Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 887South Africa
Khanyeza v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2024/079861) [2024] ZAGPJHC 887 (5 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Khanyeza v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2024/079861) [2024] ZAGPJHC 887 (5 September 2024)
Khanyeza v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2024/079861) [2024] ZAGPJHC 887 (5 September 2024)
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sino date 5 September 2024
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No.
2024-079861
1.
REPORTABLE:
No
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
No
3.
REVISED:
No
04/09/2024
In
the matter between:
NOMPUMELELO
GIVEN KHANYEZA
Applicant
and
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
JOHANNESBURG
WATER (SOC) (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives via e-mail, by being uploaded
to Court
Online and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand- down is
deemed to be 10h00 on September
2024.
JUDGMENT
BEYERS, AJ:
[1]
This is an opposed application that was
brought on an urgent basis where the Applicant inter alia seeks the
following relief against
the Respondents:
“
1.
That the above Honourable Court dispenses with the forms and time
periods for service as required by the rules of this
Honourable Court
and hear this application as a matter of urgency.
2. Declaring the
removal of the water metre at the Applicant's place of residence and
the disconnection of water supply to
the Applicant at
7[…]
S[…] C[…] STREET, K[…] E[…], JOHANNESBURG
1684 (the Property) by the First or the Second Respondent to be
wrongful spoliation of Applicant’s access to water and /
or
unlawful and in violation of the Applicant’s basic
constitutional rights to have access to water;
3. Directing the
Respondents to install a new water metre and restore Applicant's
water supply within 24 (twenty-four) hours
from the date on which
this order is granted;
4. Directing the
First Respondent and or the Second Respondent to desist from removing
the water metre at Applicant's place
of residence and interrupting
Applicant's access to water in the future without just cause.
5. Compelling
the Respondents to launch an investigation regarding the disputed
amounts, cause and effect of the faulty meter
on the amount owed,
alleged illegal connection of the water meter and when such
investigation is finalised, for the parties to
enter into a payment
arrangement on undisputed amounts.
6.
Directing the Respondents to pay the costs of this application on an
attorney and client scale.
”
[2]
As appears from the aforegoing, the
Applicant seeks final relief against the Respondents in motion
proceedings.
[3]
The Respondents opposes the relief sought
on a number of bases, including:
a.
That
the application is not urgent and that there has not been compliance
with the requirements of the Rules relating to service,
or with the
practice directives pertaining to urgent applications;
[1]
b.
That
the
mandament
van spolie
does not cover the restoration of the supply of water to the
Applicant’s premises, and that the application is accordingly
fundamentally flawed on that basis;
[2]
and
c.
That
the Applicant has not demonstrated any entitlement to allow reliance
on
s
102
of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act, 32 of 2000 (“
the
Act
”).
[3]
[4]
The Applicant’s case can be
summarised as follows:
a.
She
has been the owner of the immovable property forming the
subject-matter of the Respondents’ water supply since July
2017.
[4]
b.
The
Respondents allege that she owes the amount of R193,055,89
[5]
.
c.
Although
she acknowledges that there were times at which payment was not made
monthly or at all for the services provided by the
Respondents, the
amount the Respondents are alleging is owing is in dispute.
[6]
d.
As
at 10 July 2024, according to the Applicant, “
the
amount owed to the municipality might be about R87 000.
”
[7]
e.
There have been a number of interactions
between the Applicant and employees of the First Respondent in
respect of the water supply
to the property and the amount owed to
the First Respondent in respect of Applicant’s municipal
account.
f.
This
included, inter alia, a pre-termination notice received by the
Applicant dated 8 August 2023
[8]
,
various complaints raised by the Applicant with the First Respondent
and visits by the Applicant to the First Respondent’s
offices.
g.
On
2 July 2024 the Applicant discovered that the water meter to her
property had been removed and the water supply was disconnected.
[9]
h.
She
attended at the Respondents’ offices on 8 and 10 July 2024 to
attempt to achieve a resolution, but to no avail.
On 10 July
2024 she sent an email to the First Respondent (“
KNG17
”)
confirming her visit and complaint.
[10]
i.
She
indicates that it would be unwise for her to enter into a payment
arrangement for amounts that are in dispute and that the Respondents
should be compelled to investigate the amount owed and the reason
that caused its meter to malfunction and to show how that
malfunctioning
caused discrepancies in their billing.
[11]
j.
The
Applicant alleges that the disconnection was procedurally unfair as
it was done without the requisite 14-day pre-termination
notice and,
accordingly, the Respondents’ actions were not within the ambit
of the law.
[12]
k.
The
Applicant alleges that
s
102(1)
of the
Local Government Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000
does not
allow the Respondents to implement any of the debt collection and
credit control measures where there is a dispute between
the
municipality and the consumer concerning any specific amount claimed
by the municipality from that person.
[13]
l.
As
a consequence the Applicant contends that the Respondents’ act
of disconnecting the water and thereafter removing the water
meter
was unlawful.
[14]
m.
As
far as urgency is concerned, the Applicant alleges that she has a
constitutional right to access to sufficient water and that,
as a
consequence of the Respondents’ actions, her son, daughter and
herself are subjected to serious health concerns and
do not have
water to drink, cook, clean the house or bath.
[15]
[5]
The Respondent’s case in opposition
may be summarised as follows:
a.
The
Applicant has not established urgency, has failed to comply with the
service requirements of the Rules and with this Court’s
practice directives for urgent applications.
[16]
b.
The
Applicant is a chronic defaulter
[17]
and the last time she had made a payment towards her account was on
21 October 2022.
[18]
c.
As
at 11 July 2024 the Applicant was indebted to the City in the sum of
R200,328 33
[19]
.
d.
The
Applicant has not alleged or proved her compliance with
s
102
of Act 32 of 2000 or 12(6) and
s
16
of the City’s Credit Control By-Laws as it concerns disputes
and queries of municipal accounts, consumer dissatisfaction
therewith
or the appeal process that subsists in respect of such queries and
disputes.
[20]
e.
Several pre-termination notices had been
given to the Applicant, including:
i.
On
8 August 2023;
[21]
and
ii.
On
8 November 2023.
[22]
f.
The
Applicant did not comply with these notices, and her attempts to
raise a dispute are made in vague generalisations and do not
meet the
requirements for a valid dispute.
[23]
g.
The
Respondents accordingly contend that the disconnection of the
Applicant’s water supply and removal of the water meter,
which
is the Respondents’ property, occurred lawfully in accordance
with the relevant credit control legislation.
[24]
These paragraphs are not addressed by the Applicant in her Replying
Affidavit.
[6]
The Applicant relies on
s
102
of the Act, which provides as follows:
“
102
Accounts
(1)
A municipality may
-
(a) consolidate
any separate accounts of persons liable for payments to the
municipality;
(b) credit a
payment by such a person against any account of that person; and
(c)
implement
any of the debt collection and credit control measures provided for
in this Chapter in relation to any arrears on any
of the accounts of
such a person
.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not apply where there is a dispute between the
municipality and a person referred to in that subsection concerning
any specific amount claimed by the municipality from that person
.
(3)
A municipality must provide an owner of a property in its
jurisdiction with copies of accounts
sent to the occupier of the
property for municipal services supplied to such a property if the
owner requests such accounts in
writing from the municipality
concerned
” (Underlining added)
[7]
What
constitutes a dispute within the context of
s
102
was judicially considered in
Body
Corporate Croftdene Mall v Ethekwini Municipality 2011 JDR 1339
(SCA)
,
[25]
by the Supreme Court of Appeal where the Honourable Justice Maya
stated:
“
[22]
It is, in my view, of importance that s 102(2) of the Systems Act
requires that the
dispute must
relate to a ‘specific amount’
claimed by the municipality.
Quite
obviously, its objective must be to prevent a ratepayer from delaying
payment of an account by raising a dispute in general
terms.
The ratepayer is required to furnish facts that would adequately
enable the municipality to ascertain or identify the disputed
item or
items and the basis for the ratepayer’s objection thereto. If
an item is properly identified and a dispute properly
raised, debt
collection and credit control measures could not be implemented
in
regard to that item
because of
the provisions of the subsection.
But
the measures could be implemented in regard to the balance in
arrears; and they could be implemented in respect of the entire
amount if an item is not properly identified and a dispute in
relation thereto is not properly raised.
”
(underlining added)
[8]
Recently,
the Honourable Acting Justice Dodson in
39
Van Der Merwe Street Hillbrow CC v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan
Municipality and two others
[26]
commented as follows:
“
[27]
Croftdene Mall thus imposes the following requirements before a
consumer of municipal services may rely on the
protection from
disconnection afforded by section 102(2) of the Systems Act:
27.1.
there must be a dispute, in the sense of a consumer, on the one hand,
and the municipality, on the other, advancing
irreconcilable
contentions;
27.2
the dispute must be properly raised, which would require, at
least, that it be properly communicated to the appropriate
authorities
at the municipality and that this be done in accordance
with any mechanism and appeal procedure provided in terms of section
95(f)
of the Systems Act for the querying of accounts;
27.3
the dispute must relate to a specific amount
or amounts or a
specific item or items on an account or accounts, with the corollary
that it is insufficient to raise a dispute
in general terms;
27.4
the consumer must put up enough facts to enable the municipality to
identify the disputed item or items and
the basis for the ratepayer's
objection to them;
27.5
it must be apparent from the founding affidavit that the foregoing
requirements have been satisfied.
”
(Underlining added)
[9]
On the papers the following facts are
clear:
a.
The
Applicant, on her own version, owes the Respondents an undisputed
amount of approximately R87,000 00.
[27]
b.
The Applicant did not follow the dispute
process dictated by the Act and the City’s Credit Control
By-Laws.
c.
The dispute raised by the Applicant does
not relate to a specific amount or amounts or a specific item or
items; instead, the dispute
has been raised in general terms, and it
has been coupled with an admission that a significant amount is owed
that is undisputed.
d.
The Respondents have given the Applicant a
number of pre-termination notices, including, at least, notices on 8
August and 8 November
2023, respectively. These are all dated
in excess of a period of 14 days prior to the alleged discontinuation
date of 2 July
2024.
[10]
Given the undisputed amount due to the
Respondents, as well as the Applicant’s failure to have
properly raised a dispute in
respect of her account with the
Respondents in specific terms and in accordance with the mechanisms
and appeal procedure in the
Act, the Applicant is not entitled to the
protection offered by
s
102(2)
of the Act. The Respondents were accordingly within their rights to
enforce the legislatively sanctioned credit control measures,
which
included the right to discontinue the water supply to the Applicant’s
property and to remove the water meter.
[11]
In the premises the Applicant is not
entitled to the relief sought, and I make the following order:
a.
The Applicant’s application is
dismissed with costs on party and party scale A.
J BEYERS
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Date
of Hearing:
23
July 2024
Date
of Judgment:
4
September 2024
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
Adv
R Mthmebu
Barry
Moyana Inc
For
the Respondents:
Instructed
by:
Adv
Lebo Mokwena
Patel
Inc
[1]
Answering
Affidavit,
par 8 – 21, Caselines 26-3 to 26-5.
[2]
Answering
Affidavit, par 22-24, Caselines 26-5 to 26-6.
[3]
Answering
Affidavit, par 28 – 39, Caselines 26-8.
[4]
Caselines
02-10, Applicant’s Founding Affidavit, paras 4.1 and 4.2.
[5]
Caselines
02-11,
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 4.3.
[6]
Caselines
02-11, Applicant’s Founding Affidavit, par 4.3.
[7]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 4.18,
Caselines
02-14, read with annexure “
KNG17
”
at Caselines 02-69.
[8]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 4.8, Caselines 02-12, and annexure “
KNG6
”
at Caselines 02-56.
[9]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 4.17, Caselines 02-14.
[10]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 4.18, Caselines 02-14.
[11]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 4.2.4, Caselines 02-16.
[12]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 9, Caselines 02-18.
[13]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 10, Caselines 02-18.
[14]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 12, Caselines 02-18.
[15]
Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit, par 6-8, Caselines 02-17.
[16]
Respondents’
Answering Affidavit, paras 8-21, Caselines 26-95 – 26-97.
[17]
Respondents’
Answering Affidavit, par 35, Caselines 26-100.
[18]
Respondents’
Answering Affidavit, par 36, Caselines 26-100.
[19]
Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit, par 45, Caselines 26-101 and annexure “
AA3
”
at 26-117.
[20]
Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit, paras 38-43, Caselines 26-100 to 26-101.
[21]
Respondent’s
Answering Affidavit, par 8, Caselines 26-95, admitted by Applicant
in her Replying Affidavit, par 7.1, Caselines
02-76.
[22]
First
and Second Respondents’ Additional Answering Affidavit, par 4,
Caselines 26-178, not disputed by Applicant.
[23]
Respondents’
Answering Affidavit, paras 9 and 47, Caselines 26-95 and 26-101.
[24]
Respondents’
Answering Affidavit, paras 48-51, Caselines 26-102.
[25]
Now
reported at
2012
(4) SA 169
(SCA)
.
[26]
In
this division of the High Court, under case number 23/7784.
[27]
See
footnote 7 (supra).
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