Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1019South Africa
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Idola (Pty) Ltd and Another (0004168/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1019 (9 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
9 October 2024
Headnotes
to be in contempt of the orders of Siwendu J, Crutchfield J, Wright J including my judgment of the 7th February 2024. I did not make a ruling in respect of the contempt as I required proof that the order had been served on the City Manager before making such a ruling.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Idola (Pty) Ltd and Another (0004168/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1019 (9 October 2024)
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Others v Idola (Pty) Ltd and Another (0004168/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1019 (9 October 2024)
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sino date 9 October 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 0004168/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
In
the matter between:
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
1
st
Applicant
THE
MUNICIPAL MANAGER CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
2
nd
Applicant
JOHANNESBURG
WATER (SOC) LTD
3
rd
Applicant
CITY
POWER (SOC) LTD
4
th
Applicant
And
IDOLA
(PTY) LTD
1
st
Respondent
TWIN
CITY
2
nd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAKUME, J:
INTRODUCTION
[1] There are two
applications before me the first is an application for leave to
appeal a judgment I handed down on the 14
February 2024 in which I
granted the following order against the applicants:
1.1
That
the matter was urgent.
1.2
That
the first, second and fourth respondent and or any person,
representative, employee, official of the first, second and fourth
respondents including but not limited to any other person or
representative not necessarily in the employ of the first, second
and
fourth respondents but acting pursuant to and in terms of any
instructions issued by and on behalf of the first, second and
fourth
respondents are interdicted and retained from terminating and or
restricting the applicants Municipal services without having
been
authorised thereto by order of Court first.
1.3
The
first respondent is ordered to pay the taxed costs of this
application on a party and party scale including costs of Counsel.
[2]
The second application is one in terms of Section 18(3) of the
Superior Courts Act
[1]
(the Act)
in which the respondents (Idola and Twin City) seek leave to execute
the orders granted by me in the urgent court on
the 7
th
8
th
and 14
th
February 2024 notwithstanding the appeal application.
[3] This Section
18(3) Notice of Motion which was supported by a lengthy affidavit was
served on the 12
th
of August 2024. The City only filed a
Notice of Intention to Oppose on the 28
th
of August 2024
and had not by the 17
th
of September 2024 filed their
Answering Affidavit. I then ordered the City to file Answering
Affidavit by the 20
th
of September 2024 and for both
applications to be heard on the 26 September 2024. The City to pay
costs on a punitive scale.
BACKGROUND
[4] The dispute
between the parties in this matter concerns the correctness of the
City’s statement of account in respect
of Municipal services.
That dispute led to several events in which the City disconnected
electricity supply to the residential
block owned by Idola and Twin
City.
[5] Idola and Twin
City obtained three Court orders in this Court first by Madam Justice
Siwendu then Madam Justice Crutchfield
and lastly by Judge Wright. In
all three orders the City was interdicted from disconnecting
electricity supply to Idola without
a Court order. It is significant
to note that all three Court orders still stand and have not been
challenged on appeal.
[6] In the
application before me on the 8
th
February 2024 the
respondents had also sought an order that the first, second and
fourth respondents be held to be in contempt
of the orders of Siwendu
J, Crutchfield J, Wright J including my judgment of the 7
th
February 2024. I did not make a ruling in respect of the contempt as
I required proof that the order had been served on the City
Manager
before making such a ruling.
THE APPLICANTS' GROUND
OF APPEAL
[7] The grounds of
appeal are spread between the notice of appeal as well as in the
heads of argument and can be summarised
as being the following:
7.1
That
the order granted is clearly wrong as it fails to take into
consideration and appreciate the statutory obligation assigned
to the
Municipality to collect levies and for services
7.2
That
this Court erred in granting the order of the 7
th
February 2024 in the absence of the Municipality thus flouting the
audi
alteram parterm
rule.
7.3 The court
erred in dismissing the Municipality’s reconsideration
application on the 7
th
February 2024.
7.4 This court
erred in granting a final interdict against the implementation of the
Municipal by-laws.
7.5
That this Court failed to observe the principle of
stare
decisis
as set out in the Constitutional Court judgment of
Rademan
v Moqhaka Local Municipality
[2]
in which the Constitutional Court refused the contention that the
Municipality needed a Court order prior to it implementing its
by-laws.
7.6 That there are
important issues of law and compelling reasons why leave to appeal
should be granted.
THE TEST FOR LEAVE TO
APPEAL
[8]
Section
17 (1) (a) of the Superior Courts Act number provides that leave to
appeal may only be granted where the judge or judges
concerned are of
the opinion that:
(a)
(i)
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success.
(ii)
there is some other compelling reasons why the appeal should be heard
including conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration
.
[9]
T
he
Supreme Court of Appeal in
MEC
for Health Eastern Cape vs Mkhitha
[3]
held that:
“
Once
again it is necessary to say that leave to appeal, especially to this
court, must not be granted unless there truly is a reasonable
prospects of success.
Section 17
(1)(a) of the
Superior Courts Act 10
of 2013
makes it clear that leave to appeal may only be given where
the judge concerned is of the opinion that the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success; or there is some other
compelling reason why it should be heard.
An
Applicant for leave to appeal must convince the court on proper
grounds that there is a reasonable prospect or realistic chance
of
success on appeal. A mere possibility of success, an arguable case or
one that is not hopeless, is not enough. There must be
a sound,
rational basis to conclude that there is a reasonable prospect of
success on appeal.”
FAILURE TO OBSERVE THE
AUDI ALTERAM PATRTEN RULE
[10]
This
argument only holds water and is applicable to the first order which
this Court granted at 16h00 on the 7
th
of February 2024
.
However,
in my judgment I justified ruling against the applicant in their
absence as I was satisfied that firstly, it was in the
best interest
of justice for the innocent tenants, secondly, I was satisfied that
the Municipality attorneys had received the notice
of motion and
elected not to appear in court. In any case a few hours after the
order the Municipality brought a reconsideration
application which I
heard on the same day in the evening and dismissed same. That alone
fortifies the earlier decision taken in
the absence of the
municipality.
FAILURE TO OBSERVE THE
PRINCIPLE OF STARE DECISIS AS SET OUT IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL DECISION
IN RADEMAN VS MOQHAKA MUNICIPALITY
[11]
Reliance
on the decision of Rademan is misplaced
.
Firstly,
there has been three decisions in which the City was interdicted from
disconnecting electricity and all those three decisions
have not been
challenged hence the application for contempt. Secondly, in Rademan
the appellant had decided on her own to split
the Municipalities
consolidated account and only paid the electricity portion thereof
leaving out the other levies on the basis
that the Municipality was
rendering poor service. Both the High Court as well as the Supreme
Court of appeals relying on
Section 18(3)
of the by-laws concluded
that Mrs Rademan could not on her own decide what amount to pay once
the account was consolidated it was
one account and it had to be paid
in full within the stipulated period.
[12]
The
facts in Rademan are distinguishable from the facts in this matter.
In this matter payment is being made. The dispute is about
the
calculation hence the order by Van Niekerk AJ in February 2024. The
respondent Idola is not refusing to pay nor is it withholding
any
amount.
[13]
The
interdict granted against the City will operate for as long as the
underlying dispute remains unresolved. In granting the interdict
this
Court and the ones before did not seek to establish a new principle
that the City or any other local authority must first
obtain a Court
order before enforcing the by-law.
[14]
I am
not persuaded that the applicant has succeeded to establish any
prospects of success in the appeal in the result the application
for
leave to appeal must fail
.
RELIEF IN TERMS OF
SECTION 18(1) AND (3) OF THE SUPERIOR COURTS ACT, 10 OF 2013 (THE
ACT)
[15]
Idola
are the applicants, and they seek the following relief:
15.1 That
exceptional circumstances as contemplated in Section 18(1) of the Act
exist.
15.2 That the
applicants will suffer irreparable harm if the order herein is not
granted.
15.3 That the
first and second respondents will not suffer any irreparable harm if
the order sought herein is granted.
15.4 That the
applicants are granted leave and are authorized in terms of section
18 (1) read with section 18 (3) of the
Act to execute orders granted
by Makume J dated the 7
th
February 2024, 8th February 2024
and 14
th
February 2024 pending finalisation of any appeals
lodged by and on behalf of the 1st and or second respondents.
15.5 Cost on an
attorney and client scale.
[16]
It is
common cause that the parties have been involved in litigation
stemming from disputes over the applicants Municipal account
since
the year 2020. Despite previous court orders interdicting the
Respondents from disconnecting electricity supply the respondents
have repeatedly terminated such supply in flagrant disregard of the
Court orders. This is the reason for a pending application
to hold
the City Manager in contempt of court orders.
[17]
Idola
maintains that exceptional circumstances exist as contemplated in
Section 18(1)
and
18
(3) of the
Superior Courts Act
.
It
contends that it will suffer irreparable harm should the operation
and execution of the orders granted on the 7, 8 and 14 February
2020
remain suspended.
[18]
The
respondents in opposing this application place heavy reliance on the
issue of the
audi
alteram partem
rule
secondly, they refer
ad
nuseam
to the decisions of Siwendu J; Crutchfield J and Wright J which
decisions have no bearing on whether to grant the
Section 18(1)
relief or not
.
Lastly
the respondents maintain that the order granted by Van Niekerk AJ on
the 14
th
February 2024 serves to ensure that the respondents will not
disconnect the electricity supply to Idola whilst that order is still
in operation. If that is what the Respondents says the question
remains why after that order, they filed the application for leave
to
appeal on the 11 March 2024 and why are they persisting with it
instead of withdrawing the application so as to afford the Van
Niekerk order to be finalised.
[19]
In
Tyte
Security Services CC vs Western Cape Provincial Government and
others
[4]
the SCA revisited the existing authorities with regard to such
applications and stated as follows in paragraph 9 and 10:
“
[9]
This
court has examined the requirements for the implementation of an
execution order pending an appeal in
University
of the Free State vs Afriforum (Afriforum)
[
[2016]
ZASCA 165
;
[2017] All SA 79
(SCA);
2018 (3) SA 428
(SCA)]
(Afriforum);
Ntlemenza vs Helen Suzman Foundation
[
[2017]
ZASCA 93
;
[2017] 3 All SA 589
(SCA);
2017 (5) SA 402
(SCA)];
Premier
of Gauteng vs Democratic Alliance; Knoop v Gupta
[[2020]
ZASCA 149;
[2021] 1 All SA 17
(SCA);
2021 (3) SA 135
(SCA)]
(Knoop)
and
most recently, in
Zuma
v Downer and Another
[[2023]
ZASCA 132;
[2023] 4 All SA 644
(SCA);
2024 (2) SA 356
(SCA);
2024 (1)
SACR 589
(SCA)]. Relying, in part, on the statements made in those
judgments, in particular
Afriforum
and
Knoop,
Counsel
for Tyte, argued that it was for an applicant for an execution order
(in the position of Royal) to establish three separate,
distinct and
self-standing requirements, namely: first, exceptional circumstances
(the first); second, that it will suffer irreparable
harm if the
order is not made (the second); and, third, the party against whom
the order is made (in this case Tyte) will not suffer
irreparable
harm if the order is made (the third).
[10] Whilst there
are indeed statements in those judgments that would appear to support
counsel's fundamental hypothesis,
they seem to have been made in
passing. They thus called for close examination of this matter. An
important point of departure,
so it seems to me, is that
consideration of each of the so-called three requirements is not a
hermetically sealed inquiry and can
hardly be approached in a
compartmentalised fashion.”
[20]
The
respondents repeated contention that it is entitled to disconnect
electricity supply notwithstanding the interdict is proof
of the
existence of exceptional circumstances. In the matter of
MV
Ais Mamas Seatrans Maritime vs Owners, MV Ais Mamas, and Another
[5]
Thring J said that:
“
What
is ordinarily contemplated by the words ‘exceptional
circumstances’ is something out of the ordinary and of an
unusual nature; something which is accepted in the sense that the
general rule does not apply to it; something uncommon, rare or
different.”
[21]
I
t is
indeed rare and out of the ordinary for a statutory body like the
city to continuously defy court orders. This is exceptional
and
unheard of. The respondents also rely heavily on an agreed order of
the Honourable Van Niekerk AJ which they have not adhered
to instead
of addressing their dispute as set out in the order the respondents
decided to file an application for leave to appeal.
These on its own
amounts to exceptional circumstances.
[22]
It
is not possible to lay down precise rules as to what constitutes
exceptional circumstances. Each case has to be decided on its
own
facts
.
In
JAI
Hind EMCC t/a Emmerentia Convenience Centre vs Engen Petroleum Ltd
South Africa
[6]
Sutherland DJP emphasised that
the
question whether exceptional circumstances exist does not depend upon
the exercise of judicial discretion but their existence
or otherwise
is a matter of fact which the court must decide.
[23]
In
University
of the Free State v Afriforum and Another
[7]
the Court held that the prospects of success on appeal is a relevant
factor in determining whether there are exceptional circumstances
justifying an order under
Section 18(3).
In
Minister
of Social Development Western Cape and Others vs Justice Alliance of
South Africa
[8]
,
Binns-Ward J concluded that the judgment creditors prospects of
success on appeal were so poor that they ought to have precluded
a
finding of sufficient degree of exceptionality to justify an order in
terms of section 18 of the Act. Lastly in
Zero
Azania (Pty) Ltd vs Caterpillar Financial Services SA (Pty) Ltd and a
similar appeal
[9]
the Full Court held that the poor prospects of success on appeal
constitutes in themselves the kind of exceptional circumstances
that
might justify interim execution
[24]
It is
common cause that there have been three orders which the City has
chosen to either ignore or stubbornly chose not to comply
with worse
still the agreed arrangement reached and made an order by Van Niekerk
on the 14
th
of February 2024 remains on paper and nothing has been done about it.
[25]
The
applicant has succeeded in demonstrating that the city will not
suffer any irreparable harm if the orders are executed. In any
event
the respondents prospects of success are so poor hence I have already
ruled and dismissed the application for leave to appeal.
[26]
In
paragraph 38 off their heads the respondents said that the
Municipality seeks leave to appeal against the conflicting orders
made by this Court in light of the Supreme Court of Appeals judgment
and the Constitutional Court. That statement is left naked
as it is
without reference to any judgment which is alleged to be conflicting.
[27]
There
is sufficient evidence that the repeated disconnection of electricity
and services supplied to the applicant’s premises
is causing
the applicant irreparable harm in that tenants’ riot and cause
damage others terminate their leases. On the other
hand, the
Municipality if it is convinced that money is owed to it can and
should simply commence debt recovery legal proceedings
rather than
resort to disruption of the lives of the tenants.
[28]
I'm
satisfied that the applicants have met all the requirements of
section 18 (1) and section 18(3) of the Superior Courts Act.
Order
1.
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is ordered
to pay the first respondent’s taxed party and party costs.
3.
The applicants are hereby
authorised in terms of section 18(1) read with section 18(3) to
execute the orders granted on the 7, 8
and 14
th
February 2024.
M A MAKUME
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Dated at Johannesburg on
this 09
th
day of October 2024
DATE OF HEARING: 26
SEPTMBER 2024
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09
OCTOBER 2024
Appearances:
FOR APPLICANT:
INSTRUCTED BY:
ADV AUCAMP
JACQUES CLASSEN
INCORPORATED
FOR RESPONDENT:
INSTRUCTED
BY:
ADV E SITHOLE
MADHLOPA
& THENGA INCORPORTED
[1]
10
of 2013.
[2]
[2013]
ZACC 11
;
2013 (4) SA 225
CC.
[3]
[2016]
ZASCA 176
; 2016 JDR 2214 (SCA).
[4]
[2024]
ZASCA 887
; 2024 JDR 2306 (SCA).
[5]
2002
(6) SA 150
(C) at 156 H-J.
[6]
2023
(2) SA 252 (GJ).
[7]
2018
(3) SA 428 (SCA)
[8]
2016
JDR 0606 (WCC).
[9]
2024
(2) SA 574
(GJ).
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