Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 531South Africa
Nelmar Court (Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg and Others (2023/046703) [2023] ZAGPJHC 531 (22 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 April 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nelmar Court (Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg and Others (2023/046703) [2023] ZAGPJHC 531 (22 May 2023)
Nelmar Court (Pty) Ltd v City of Johannesburg and Others (2023/046703) [2023] ZAGPJHC 531 (22 May 2023)
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sino date 22 May 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
####
Case No. 2023/046703
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
22.05.23
In the matter between:
NELMAR
COURT (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
FIRST
RESPONDENT
BRINK
NO, FLOYD
SECOND
RESPONDENT
BRINK,
FLOYD
THIRD
RESPONDENT
JOHANNESBURG
WATER (SOC) PTY LTD
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation: Nelmar Court (Pty)
Ltd v City of Johannesburg (2023/046703) [2023] ZAGPJHC 531 (22 May
2023)
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON J:
1
On 19 May 2023, I granted two orders on urgent applications
brought in this case. The first order directed that the respondents
reconnect the water supply to a series of properties comprising a
sectional title scheme at ERF 411 Lorentzville, Johannesburg,
and
interdicting further disconnections pending the outcome of an
application for final relief amounting to the debatement and
correction of the applicant’s water account. I also granted an
order declaring the first respondent, the City, to be in contempt
of
an interim reconnection order I had made on 18 May 2023. I indicated
that my reasons for making these orders would be given
in due course.
These are my reasons.
The
reconnection order
2
There were two bases on which I granted the reconnection
order.
3
The first basis was that inadequate notice of the
disconnection of the properties had been given. It was common cause
that two statutory
pre-termination notices had been delivered to the
property. The first was delivered on 24 April 2023. The second was
dated 5 May
2023, but delivered on 10 May 2023. The properties’
water supply was disconnected on 18 May 2023. The 10 May 2023 notice
alleged that the applicant, Nelmar Court, was in arrears with its
water bills, and that the water supply to the properties would
be
disconnected if acceptable arrangements to clear these arrears were
not made within 14 days.
4
The disconnection of the water supply 8 days later was,
accordingly, plainly unlawful, since it failed to afford Nelmar Court
the
time promised in the notice to rectify its alleged default. The
disconnection would have been premature even if the clock had started
ticking from the day the notice was produced rather than the day it
was actually delivered to the property.
5
Mr. Sithole, who appeared for the respondents, argued that the
disconnection was carried out on the authority of the 24 April 2023
notice. But this submission was plainly without merit. The 10 May
notice clearly novated the 24 April notice. Nelmar Court was
entitled
to assume that the second notice evinced an intention to extend the
period of time initially afforded to it in the first
notice, and that
the respondents had waived their right to act on the first notice.
That is indeed the legal effect of the second
notice, whatever its
true intent.
6
The second basis was that the disconnection was in breach of
section 102 (2) of the Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2002. That
provision
prevents disconnection of services over an amount that is
disputed. The dispute about the nature and extent of Nelmar
Court’s
liability for water service charges has a very long
history. The papers in this matter tell a sorry tale of the City’s
ineptitude
in addressing what, on the face of it, appears to be
plainly inaccurate billing of the properties’ water supply.
Having lodged
and then escalated a series of disputes with the City,
only to have had its supply summarily terminated despite its clear
and consistent
record of payment for the consumption it believes it
owes, Nelmar Court asked for an interdict restraining disconnection
pending
the outcome of an application for a full debatement of the
water account. On the papers, Nelmar had plainly established a
prima
facie
case for the debatement relief, and a reasonable
apprehension that it would face disconnection on the basis of
disputed amounts
until the debatement was finalised.
7
The City’s answering papers did not, in my view, throw
much doubt on Nelmar’s
prima facie
right to the
reconnection order or the interdict. At any rate, they did not create
doubt sufficient to refuse interim relief. That
is of course not the
same as saying that the City will not succeed in resisting a final
interdict. In the morass of confused allegations
that characterised
the City’s answer on the merits, there may be the germs of a
case capable of resisting the application
for final relief. But that
is an issue for another day.
8
It is, though, necessary to deal briefly with the City’s
assertion that the matter lost its urgency because the City had
agreed
to a reconnection order shortly before the matter was called
before me on 18 May 2023.
9
That is plainly not what happened. What Mr. Boshomane, who
appeared for Nelmar Court, in fact reported was that the terms and
conditions
the City sought to attach to a reconnection order were not
acceptable to Nelmar Court, and so no agreement had been reached.
During
the hearing that took place on 19 May 2023, Mr. Boshomane
repeated that there had been no settlement of the matter the day
before.
He contended that, even if I granted a bare reconnection
order, Nelmar Court retained a reasonable apprehension that it would
be
disconnected again on the basis of amounts in respect of which it
had declared a specific and
bona fide
dispute.
10
In all of those circumstances, the interim relief had to be
granted.
The
contempt order
11
The assertion that the matter had been resolved by agreement
on 18 May 2023 was all the more incredible in light of the
circumstances
which gave rise to my being forced to declare the City
in contempt of court.
12
The contempt order arose out of the circumstances in which the
reconnection application was brought. The urgent application for the
reconnection order was first brought before me on the afternoon of 18
May 2023. At that stage the respondents had yet to file an
answering
affidavit. Mr. Sithole asked that the respondents be afforded until
10am on 19 May 2023 to file their answering affidavit.
Mr. Boshomane
was happy to oblige, provided that water be reconnected to the
properties in the interim.
13
Mr. Sithole resisted such an interim order. He appeared to do
so on the misguided basis that it would constitute a prejudgment of
the merits of the application. However, it plainly represented no
more than a determination that Nelmar Court had set up a
prima
facie
case for reconnection in its founding papers, the
respondents’ answer to which had not yet reached me. If the
respondent
had ultimately demonstrated that a reconnection order
could not be granted, the interim order would have been discharged,
and the
respondents would have been free to disconnect again.
14
Accordingly, I ordered that the properties be reconnected
pending the outcome of the urgent application. That did not happen.
At
13h00 on 19 May 2023, Nelmar Court brought an application to
declare the respondents in contempt of my interim order.
15
That application went unanswered. At the hearing of the
matter, Mr. Sithole argued that the application was not, in truth,
before
me. I was unable to understand that submission in
circumstances were the application had been properly served and
filed.
16
Mr. Sithole nonetheless conceded that Nelmar Court’s
water supply had not been reconnected. He offered no justification
for
this apparent breach of my order, save to submit that he had been
instructed that no direction to reconnect the water supply had
reached the fourth respondent, Johannesburg Water. However, there was
no evidence before me that such a direction had been issued,
and no
explanation at all of whether or when the respondents would reconnect
the supply.
17
In these circumstances, I was bound to conclude at least that
the City had been given notice of my order, and that it had taken no
action to obey it. Nor had it placed any information before me
capable of rebutting the legal presumption that applies in these
circumstances: viz. that the City’s breach of my order was
wilful and
mala fide
(see
Fakie NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA 326
(SCA) (at paragraph 42 (4)). An order declaring the
City to be in contempt was the least that had to follow.
18
I decided not to make a similar order against the second,
third and fourth respondents. There was no evidence before me that
the
order had come to the attention of Mr. Brink, who had been cited
separately in his official and personal capacities as the second
and
third respondent. I decided to credit Mr. Sithole’s assertion
that Johannesburg Water had not been given a direction
to reconnect.
19
However, in the absence of any evidence that the City had
issued that direction, there was no basis on which I could avoid the
conclusion
that the City was in contempt of my order.
20
It was for these reasons that I granted the reconnection
order, and declared the City to be in contempt of the interim order I
made
on the afternoon of 18 May 2023.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
HEARD ON: 18 and 19 May 2023
DECIDED ON: 19 May 2023
REASONS: 22 May 2023
For
the Applicant:
KM
Boshomane
Instructed
by
Vermaak
Marshall Wellbeloved Inc
For
the Respondents:
E
Sithole
Instructed
by
Madhlopha
& Tenga Inc
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