Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 171South Africa
Lateovitsa (Pty) Ltd and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2023-007015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 171 (27 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
27 February 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lateovitsa (Pty) Ltd and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2023-007015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 171 (27 February 2023)
Lateovitsa (Pty) Ltd and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Another (2023-007015) [2023] ZAGPJHC 171 (27 February 2023)
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sino date 27 February 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2023-007015
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED:
YES
/NO
DATE: 27/02/2023……
In
the matter between:
LATEOVITSA
(PTY) LTD First
Applicant
TRANSCOM
SERVICES (PTY) LTD Second
Applicant
MINX
SHIPPING (PTY)
LTD Third
Applicant
and
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY First
Respondent
TLOTLEGO
PROPERTY GROUP (PTY) LTD Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
Introduction
[1]
This an application brought by the sub-tenants of a property to get
the local authority, the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality
(“City”), to restore their supply of electricity. This at
least is the essence of the relief sought although
it is framed in
various different prayers because the applicants seek to achieve the
same result – restoration of the electric
supply – but
they rely on different legal bases to get there.
[2]
In the first place they rely on spoliation. They thus seek the
restoration of electricity as an element of
possession they have been
unlawfully deprived of. The second basis is a review of the decision
of the City to cut their supply
– in other words they rely on
an administrative law remedy based on the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000
(“PAJA”). The third is to rely on
another administrative law ground in an attempt to apply the facts
the well-known
Joseph
case
[1]
,
to those of this case. In
Joseph
the Constitutional Court had ordered the City of Johannesburg to
restore the supply of electricity to tenants of a building where
they
had paid their landlord who had not paid these amounts on to the City
of Johannesburg which had then terminated supply to
their building
without giving them 14 days’ notice.
[3]
The City opposes the application on all these grounds and contends
that its action in terminating the supply
was lawful and in
accordance with its by-laws and the case law on this issue. I heard
the matter on 8 February 2023.Although the
City challenged the
application on the grounds of urgency, I consider the matter is
urgent as the application concerns the supply
of electricity to three
businesses that operate from the same premises in a warehouse in
Ekurhuleni.
The
parties
[4]
The applicants comprise three companies. The first applicant
Lateovista has a lease with the second respondent
Tlotlego Property
Service Group (Pty) Ltd (“Tloltlego”) to lease warehouse
space at a property situated at 43 Houtbaai
Street Elandshaven
Extension 4 Germiston (“the property”). The first
applicant in turn has subleases with the second
and third applicants
for warehouse space on the property. There is no contractual
arrangement for the supply of electricity to
the property between the
applicants and the City, which is first respondent. Rather the
contract for the supply is between the
first respondent and the
second respondent, Tlotlego. The Second Respondent is also the
account holder of the rates, services and
the local authority
accounts relevant to the property with the First Respondent. To avoid
the confusion of names I will from now
on refer to Tlotlego as the
Landlord and the first respondent as the City.
[5]
The Landlord in turn in terms of its lease with the first applicant
charges it for the electricity consumed
on the property. The first
applicant then charges the two other applicants in turn for their
consumption. The applicants contend
that when they are billed monthly
for their electricity consumption by the Landlord, they pay the
Landlord as billed, and are up
to date with their payments. The three
applicants make no distinction between their respective
circumstances. For this reason,
in this decision, I will refer to
them collectively as the applicants.
[6]
The applicants problem is that the Landlord has not paid the City for
the electricity consumption on the property.
The Landlord is engaged
in a longstanding dispute with the City over the charges it has
levied on the property. At present there
is pending litigation.
According to the applicants this dispute has been in existence prior
to the applicants leasing the property
in 2018. The applicants
complain that their dilemma is that they are the victims of this
dispute. They are not party to the litigation.
They have paid for
their electricity consumption, but the Landlord is not paying this
over to the City.
[2]
The City in
turn has refused the applicants proposal to bill them directly, until
the outstanding balance, some R 4 million at
present, has been paid.
For the applicants this proposal is a non-starter. They cannot afford
to pay this amount and then try to
recover it from the Landlord.
Hence the impasse and why they have come to court.
[7]
Missing in this litigation despite being cited as the second
respondent, is the Landlord. It has
not opposed or
supported the application or elected to abide by the outcome. The
dispute is thus between the applicants and the
City.
Events
leading up to the application.
[8]
It is common cause that on 6 September 2022 the City discontinued the
supply of electricity to the property
on the grounds of non-payment
by the Landlord. I will refer to this as the first termination. Here
is where the dispute of fact
gets stranger. The applicants say the
electricity was cut off for a period of 26 days after which it was
restored on 3 October
2022. They can give no explanation of why this
was so. According to the applicants the electricity was again
terminated on 4 November.
The applicants state that members of the
City’s department and its police attended on that day and
engaged in a nasty altercation
with the third applicant’s
security official who had protested their right to terminate. They
say the supply was again reinstated
on 14
th
November 2022.
Again, there is no explanation of why this was the case.
[9]
However, the City denies any knowledge of reinstating the electricity
supply on 3 October nor terminating
it again and later reinstating it
again on 14 November.
[10]
Then, and this is common cause, the electricity was again terminated
on 23 January 2023 and the supply has remained cut
off since then,
hence this application. I will refer to this as the second
termination. The City’s version is that in January
2023 they
were conducting a campaign to enforce payment in the City by
defaulters. As part of the campaign its technical staff
visited the
property and discovered an illegal connection. The property was thus
disconnected because of an illegal connection.
A photograph
accompanied the answering affidavit together with a supporting
affidavit from the technician who had seen the offending
connection.
[11]
In response in a supplementary affidavit accompanying their replying
affidavit, the applicants have put up a version
from an electrician
who has inspected both the property and the photographs. In brief,
his contention is that the connection shown
in the photograph comes
not from the switchbox on the property to which the applicants have
access but from a nearby substation
to which only the City has
access. Therefore, the applicants contend in reply, if there is
indeed an illegal connection it cannot
be of their doing.
[12]
Thus, to summarise the facts. It is common cause that the City
terminated the electricity supply to the property on 6
September 2022
and later again on 23 January 2023. The City denies any knowledge of
any restoration of supply between these two
dates. The City states on
23 January, the date of the second termination, the property was
receiving a supply of electricity, but
this was because of an illegal
connection not a lawful supply by the City. As far as the City is
concerned there should have been
no supply to the property since it
was terminated after the first termination with this background, I
will now go on to consider
the various bases which the applicants
raise for their relief.
Spoliation
[13]
The basis for the spoliation relief is this. On 23 January 2023 the
applicants submit they were in peaceful possession
of the supply of
electricity when the City unlawfully deprived them of it. This is by
no means the first time that parties whose
electricity has been
terminated by a public body have sought to rely on spoliation as a
remedy. In the leading case of
Eskom Holdings SOC v Masinda,
the court looked at the right of a party whose electricity has been
terminated to rely on spoliation for relief. The court stated:
“
[…]
However, the cases that I have dealt with above graphically
illustrate how, in the context of a disconnection of the
supply of
such a service, spoliation should be refused where the right to
receive it is purely personal in nature. The mere existence
of such a
supply is, in itself, insufficient to establish a right constituting
an incident of possession of the property to
which it is
delivered. In order to justify a spoliation order, the right must be
of such a nature that it vests in the person in
possession of the
property as an incident of their possession. Rights bestowed by
servitude, registration or statute are obvious
examples of this. On
the other hand, rights that flow from a contractual nexus between the
parties are insufficient as they are
purely personal, and a
spoliation order, in effect, would amount to an order of specific
performance in proceedings in which a
respondent is precluded from
disproving the merits of the applicant’s claim for possession.
Consequently, insofar as previous
cases may be construed as holding
that such a supply is in itself an incident of the possession of
property to which it is delivered,
they must be regarded as
having been wrongly decided.”
[3]
[14]
More recently in
Makeshift
1190 (Pty) Ltd v Cilliers
[4]
a full court in the Western Cape took a wider view of the remedy.
That decision poses the possibility that what constitutes an
incidental right might be wider than those mentioned in the passage
above in
Masinda
.
The court there gave as an example where a landlord might terminate
supply to in an attempt to evict a tenant without following
due
process. But even on this extended view the applicants cannot claim
an incidental right. The Landlord here is not attempting
to evict
them. The City has no commercial or legal interest in evicting them -
it is not their landlord.
[15]
Thus, the applicants are not vested with any right that is incidental
to their possession as is understood in either
the
Masinda
or
Makeshift
cases. Indeed, they do not even have a personal
right against the City as they are not the contracting party, the
Landlord is.
The law on this point is clear and needs no further
elaboration. The applicants cannot rely on spoliation against the
city terminating
the supply of electricity to the property because of
their Landlord’s outstanding bill.
Administrative
law remedy
.
[16]
Mr Wentzel who appeared for the applicants argued that the decision
of the City to terminate electricity to the property
was reviewable
under PAJA on two grounds. First, it was procedurally unfair because
the City failed to notify the applicants that
it was terminating the
supply on 23 January 2023.
[17]
The next argument was that the City did not act rationally and hence
the action was reviewable on this ground. The basis
for the
rationality attack was that in January 2023 the City, on its own
version had visited the property as part of a campaign
against
non-paying users and then having come to the property decided to rely
on an illegal connection. Thus, it is argued the
pretext for arriving
to terminate and the post termination rationale given, are
inconsistent, and hence the City acted irrationally.
[18]
But both grounds for termination; for non-payment and for having an
illegal connection, are a basis for the City to terminate
its
services. The fact that they may have arrived to terminate for reason
and A and then found reason B to terminate existed as
well, does not
make the actions irrational. A non-paying customer may also at the
same time have an illegal connection. The City
is entitled to act in
respect of the illegal connection once found even if its pretext for
arriving was originally informed by
non-payment.
[19]
The City’s by-laws make it clear that it has the power to
disconnect the supply of electricity in these circumstance.
The
relevant by-law states:
"When an
installation has been illegally reconnected on a consumer's premises
after having been previously legally disconnected
by the Council or
where Council's equipment has been tampered with to prevent full
registration of consumption by the meter the
electricity shall be
physically removed from those premises and will only be reinstalled
upon payment of the applicable fee, as
prescribed in the tariff
charges."
[20]
On the facts before me I have to accept the City’s version that
there was an illegal connection to the property.
The illegal
connection had followed upon a previously legal disconnection. The
best the applicants can contend for in the replying
supplementary
affidavit is to dispute whether the illegal connection was at the
point of supply on the property or a nearby transformer.
On either
version the supply was unlawful, and had been since the supply was
terminated in September 2022. The City denies ever
resuming supply
and the applicants are not able to explain why on two occasions since
the first termination electricity was restored.
Applying
Plascon-
Evans
rule I must accept the City’s’ version that on
23
rd
January there was an illegal supply of electricity to
the property and that the City was entitled to terminate the supply
in accordance
with its by-laws.
[21] Moreover, as
the City has argued, the law is clear on the point that a party who
receives an illegal supply of electricity
is not entitled to rely on
PAJA. This is clearly explained by the SCA in the case of
Eskom
Holdings Soc Ltd v Sidoyi
“
If
Eskom was correct in saying that the supply of electricity to Mr
Sidoyi's house was via an unlawful connection using electrical
apparatus that had been unlawfully erected and installed, it was
difficult to see how the removal of that apparatus, which would
have
the effect of terminating the supply, could constitute administrative
action as defined in PAJA. The reason was that the definition
of
administrative action in s 1 of PAJA requires that the action in
question 'adversely affect the rights' of the person bringing
the
proceedings. If the means of receiving a supply of electricity is an
unlawful connection to the electricity network there is
no right or
legitimate expectation to receive that supply of electricity.”
[5]
[22]
This then disposes of the administrative law remedy. The applicants
had no right to invoke PAJA in circumstances where
the City
terminated an unlawful supply. I now turn to the question as to
whether there remains an administrative law remedy for
tenants of a
non-paying landlords based on the
Joseph
case.
Joseph
’
s
case
.
[6]
[23]
Finally, the applicants seek to argue that they are similarly
situated to the tenants in the
Joseph
case who got relief on
public interest grounds from the Constitutional court. Like the
Cooper
applicants they assert they are victims of a non-paying
landlord who they have paid for their consumption.
[24]
The
Cooper
case however did not involve an illegal connection.
Rather it was limited to the issue of supply termination for
non-payment when
the tenants had not been given notice of termination
by the City of Johannesburg. The facts are thus different from the
present
case.
[25]
In the result the applicants have failed in their application. Costs
must follow cause and the City is awarded costs.
The City has also
sought the costs pursuant to the employment of two counsel. This case
had a lengthy record despite being dealt
with by way of urgency and
the applicants raised a number of issues including new ones in their
replying papers. Consequently,
I think the employment of two counsel
by the City was justified.
ORDER:-
[26] In the result
the following order is made:
a.
The application is dismissed;
b.
The applicants, jointly and severally, the one paying the others to
be
absolved, are liable for the first respondent’s cost
including the costs consequent on the employment of two counsel.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
07
February 2023
Date of judgment:
27
February 2023
Appearances:
Counsel
for the Applicants:
J
H Wentzel
Instructed
by:
Adv
J H Wentzel
Advocate with Trust
Account
Counsel for the First
Respondent: X Mofokeng
M O Mudimeli
Instructed by:
Galananzhele
Sebela Attorneys Inc
[1]
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
2010(4)
SA 55 (CC).
[2]
The
City claims that the Landlord had made certain payments and then
reversed them.
[3]
2019 (5) SA 386
SCA at paragraph 22.
[4]
3 All SA 234
(WCC) at paragraphs 33 to 37.
[5]
2019 JDR 0963 (SCA) at paragraph 15.
[6]
See
footnote 1, supra.
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