariff on the property because the
Trust
is not utilizing the property in breach of the assigned zoning
rights of Agricultural Business.
20.
I have already made a finding above, that the
Trust is not utilizing the property in contravention of the assigned
zoning rights
of Agricultural Business. Therefore, there is no legal
justification for the respondent to charge the Trust for the property
rates
based on illegal use tariff.
21.
I now deal with the issue whether the Trust is
entitled to the writing off and reversal of the charges of illegal
use from 1 April
or 1 May 2019 to date of compliance with the order.
The applicants averred that the levy of illegal use tariff on the
property
inflated the Trust’s rates charges from R25,217.32 per
month in 2019 and 2020, to R58,194.99 per month in 2019, and to
R60,523.09
per month in 2020, and from R25,721.75 per month in 2021,
to R61,733.45 per month in 2021, up to date. This evidence was not
disputed
by the respondent.
22.
I have already found that the respondent has
levied the illegal use tariff incorrectly as it had no legal basis to
do so. Therefore,
the Trust is entitled to the writing off and
reversal of the charges of illegal use tariff from 1 April 2019,
alternatively 1 May
2019. The respondent’s records would show
the actual date it commenced levying the Illegal use tariff.
23.
The respondent contended that the applicants have
not made out a case for the debatement of account. The applicants
submitted that
they have not applied for the debatement of account
because the respondent’s actions in levying the incorrect
tariff are
patently unlawful, and the Trust seeks an interdict
against the respondent in order for it to be compelled to correct the
account.
I conclude that the applicants have made out a case for the
writing off and reversal of the illegal use tariff charges for the
abovementioned period.
Final
interdict
24.
The applicants seek an order against the
respondent to refrain from terminating or restricting
the
supply of any service to the property or threatening to terminate or
restrict the supply of any service to the property, in
respect of the
disputed charges on the account arising from being billed on the
illegal use tariff, until the dispute has been
resolved. The
applicants also seek an order that the respondent pends or refrain
from any debt collection, or threats of debt collection
of the
disputed charges on the account, until the dispute has been resolved.
25.
The issue to be determined here is whether the
applicants have met the requirements for a final interdict. The
applicants averred
that they made efforts to resolve the dispute
between the parties before they brought this application. They logged
a query, on
25 May 2021. After 30 days period had lapsed, they sent
the written complaint and letter of demand to the respond in terms of
section
16.2 of the respondent’s Credit Control and Debt
Collection Policy. Another 30 days period lapsed, and the dispute
remained
unresolved before this application was brought. The
respondent failed or neglected to provide the Trust with the outcome
to its
queries. The applicants averred that they have exhausted all
other remedies available to the Trust.
26.
The applicants submitted that the Trust is
suffering harm as a result of the unlawful levy of illegal use
tariff, as it was being
held liable for inflated property rates for a
period which it should not be held liable for.
27.
Further, the applicants submitted that the Trust
has a clear right to log a query in terms of section 16 of the Credit
Control and
Debt Collection Policy, and the respondent has a
statutory duty to investigate the query logged by the Trust and
advise the Trust
of the outcome of its investigation before credit
control action is taken, and if the query is found to have been
correct, adjust
the account. The Trust has a legal right to receive
correct invoices.
28.
Furthermore, the applicants submitted that in
terms of section 102(2) of the Systems Act no credit control action
may be taken against
the Trust while there is an ongoing dispute
about the levy of the illegal use tariff, and only payment of the
undisputed charges
on the account are necessitated.
29.
I am satisfied that the applicants have made out
a case for a final interdict.
Costs
30.
The applicants seek costs of the application on
an attorney and own client scale on the basis
inter
alia
that the respondent failed to comply
with the applicable case law, national legislation, municipal
by-laws, policies, common law
and Constitution. In addition, the
respondent disregarded the Trust’s letters of demand and
appeal. They submitted that this
demonstrated a wilful disregard for
the Trust’s rights and the respondent should be appropriately
dissuaded from doing same
in the future.
31.
The respondent has denied that it wilfully
disregarded the rights of the Trust. It submitted that due to its
size and scope of services
rendered to the public it receives several
demands and legal actions regarding disputes in relation to municipal
services rendered.
It makes genuine attempts to defend litigation
where necessary and makes attempts to settle where such route is
feasible.
32.
I have considered the submissions made by the
parties on the scale of costs and I am not persuaded that the
punitive costs order
is justified in this application.
Order
33.
The following order is made:
1.
The respondent is ordered to
take all necessary measures to ensure that
inter
alia,
the following
adjustments are made to the Trust’s account within 14 days from
the date of this order:
1.1 Writing off
all charges billed to the account in respect of the illegal use
property rates tariff for the period 1 April
2019, alternatively 1
May 2019 to date of compliance with this order;
1.2
The respondent re-bill
the property rates based on the Agricultural
Business tariff for the
period of 1 April 2019, alternatively 1 May 2019 to date of
compliance with this order;
1.3
Reversing any/all
interest, VAT and ancillary charges on the Trust’s account in
respect of the abovementioned amounts that
stand to be reversed or
written off;
1.4
Within 14 days
from the date of this order, furnish the Trust with an adjusted
municipal account showing all reversals and written
offs made;
1.5
That the respondent refrain
from terminating or restricting the supply of any service to the
property, or threatening to terminate
or restrict the supply of any
service to the property, in respect of the disputed charges on the
account arising from being billed
on the illegal use tariff, until
the dispute has been resolved; and
1.6
That the respondent pends or
refrains from any debt collection, or threats of debt collection of
the disputed charges on the account,
until the dispute has been
resolved.
2.
The respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the
application on a party and party scale.
MMP
Mdalana-Mayisela
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division,
Johannesburg
Digitally
delivered by uploading on CaseLines and emailing to the parties
Date
of delivery: 30 August 2024
Appearances:
For
the applicants: Adv T Paige-Green
Instructed
by: Schindlers
Attorneys
For
the respondent: Adv S Ogunronbi
Instructed
by: Kunene
Ramapala Inc.
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