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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2023] ZAGPJHC 34
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## Mbhele and Another vs City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another (020979/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 34 (16 January 2023)
Mbhele and Another vs City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another (020979/2022)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 34 (16 January 2023)
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sino date 16 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE
NO
: 020979/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
16 JANUARY 2023
In
the matter between:
MBHELE
NOMSHADO ZERICH
First
Applicant
MBHELE
FRANK GOODMAN
Second
Applicant
and
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
HERBY
PROP TWENTY EIGHT CC
Second
Respondent
Delivered:
By transmission to the parties via email and
uploading onto Case Lines the Judgment is deemed to be delivered. The
date for hand-down
is deemed to be 16 January 2023
JUDGMENT
SENYATSI
J:
[1]
The controversy in this matter is whether or not the City of
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality (“Ekurhuleni Metro”)
is in contempt of a court order by Swanepoel AJ issued on 8 September
2022.
[2]
The court order (“the court order”) was to the following
effect:
“
1.
The electricity having been restored on the 6
th
September
2022;
2.
The First Respondent is to desist from suspending the applicants
access to electricity and/or blocking
the Applicant’s pre-paid
electricity meter in the future
so long as the applicants pay for
the services consumed.
(my own emphasis);
3.
The first respondent is to pay the costs of this application.”
[3]
The applicants brought an urgent application on the grounds that
Ekurhuleni Metro
is in contempt of the court order in that they are
unable to purchase the pre-paid electricity because their pre-paid
meter was
blocked by Ekurhuleni Metro.
[4]
The requirements for a party to be held in contempt of a court order
are well trodden
in the judicial turf.
[5]
The test to be applied to determine whether a party in contempt was
spelled out in
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[1]
by Cameron JA (as he then was) in the following terms:
[2]
“
[9]
The test for when disobedience of a civil order constitutes contempt
has come to be stated as whether the breach
was committed
‘deliberately and mala fide.
[3]
A deliberate disregard is not enough, since the non-complier may
genuinely, elbeit mistakenly, believe him or herself entitled
to act
in the way claimed to constitute the contempt. In such a case good
faith avoids the infraction.
[4]
Even a refusal to comply that is objectively unreasonable may be bona
fide though unreasonableness could evidence lack
of good
faith.”
[6]
The history of this litigation is replete with facts that are common
course to the
parties. It is the applicants’ case that since
purchasing the property in 1997, they have not received title
thereto. The
title still remains with the second respondent.
[7]
Some 12 years after taking occupation of the property the applicants
applied and were
granted permission to open an account with
Ekurhuleni Metro for services to be rendered on that account.
Simultaneously with the
approval of the account, Ekurhuleni Metro was
able to indicate or water and sewage services in the name of the
applicant. The account
was opened as a tenant account with the
Ekurhuleni Metro for those services.
[8]
From the papers it appears that even when they account for those
services was in the
name of the applicants, it was never kept up to
date. This led to the parties agreeing to an arrangement in terms of
which the
areas for consumption of water and sewage which is at 21
August 2022 was R32 282.76, the applicants were to pay R294.40
towards
the areas. It appears from annexure MN14A to the founding
affidavit that the arrangement had been made much earlier than that
date,
that 21 August 2022. The electricity was consumed in
terms of a pre-paid meter which could be used for as long as the
other
services were paid for.
[9]
The dispute arises due to the blocking of the pre-paid electricity
meter due to the
alleged non-payment after consumption of services.
It appears that this is the armoury available to the metro when water
and other
related services are not paid for.
[10]
In a nutshell this is what led to the Swanepoel AJ order which is the
subject of the application
today. There is also a pending rescission
application to set aside that order.
[11]
The applicants do not aver in their initial founding affidavit that
they have paid for the services
which renders the blocking of the
pre-paid meter a contemptuous action by the first respondent. They
however filed a supplementary
affidavit that although the court order
says that the prepaid meter must not be suspended as long as they pay
for the consumption
of water and sewage services, they have been
unable to do so because the account in their name has been closed.
[12]
Ekurhuleni Metro contends the services were not paid for as required
by the court order. It contends
that even prior to the order been
issued, the tenant’s account in which the services were paid
for had been closed. The closure
was, so contend the first
respondent, consistent with the policy that was adopted in 2017 for
closure of the tenants account was
implemented in 2022. It contends
that the services that can still be paid for through the second
respondents account and that the
closure of the tenants account was
in accordance with the policy that was legally adopted and
implemented by it. Whilst that may
well be the case, it is difficult
to understand how the tenants who have valid rental agreements with
the owner would pay for water
and sewage services rendered to them
where for instance, the owner is not a commercial rental business
entity with the ability
to create prepaid electricity metres for its
tenants. However, this is not an issue that this court is required to
adjudicate on.
[13]
Ekurhuleni Metro also states in its papers that its implementation of
the policy to close accounts
of the tenants was not done in a rushed
manner, but followed due process of notifying the occupants of the
property by serving
the necessary notice. It contends that if payment
of the services consumed is effected, the pre-paid meter will be
unblocked.
[14]
Having regard to the papers before me, I am not persuaded that the
court order was disobeyed
with the required mala fide to render the
first respondent liable to contempt. On the country, the court order
states that for
as long as consumption of services is paid for; the
pre-paid meter will not be blocked.
[15]
There is no evidence in the founding papers that payment of the
services was made by the applicants
as required by the court order.
The attempt by the applicants to supplement their papers to say
payment was impossible to make
as the tenant’s account had been
closed does not, in my view, hold. This is so because when the
Swanepoel AJ court order
was issued the tenants account had already
been closed. More importantly, the applicants do not disclose the
steps they took to
get the payment issue resolved post the court
order with regards to how the payment was to be made.
[16]
The applicants, from their papers state that they have been in
possession of the property since
1997. And a submission was made that
the bond which was taken to fund the purchase price was in fact
settled by the applicants
in 2012. It defies logic, in my view, that
the applicants have not taken steps to assert their rights to title
over the property.
This is again a point that is not before this
court but just an observation.
[17]
Having regard to the papers before this court, I am not in a position
to declare that the first
respondent is in breach of the court order.
[18]
Advocate Nobangule submitted that the court should consider the
principles laid out in
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Anzotrax (Pty) Ltd t/a Topbet
Germiston
.
[5]
In that case the nub of the dispute between the parties was whether
the municipality is empowered by the provisions of Section
34 of the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality By-law to discount the
electricity supply to a tenant who holds its own consumer
agreement
with the municipality in respect of electricity supply, which was
fully paid, in regard to arrear property rates and
taxes owed by the
owner.
[19]
The court correctly held that the municipality was not entitled to
disconnect electricity under
these circumstances. The facts of the
present case are distinguishable. The services that are the subject
of the dispute are not
rates and taxes but water and sewage services
which the applicants concede consume. Reliance on
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Anzotrax (Pty) Ltd t/a Topbet Germiston
by the applicant finds no application in the present case. I say so
because in their founding affidavits, the applicants do not
state
that after the court order was issued they were sent from pillar to
post in their attempts to pay for the services consumed.
Instead,
through the mouth of their legal representative who provided the
sworn founding affidavit on their behalf, they are silent
on this
important point. It is only in the supplementary affidavit that an
explanation is provided that the account was closed.
This fact was
known even before the order that is the subject of this litigation
was obtained.
[20]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
(a)
The forms and time periods for service as required by the rules of
this court are dispensed with;
(b)
The application for an order declaring that the first respondent is
in contempt of the court order granted
by Swanepoel AJ on 8 September
2022 under case number 2022-020979 is dismissed;
(c)
The applicants are ordered to pay the costs of this application.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE
APPLICATION HEARD
: 13 January 2023
DATE
DELIVERED
:
16
January 2023
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant
Adv
Nobangule
Instructed
by Maseko
Nondumiso Inc
Counsel
for the Respondent: Mr S Lusenga
Instructed
by: Lusenga
Attorneys Incorporated
[1]
(653/04)
[2006] ZASCA 52
[2]
See
para a
[3]
See
Frankel Max Pollak Vinderine Inc v Menell Jack Hyman Rosenberg &
Co Inc
[1996] ZASCA 21
;
1996 (3) SA 355
(A) 367 H-I.
[4]
See
Consolidated Fish (Pty) Ltd v Zive
1968 (2) SA 517 (C) 524 D
[5]
[2016]
ZAGPJHC 178
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