Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 935South Africa
Eskom Holding SOC Limited Ltd v Sokweba and Others (101726/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 935 (18 September 2024)
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Eskom Holding SOC Limited Ltd v Sokweba and Others (101726/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 935 (18 September 2024)
Eskom Holding SOC Limited Ltd v Sokweba and Others (101726/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 935 (18 September 2024)
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sino date 18 September 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 101726/2024
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
In the matter between:
ESKOM
HOLDING SOC LIMITED
Applicant
and
MPHO
SOKWEBA AND
TWENTY-THREE
OTHERS
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
for hand-down is deemed to be
10: 00 am on 18 September 2024.
Summary:
An urgent interdict
seeking to restraint the respondents from interfering with the
legally protected rights of the applicant. Since
August 2024, the
applicant was faced with incidents that interfered with its business
operations. The respondents who opposed the
relief sought do not
dispute the incidents. They simply dispute a link between them and
the alleged incidents and more importantly
the threat to injury to
the business operations of the applicant. On the available evidence,
the respondents are linked to the
threat faced by the applicant.
Accordingly, an interdict ought to be issued against them in order to
protect the threatened legally
protectable rights of the applicants.
Held: (1) The draft order marked “X” is made an order of
Court.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
In this urgent application, Eskom Holding
SOC Limited (Eskom) a state entity responsible for the provision and
distribution of electricity
in South Africa, an essential service to
the country as a whole is seeking the Court’s intervention.
Essentially, Eskom seeks
an order interdicting and restraining the
cited respondents from interfering or disrupting its operations at
various places where
it operates. The application is opposed by 22
respondents.
Background facts
pertinent to the present application
[2]
To
a large degree, the relevant facts are common cause. As indicated at
the dawn of this judgment, Eskom provides an essential service
to the
country. This country is still reeling from the past experience where
the supply of electricity was severely compromised.
In an instance
where Eskom does not function optimally, the consequences are dire to
the country and its ailing economy. From 13
August 2024, Eskom was
faced with undisputed incidents of blockading all its access gates at
its head office. Similar incidents
occurred on 26 August 2024. These
spates of unlawful activities had spread to various power stations of
Eskom. As far back as 24
July 2020 and 12 May 2021 respectively,
Eskom was compelled to obtain Court orders in this Court and the
Mpumalanga High Court
division. All these orders were aimed at
keeping at bay the unlawful interruptions of the business activities
of Eskom.
[3]
In the midst of all these on-going
interruptions, on 3 September 2024, the first respondent, one Ms Mpho
Sokweba in an email intimated
that on 4 September 2024, they will be
at the head office of Eskom. I interpose that in early August 2024,
there is evidence that
indicates that Ms Mpho Sokweba and Mr Muzi
Dube, made common cause with the demands of Gwanala group. The
Gwanala group had been
spearheading the interruptive protest action
for a period of time. Knowing what a visit to the head office means,
on 4 September
2024, Eskom addressed a written communication to Ms
Sokweba and the respondents cited in this application. The
communication indicated
that Eskom was aware of the planned
interruptive protest action and sought an undertaking to desist from
acting in the interruptive
manner as they did in the past as
evidenced by two Court orders. Such an undertaking was not provided.
Fearing the repeat of the
incidents of 13 and 26 August respectively,
Eskom launched the present application on 9 September 2024.
Analysis
[4]
Since
the decision of
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
[1]
,
the discretionary remedy of interdict existed to prevent any
continuation of unlawfulness. More recently, the Constitutional Court
in
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2]
,
felicitously stated the law as follows:
“
An
interdict is an order by a court prohibiting or compelling the doing
of a particular act for the purposes of
protecting
legally enforceable right
, which is
threatened by continuing or anticipated harm…
In
granting an
interdict, the court must exercise its discretion
judicially upon
consideration of all the facts and circumstances. An interdict is
“not a remedy for the past invasion of
rights: it is concerned
with the present and the future”. The past invasion should be
addressed by an action of damages.
An interdict is appropriate only
when future injury is feared
.”
[5]
There
is no doubt that having been faced with past interruptive actions,
the email of 3 September 2024, ignited the fear of a future
injury.
The defence of the respondents is simply that they were not involved
in the past invasions. However, on assessment of the
objective
evidence available to this Court, the preponderance of probabilities
demonstrates a common cause with the Gwanala group.
During argument,
Ms Osman, who appeared on behalf of the 22 respondents, strenuously
argued that Eskom has failed to establish
the link between the cited
respondents and the past invasions. On this point, she placed heavy
reliance on the Constitutional decision
of
Commercial
Stevedoring Agricultural and Allied Workers’ Union and Others v
Oak Valley Estates (Pty) Ltd and Another
(
Oak
Valley
)
[3]
.
[6]
In
casu
,
the documents of Gwanala group clearly link Ms Sokweba with the
activities of Gwanala. It was Ms Sokweba who intimated a threat
to
visit the head office of Eskom. All the respondents failed to give an
undertaking and or dispute any involvement in the planned
interruptions that Eskom made them aware that it was aware of.
Clearly, there is overwhelming evidence that the respondents are
definitely part of the planned interruption. The interruptions are
unlawful and Eskom is entitled to obtain an interdict for the
demonstrated fear. The Court in
Oak
Valley
concluded that our law requires that for interdictory relief to be
competently granted, a factual link between an individual respondent
and the actual or threatened unlawful conduct must be shown
[4]
.
The learned Theron J went further to state that:
“
[42]
… Where, for instance, unlawful conduct during protest action
is ongoing, widespread, and manifest, individual
protestors or
strikers will usually have to disassociate themselves from the
conduct, to escape the inference that it is reasonably
apprehended
that they will cause injury to the applicant.”
[7]
The respondents had an opportunity to
disassociate themselves with the planned interruption when Eskom
addressed them in a letter
of 4 September 2024. As such, they cannot
escape an inference that they will cause injury to Eskom on the
planned interruption.
Ms Omar argued that since nothing happened on 4
September 2024, then Eskom must fail. An interdict is concerned with
fear and reasonable
apprehension. Eskom had and continue to have a
reasonable apprehension that the respondents would interrupt its
business operations.
Therefore, that argument is unhelpful to the
respondents. On the day when the Court was preparing its judgment,
some written submissions
were availed seeking to argue that there was
no urgency. This after the application was fully argued.
Nevertheless, where unlawfulness
is hovering, the rule of law enjoins
a Court to interfere. Accordingly, the lack of urgency argument,
belated as it is, must fail.
Conclusions
[8]
For all the above reasons, the application
must be granted by adopting the draft order handed up by Eskom.
Order
1
The draft order annexed hereto and marked
“X” is hereby made an order of Court.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
TKN Inc (SL Mohapi)
Email
tonderai@tkninc.co.za
madoda@tkninc.co.za
mbalenhle@tkninc.co.za
For
Respondents:
ZEHIR OMAR ATTORNEY
Email
yasmin@omarlegal.co.za
Date of the
hearing:
17 September 2024
Date of
judgment:
18 September 2024
[1]
1914 AD 221.
[2]
2023 (1) SA 353
(CC) at para 47-48
[3]
(CCT
301/20)
[2022] ZACC 7
(1 March 2022)
[4]
Oak
Valley
para
39.
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