Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 898South Africa
SA Student Accommodation CC and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (083447-2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 898 (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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## SA Student Accommodation CC and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (083447-2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 898 (5 September 2024)
SA Student Accommodation CC and Another v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (083447-2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 898 (5 September 2024)
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sino date 5 September 2024
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 083447/2024
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: YES/NO
5
September 2024
In
the matter between:
SA
STUDENT ACCOMODATION CC
First
Applicant
GEORGE
ASABA
Second
Applicant
AND
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Respondent
DELIVERED
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e mail and publication
on Case Lines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10H00
on 6 September 2024.
JUDGMENT
MYBURGH AJ
[1]
This matter came before me in the urgent court in the week of 6
August this year and I heard argument in relation to urgency
and
merits. As I consider the issues to be quite straightforward, I
intend to deal with the matter as tersely as is reasonably
possible.
I will, for the same reason, also not refer to or quote from
authorities save where I consider that to be strictly necessary.
[2]
The first applicant is a close corporation. Its sole member is the
second applicant, Mr Asaba. Mr Asaba is in the business
of providing
what I think can fairly be referred to as basic group accommodation;
in some cases directly, and in others indirectly-
i.e. via corporate
vehicles, of which the first applicant is one. It seems that premises
are, in some cases acquired and let out
“as is” whereas,
in other instances, buildings have either been constructed or
extensively modified to suit their intended
purpose. Mr Asaba is
involved in several such properties in the central area of Tshwane.
This matter concerns two of them, viz.
Erf 1[..] P[…] h[…]
(also referred to as “4[…] A[…] Street”)
and Erf 13[…] Pretoria
(also referred to as “3[…]
L[…] Street”). The A[…] Steet property, which is
owned by Mr Asaba
personally, comprises a recently constructed multi
storey building whereas the L[...] Street property, which is owned by
the first
applicant, has on it what appears to be a large number of
small, connected single storey dwelling units. According to Mr Asaba
, who deposed to both the founding and replying affidavits on behalf
of both applicants, the L[...] Street property is home to
approximately one hundred families and the A[...] Street property is
home to even more – i.e. both properties are occupied
by
hundreds of people. The relevance will become apparent.
[3]
A central part of the city’s case is that all of the
developments have been or are in the process of being constructed
illegally – i.e. that what Mr Asaba is what might be termed a
“rogue developer”. According to it, the building
on
A[...] Street property was constructed without approved building
plans, from which it follows that the building cannot be legally
occupied. It says that the same is true in respect of the L[...]
Street property, the zoning of which only permits the construction
of
a single dwelling house.
[4] Both
applicants complained that the respondent, whom I will refer to
simply as “the city”, had unlawfully terminated
the
supply of electricity to the properties in question. The main thrust
of their complaint was that the city had failed to give
notice of its
intention to terminate or to obtain a court order. The language of
spoliation was also used - for instance it was
alleged that the
applicants or their tenants had been in peaceful possession or
occupation of electricity prior to the allegedly
unlawful conduct of
the city, which was alleged to have been committed on 18 July this
year. The substantive relief which was sought
in terms of the notice
of motion was, in essence, an order compelling the city to reconnect
the premises to the grid and ancillary
relief.
[5]
The city
contended that the matter was not truly urgent (this for reasons
which will become apparent). It also opposed the application
on the
merits. In addition, it brought a counter application for the removal
of the matter to the Pretoria court in terms of section
27(1) of the
Superior Courts Act
[1]
. I will
deal first with the issue of urgency, then with the removal
application and thereafter with the merits.
Urgency
[6]
The applicants’ case in respect of urgency took the normal form
in matters of this kind viz. the disconnection of
the electricity
supply was causing harm to it and its tenants on a daily basis and
urgent redress was therefore required. Nothing
more need be said in
that regard.
[7]
As I have already indicated, the city’s case was that the Mr
Asaba, both personally and via the corporate entities
which he
controls (including the first applicant) is involved in what amounts
to a large-scale unlawful enterprise in terms of
which he builds or
converts premises of the kind described above in contravention of the
applicable legislation, including the
city’s zoning scheme and
by-laws. It also alleged that the buildings had been connected to the
grid illegally, that they
had been disconnected as long ago as
February this year and that that the applicants’
modus
operandi
had been to cause them to be reconnected illegally
resulting in an ongoing saga of illegal connections followed by
disconnections
- the disconnections complained of having been but the
most recent in the ongoing saga.
[8]
The view which I took is that a proper case had been made out for
urgency; this notwithstanding the troubled history.
The fact that the
disruption of the electricity supply would have seriously
inconvenienced the occupants of the buildings in question
is
something that weighed heavily with me in this regard. It is also
apposite to note that the application had been brought on
a truncated
timetable which allowed time for the filing of opposing papers rather
than on a pressingly urgent basis.
The
removal application
[9]
The basis of the city’s counterapplication for removal was that
there is currently litigation pending in the Pretoria
court between
it, Mr Asaba and certain corporate entities controlled by him
relative to the construction and alteration of buildings
as outlined
above – all of which activities were alleged to have been
unlawful. Indeed, the evidence was that the city was
seeking a
demolition order in respect of the A[...] Street apartment block,
which had been constructed without approved plans and
in respect of
which it had already obtained a
rule nisi
calling upon Mr
Asaba to show cause why it should not be demolished. It appeared from
the city’s answering papers that they
were considering bringing
a similar application in respect of the L[...] Street property.
[10]
On my understanding of the authorities, that was not a sufficient
basis to deprive the applicants of their right to proceed
in the
forum of their choice. I also do not think that it could properly be
said that it would be convenient or appropriate for
me to order the
removal of a matter in respect of which I have already read all of
the papers and heard argument. Things would
have been otherwise if
the fate of the current application had been dependent on the outcome
of the other litigation referred to;
however, that is not the
position
in casu.
[11]
I accordingly intend to dismiss the counterapplication.
An
act of spoliation?
[12]
As I have
already mentioned, the application was liberally peppered with the
language of spoliation. It was also expressly asserted
that the
applicants had been spoliated. As I pointed out to Mr Mhlanga, who
appeared for the applicants, I understand the decision
in
Masinda
[2]
to exclude that line of argument. In response Mr Mhlanga sought
refuge in the decision in
Makeshift.
[3]
In my view that decision does not assist the applicants. As appears
from the judgment in that matter, it is peculiarly fact bound
in that
the court found that the right to be supplied with electricity was,
given the facts of that matter, an incident of the
right to occupy
the property. That is not the position
in
casu
.
On the contrary, we have here to do with the interruption or
suspension of a service which was provided by the city –
according
to the applicants in terms of supply agreements and hence
subject to the applicable terms as contained in the city’s
electricity
supply by-laws. In the circumstances I consider myself to
be bound by the decision in
Masinda
.
What occurred was not a spoliation, and the remedy of a
mandament
van spolie
is
not available.
Were
the applicants entitled to receive notice?
[13]
The applicants’ case was that they did not know why they had
been disconnected. In their founding papers they expressly
alleged
that they had accounts with the city and that those accounts were up
to date. They also said that they had been disconnected
without
notice and that city’s officials had declined to give any
explanation for their conduct. The impression which Mr
Asaba sought
to create in the founding affidavit was that the city had acted
capriciously and that its conduct had been part of
campaign of
targeting him and the entities which he controls.
[14]
As I have already indicated, the city’s case was quite
different . In essence it was that the connections had been
illegal
and that it acted within its powers in effecting the disconnections.
In this regard reliance was placed on by-law 14 of
the city’s
electricity supply by-laws, which stipulates that the city may
disconnect or suspend the supply of electricity
to premises if it
“
has reasonable grounds to believe that
the consumer uses the electricity for a purpose or deals with the
electricity in a way that
interferes in an improper or unsafe manner,
or is calculated to interfere in an improper or unsafe manner, with
the efficient supply
of electricity to the premises and/or to any
other consumer…”
[15]
In argument
before me counsel for the applicants sought to rely on the decision
in
Joseph,
[4]
which, so it was argued, had held the by-law in question to offend
against the Constitution and set it aside in part. That argument
was
flawed on a number of bases. In the first instance,
Joseph
dealt with a particular by-law of the city of Johannesburg, not the
statute in question
in
casu
.
Secondly,
Joseph
dealt with disconnection on account of non-payment, not on account of
illegality. Thirdly, and most importantly, the applicants’
papers did not contain an attack on the validity of the by-law under
consideration and no relief was sought in that regard. That
being so,
the line of argument was simply not open to the applicants. It is so
well settled as to be trite that the affidavits
in motion proceedings
constitute both the pleadings and the evidence.
[5]
It is also well settled that a party who seeks to challenge the
validity of a statutory provision must do so directly and seek
relief
in those terms – i.e. as was done in
Joseph
.
[16]
The result is that the applicants’ case was flawed to the
extent that it was based on a failure on the part of
the city to give
notice regardless of the basis of the termination. There is no
requirement to give notice in the case of illegal
connections.
Indeed, to impose such an obligation would, to my mind, be absurd
given the risks which illegal connections and the
improper use of
electricity pose to life, limb and property.
Were
the connections legal?
[17]
The crisp question is therefore whether the applicants have succeeded
in establishing that the premises under consideration
were legally
connected to the grid at the time of the disconnections complained of
– i.e. on 18 July this year.
[18]
Before
proceeding to a consideration of the evidence it is apposite to note
that the civil standard applies – i.e. the test
is one of a
balance of probabilities. It is also apposite to note that the relief
sought by the applicants is final in nature and
hence that the so
called
Plascon
Evans
[6]
rule applies. The effect of that rule is, in essence, that the matter
falls to be determined according to the respondent’s
version
save only to the extent that it is obviously so far-fetched, having
regard to the common cause facts and inherent probabilities
that it
can safely be disregarded.
[19]
The case made out by the applicants , both in their founding papers
and in reply, was that the connections to the premises
had been
legal. In support of this proposition they alleged that they had
accounts with the city for the supply of electricity
which, so they
said, were up to date at the time of the disconnections. In support
of this proposition they annexed to their papers
copies of municipal
accounts which spanned an extended period.
[20]
As I have already indicated, the main thrust of the city’s case
was that the connections had been illegal. The
city also said that
the applicants had been receiving electricity without paying for it
for many months, that the supply had been
disconnected on number of
prior occasions and that the applicants had, in response, simply
caused the premises to be reconnected
illegally. As evidence of
non-payment the city produced copies of payment records, which were
supportive of its case. As evidence
of the alleged illegality, the
city annexed to its papers a number of photographs showing what it
said were and which certainly
appeared to be illegal connections.
Photographs of the buildings constructed on the two properties were
also annexed to the papers.
[21]
In respect of the A[...] Street property the city’s evidence
was furthermore to the effect that two persons had
been caught in the
act of effecting or attempting to effect an illegal reconnection on
14 July and that they had been arrested
and charged. Photographs and
a case number were also provided. None of that evidence was disputed
directly. If that evidence is
accepted, as I believe it has to be,
then it follows axiomatically that the connection to that property
which existed on 18 July
could not have been a legal one.
[22]
The evidence in respect of the L[...] Street property was not as
detailed; however the city also asserted that the buildings
on that
property had been erected illegally and that the electrical
connection to it had been illegal. That the buildings which
have been
constructed on that property do not comply with the zoning, which
permits only of a single dwelling absent consent, is
self-evident
from the photographs - which, as I have said, show what appear to be
a large number of small, connected, single storey
dwellings. This in
itself renders it unlikely that they were the subject of properly
approved building plans or that they were
in fact lawfully connected
to the grid. Put otherwise, this evidence was supportive of the
city’s case.
[23]
The applicants’ evidence regarding the existence of accounts
and the assertion that such accounts had been up to
date when the
disconnections were effected also did not stand scrutiny.
[24]
The copies
of the municipal accounts which were attached to the replying
affidavit in respect of the L[...] Street property did
not contain a
line item in respect of electricity.
[7]
Those accounts were accordingly supportive of the proposition that
that property had never in fact been legally connected to the
grid –
i.e. they were supportive of the city’s case and destructive to
that of the applicants.
[25]
As to the A[...] Street property, some of the older accounts which
were annexed to the replying affidavit contained line
items in
respect of electricity but they either reflected no consumption at
all (and hence no charge), or what appear to have been
fairly nominal
charges given the nature of the premises. By way of example, the
account for the period ended 17 August 2022 reflected
a charge of
R6 858.47 and that for the period ended18 October 2022 reflected
a charge of R4 882,94. As with the L[...]
Street property, the
more recent accounts did not contain a line item in respect of
electricity. Again, this evidence was consistent
with the city’s
case and destructive of the case put up by the applicants in their
founding papers – i.e. that they
have accounts with the city
for the supply of electricity which were up to date at the time of
the disconnection.
[26]
The applicants also annexed a series of screen shots to their
replying papers – this in support of the proposition
that
prepaid meters had been installed on the units constructed on the
L[...] Street property. That evidence was contrary to the
case made
out in the founding affidavit and hence fell to be ignored. It was
also of such little evidential value that it would
not have disturbed
my finding on the central issue, even if I had taken it into account.
At best for the applicants (i.e. assuming
that the images are taken
to be screen shots evidencing payments in respect of electricity
vouchers), they constitute proof of
isolated small purchases of
pre-paid electricity which could not, on the papers , be linked to
any particular property. They certainly
did not come anywhere close
to showing that payments had been made of amounts which would be
appropriate to the consumption of
the occupants of the L[...] Street
property (which, as I have said, was alleged to be home to
approximately 100 families) for the
period preceding 18 July.
[27]
The conclusion which I have arrived at is therefore that the
applicants have failed to discharge the onus of establishing
that
either of the buildings under consideration were legally connected to
the grid at the times in question and hence that the
city acted
unlawfully in disconnecting them. Their application must accordingly
fail.
Costs
[28]
The parties were
ad idem
that costs should follow the result.
[29]
As I have already indicated, I do not intend to grant the counter
application and will make a separate order in that
regard. I believe
it appropriate to add, for the benefit of the taxing master, that
very little time was spent on that issue. I
would estimate at most 10
percent, if that.
Order
[30] I accordingly
make the following order:
1. The application
is dismissed with costs.
2. The
counterapplication is dismissed with costs.
3. The costs of
counsel will be taxable according to scale A
G S MYBURGH
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant: Adv L Mhlanga
Instructed
by Precious Muleya Inc
For the Respondents: Adv
S Mbeki
Instructed
by Leepile Attorneys
Heard:
06 August 2024
Delivered:
6 September 2024
[1]
10
of 2013.
[2]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
2019
(5) SA 386 (SCA).
[3]
Makeshift
1190 (Pty) Ltd v Cilliers
2020
(5) SA 538 (WCC).
[4]
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and others Case
CCT 43/09
[2009] ZACC 30
;
2010 (3) BCLR 212
(CC) ;
2010 (4) SA 55
(CC) (9 October 2009)
[5]
Triomf Kunsmis (Edms) Bpk v AE & CI Bpk en Andere
1984 (2) SA
261
(W): dictum at 269G – H.
[6]
Plascon
Evans Paints (Pty) Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3) SA 623 (A).
[7]
The accounts refer to the property as a sectional title development.
sino noindex
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