Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1046South Africa
De Koker v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Another (077168/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1046 (19 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 September 2023
Judgment
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## De Koker v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Another (077168/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1046 (19 September 2023)
De Koker v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Another (077168/2023) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1046 (19 September 2023)
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sino date 19 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 077168/2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
19.09.23
In the matter between:
Yolande
de koker
Applicant
And
Eskom
holdings soc ltd
First
Respondent
Lutzacode
(Pty) Ltd
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
du Plessis AJ
[1]
This application came before me in the
urgent court on Friday, 4 August 2023, with the Applicant seeking an
interim interdict to
reconnect their electricity supply, pending the
finalisation of a dispute between First Respondent and Second
Respondent. I gave
the order set out at the end of this judgment and
stated that the parties can request reasons for the decision if they
require
them. On 24 August 2023, the Respondent requested reasons in
terms of Rule 49(1)(c). This judgment is the reason for the order
given in the urgent court.
[2]
The Applicant is a tenant in a unit in a
sectional title scheme wholly owned by the Second Respondent. She
rents one of the 60 units
that, according to her affidavit, are
occupied by low-income families, including the elderly and minor
children. The Applicant
will be referred to as "the tenant".
[3]
The
First Respondent is Eskom Holdings SOC Limited, a state-owned public
company with a share capital, incorporated per the company
laws of
the Republic of South Africa. It is the sole electricity supplier in
the country and either supplies electricity to municipalities
that
then manage the electricity supply to end users or directly to end
users.
[1]
The
First Respondent will be referred to as "Eskom".
[4]
The Second Respondent is the owner of the
sectional title scheme. The sectional title scheme does not get its
electricity through
a municipality. It is thus in the second category
of users, as described above. The Second Respondent will be referred
to as "the
landlord".
# Background
Background
[5]
Eskom disconnected the electricity supply
to the sectional title scheme where the tenant resides on 25 July
2023 and again on 1
August 2023. They aver the disconnection happened
without receiving prior written notice from Eskom.
[6]
The tenant avers that a formal dispute was
lodged by the landlord that has allegedly not been resolved before
termination. The tenants
are reliant on the electricity supply at
their homes. Each unit on the property has an IS-Metering remote
electricity meter, whereby
each unit of electricity used is run on a
"pay-as-you-go" basis. The tenants are up to date with
their
payment for electricity, which the landlord collects and must pay
over to Eskom.
[7]
The tenant states that the disconnection of
the electricity not only poses security risks. Since many tenants
work from home, the
disconnection of electricity affects their
ability to work. The disconnection of electricity also impacts the
hygiene of the tenants
as there is no hot water to clean themselves.
There is no water in some units because the pumps are not working is
there is no
electricity. It also impacts the tenants' ability to cook
meals and for the children to do their homework, presumably once it
is
dark. After a few days of disconnection, the food goes off. All
this is an infringement of the tenants' rights, she claims.
[8]
The tenant argued that she and the other
tenants would not be afforded substantial redress if this matter is
placed on the regular
roll, as they cannot afford to be without
electricity for that long.
[9]
Eskom opposes the application, citing an
abuse of the court process, since the landlord (as the owner of the
building) brought an
application in the Gauteng Division, Pretoria,
the previous week, to have the electricity restored to the same
property, with similar
relief. It was struck from the roll. Eskom
states that this application is thus merely an attempt to circumvent
that order.
[10]
In the first urgent application, Eskom
argued that
the landlord
did not prove that
the tenants were the poorest of the poor and were suffering
inconvenience or that it was a low-cost development.
Since they were
further not party to the proceedings, the landlord could not rely on
the alleged plight of the tenants. Likewise,
in this application,
they state that the tenant did not demonstrate that she is the
poorest of the poor or that any of the other
tenants are the poorest
of the poor. The crux of the problem, Eskom states, is that the
landlord has been collecting payments for
electricity since the
property development was established in April 2022 but never paid
these payments over to Eskom. According
to Eskom, the landlord thus
wants to receive free electricity, which is unreasonable and illegal.
[11]
As
for the disconnection, Eskom states that they have no obligation
towards the tenant as the end user to serve an advanced notice
in
terms of the planned termination of electricity, as it acts in terms
of the Electricity Regulation Act.
[2]
It
has a right to disconnect a customer that is not paying. If that
customer is a landlord, the landlord must inform the tenants
of the
pending disconnection.
[12]
Although the validity of the reasons for
the disconnection was not before this court it will be briefly dealt
with for context.
[13]
Eskom denies that there is a dispute with
the landlord. They say that when the first urgent application was
launched after the first
disconnection, they agreed to "without
prejudice" try to solve the problem without going to court. When
the talks did
not lead to a solution, Eskom reminded the landlord
that they would disconnect the electricity if no payment were
received by 1
July 2023. There was further communication between
Eskom and the landlord, where Eskom reminded the landlord to pay the
monies,
or at least the non-disputed portion. Eskom states that it
gave the landlord two notices of intention to disconnect the
electricity
– one on 23 May 2023 and the second on 18 June
2023.
[14]
Eskom
states that the only query lodged was for not receiving bills, and
once the statements were sent, there was no dispute anymore.
In its
founding affidavit to the first application, however, it refers to
"disputed charges" and that "while the
dispute is
under investigation, the Applicant needed to pay the remainder of the
account".
[3]
Later
they state that "investigations relating to the disputed units
were pending and Eskom was still waiting for the detailed
metering
information from the Applicant".
[4]
There
is thus a dispute about whether there is a dispute, and what the
dispute is about.
[15]
There is also not agreement as to whether
there is a valid agreement. Eskom states that there is no electricity
supply agreement
(ESA), as the landlord amended the agreement, which
amendments Eskom did not accept. Eskom does, however, refer the court
to specific
clauses in the agreement, and avers that the landlord is
liable for certain Service Charges usually arising from an ESA. The
landlord
also paid a guarantee of R450 000, as required by the
ESA. Based on this, the landlord avers there is at least a tacit or
oral agreement.
[16]
Be that as it may. Whether there is a valid
dispute and/or agreement is not for me to determine. The background
is to contextualise
how the tenants' electricity disconnection came
about.
[17]
What can be concluded from the papers are:
The landlord collected monies from the tenants through pre-paid
meters and has not paid
all the money over to Eskom because they
dispute the amount charged. The landlord has made some payments. The
landlord further
relies on the R450 000 guarantee to state that
there is no prejudice for Eskom in investigating the disputes before
payment,
as it has access to the guarantee. However, Eskom states
that that is not the purpose of the guarantee. At least through its
attorneys
and on the statement from Eskom, the landlord has received
notification of the disconnection. Eskom did not serve any notice on
the tenants, who are the end users of the electricity and who have
been paying for electricity.
[18]
The electricity was thus disconnected on 1
August 2023. This prompted the landlord to launch the first urgent
application on 2 August
2023, which was struck from the roll. The
tenant then launched the second urgent application on 3 August 2023,
and enrolled on
my roll to be heard on Friday, 4 August 2023 at
10:00.
# Ad urgency
Ad urgency
[19]
Eskom's contention that this application is
just an attempt to circumvent the previous order loses sight of the
fact that the landlord
has a different relationship with Eskom.
Furthermore, the disconnection of electricity does not have the same
impact on the landlord
as on the tenants.
[20]
The tenant argues that they will have no
substantial redress in due course, as obtaining a court date is too
far in the future to
go without electricity. Most tenants, even if
perhaps not the poorest of the poor, are low-income earners who
cannot afford alternative
power solutions for months or alternative
accommodation.
[21]
I am satisfied that the tenants will not be
afforded substantial redress in due time should the matter not be
heard, and I thus
enrol the matter.
# Ad merits
Ad merits
[22]
In
this case, the question is whether there is an obligation in terms of
the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[5]
(PAJA)
on Eskom to serve a notice on the tenants of a building before
disconnection if there is no contractual nexus between Eskom
and the
tenants.
[23]
Eskom
argues that as a government-owned enterprise, it is bound, amongst
others, by the Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999
(PFMA) and the
Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006. According to PFMA, Eskom must
recover the costs and fees owed to it for its
services.
[6]
[24]
It also relies on s 21(5) of the
Electricity Regulation Act 4 of 2006 ("ERA") that provides:
A licensee may not reduce
or terminate the supply of electricity to a customer, unless –
(a) The customer is
insolvent;
(b) the customer has
failed to honour, or refuses to enter into, an agreement for the
supply of electricity; or
(c) the customer has
contravened the payment conditions of that licensee.
[25]
Thus, by legislation, Eskom is authorised
to terminate a customer's electricity supply if they do not enter
into or fail to honour
an agreement. This is what happened here, they
state. They also point to s 30 of ERA, which sets out a dispute
resolution procedure.
One of Eskom's arguments is that the landlord
did not follow this process to solve the dispute before approaching
the court. However,
the focus in this case is not a review of the
decision itself but whether Eskom followed the correct procedure. As
stated, the
reasons for the disconnection and the internal remedies
that must be exhausted is not before me, and I make no decision about
that.
I am tasked to determine the procedural requirements when Eskom
terminates the supply of tenants with whom it has no contractual
relationship.
[26]
A
decision of Eskom to reduce or terminate supply is an administrative
action. This was stated in
Resilient
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Eskom.
[7]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA)
[8]
confirmed
that Eskom's decision constitutes an administrative action as
contemplated in s 1 of PAJA. It is an organ of state,
[9]
performing
a public function in terms of legislation, and the termination of
electricity adversity affects the rights of persons.
Since a decision
by Eskom to terminate electricity supply is an administrative action,
such termination should thus comply with
the prescripts of PAJA.
[27]
In
Vaal
River Development Association (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd;
Lekwa Rate Payers Association NPC v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd
,
[10]
the
court pointed out that even if it has a contractual relationship with
parties, it does not detract from the fact that it is
a state-owned
enterprise who has the monopoly on the supply of electricity, not
just there to generate an income for the state,
but also to promote
the rights of individual citizens.
[11]
It
is a public service, that is 100% state owned.
[28]
Our
Constitution does not protect the right to electricity, although
arguments are made that electricity facilitates the enjoyment
and
fulfilment of other socio-economic rights.
[12]
Thus,
when electricity is disconnected, it impacts the enjoyment and
fulfilment of these rights. All these rights are "rights"
referred to in the definition of "administrative action" in
section 1 of PAJA, that can be adversely affected by a decision.
[29]
This
was confirmed in
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd
,
[13]
where
the Constitutional Court stated that the substantial reduction of
electricity supply in that case adversely affected several
of the
residents' fundamental rights as protected in the Bill of Rights,
[14]
and
that this administrative action was taken without following a fair
procedure. The court then states that this "is sufficient
for
purposes of a
prima
facie
case founded on section 6(2)(c) of PAJA".
[15]
In
that case, the electricity supply reduction was also made without
notice.
[30]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd
[16]
built
on previous case law dealing with consumers who do not have a
contractual nexus with Eskom but whose electricity supply was
terminated. The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Resilient
Properties (Pty) Ltd
[17]
dealt
with a situation where Eskom interrupted the bulk electricity supply
to two local municipalities, as they contractually failed
to pay for
the electricity supplied by Eskom. Certain commercial entities who do
not have a contractual relationship with Eskom
and who have paid the
municipalities for electricity made representations to Eskom as to
why it should not continue with the proposed
electricity supply
interruptions. Eskom, however, informed them that their remedy is a
mandamus against the municipalities to force
them to pay their debts
to Eskom. The court found that this provides little comfort to the
end-users, and the decisions it took
to reduce the electricity supply
failed to take this relevant consideration into account.
[18]
Although
this is not the argument in this case, it is important to highlight
it as a similar argument was made in this case: the
tenants must take
the landlord to task in paying the bills. Complying with the
procedural requirement in PAJA by giving adequate
notice to the
affected end-users allows such users to bring relevant considerations
to the attention of Eskom for it to consider
in its decision-making
process. This includes whether such a mandamus against the landlord
is a viable option.
[31]
The
procedural duties are set out in s 3 of PAJA. S 3(1) provides that an
administrative action that materially and adversely affects
any
person's rights or legitimate expectations must be procedurally
fair.
[19]
The
"rights" in s 3(1) must be broadly interpreted.
[20]
S
3(2)(b) then specifically states
(b) In order to give
effect to the right to procedurally fair administrative action, an
administrator, subject to
subsection (4), must give
a person referred to in subsection (1)¬
(i) adequate notice of
the nature and purpose of the proposed administrative action;
(ii) a reasonable
opportunity to make representations;
(iii) a clear
statement of the administrative action;
(iv) adequate
notice of any right of review or internal appeal, where applicable;
and
(v) adequate notice
of the right to request reasons in terms of section 5.
[32]
The
question is to whom such notice must be given and what an "adequate
notice" is. In
Joseph
v City of Johannesburg
,
[21]
the
Constitutional Court dealt with the question of whether City Power
(as electricity supplier) had a duty to give adequate notice
of
disconnection to the tenants of a building, where there was a
contractual nexus to the landlord but not to the tenants. It found
that when City Power supplied electricity to the building, it did so
in terms of its constitutional and statutory duties of local
government to provide basic municipal services. When depriving them
of the service, City Power was obliged to afford them procedural
fairness before taking the decision which would materially and
adversely affect that right.
[22]
[33]
The
Court emphasised that the City's need for proper debt collection must
be considered with reference to the procedural fairness
obligations
in PAJA. In that respect, procedural fairness required that the
residents should also receive pre-termination notices,
not merely the
building owner (with whom the municipality did have a contractual
nexus). The notice should contain all relevant
information, including
the date and time of the disconnection, the reasons for the
disconnection, and how the parties can challenge
the basis for the
disconnection. It must also afford the tenants sufficient time to
make the necessary enquiries and investigations,
to seek legal advice
and to organise themselves collectively if they so wished.
[23]
Placing
it in a prominent place in the building and affording the minimum of
14 days pre-termination was considered fair and complied
with the
requirement of "adequate notice" in s 3(2)(b)(i) of PAJA.
[34]
I
have considered the argument of Eskom that
Josephs
dealt with the constitutional duties of local government and that
Eskom is not local government as it deals with customers in terms
of
contracts of supply. The rights that flow from the supply of
electricity are established because of a contractual nexus, they
state, relying on
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Masinda
.
[24]
It
is so that there is an obligation on municipalities to supply
municipal services, as set out in ss 152 and 153(a) of the
Constitution,
which obligation does not rest on Eskom. However, the
relief sought does not rely on Eskom's duty to provide services but
on Eskom's
duty to comply with the prescripts of PAJA when deciding
to disconnect electricity.
[35]
This
does not substantially interfere with Eskom's obligation to secure
the integrity of the national grid, which includes the ability
to
recover payment for electricity supplied.
[25]
The
court does not wish to sanction non-payment of electricity. Instead,
it seeks to ensure that people whose rights might be adversely
affected by an administrative action are given adequate notice. As
alluded to above, the duty to give tenants adequate notice when
the
administrator only had a contractual relationship with the landlord
was set out in
Joseph
v City of Johannesburg
[26]
.
The disconnection of electricity is an administrative action that
adversely affects the end users' rights. As such, they also
have a
right to a fair procedure in terms of PAJA.
[36]
By analogy, this should also apply when
Eskom has a contractual relationship with the landlord and
disconnects the tenants' electricity.
I see no reason why end-users,
in a situation where the electricity is supplied directly by Eskom
and not City Power, should
not
be entitled to the same procedural protection in terms of PAJA.
[37]
I,
therefore, conclude that lawful disconnection of services in terms of
PAJA includes that tenants themselves must be given adequate
notice
of the proposed action
[27]
and
a reasonable opportunity to make representations.
[28]
They
can only do so if Eskom complies with the prescripts in PAJA by
giving them proper notice of the disconnection in line with
Joseph
.
[29]
[38]
I
thus order the reconnection of the electricity supply pending proper
notice being given to the tenants. The Applicants have met
the
requirements of an interim interdict.
[30]
The
Applicant has a
prima
face
right, notwithstanding that there is no contractual relationship
between her and Eskom. Firstly, it has a right to just administrative
action. Furthermore, Eskom is aware through its engagements with the
landlord that the electricity is supplied to tenants in the
property
owned by the landlord. Even though the right to electricity is not
specifically provided for in the Bill of Rights, it
is inseparably
intertwined with the enjoyment of socio-economic rights.
[31]
When
Eskom enforces its agreement with the landlord, that decision
adversely affects those rights. When it does so, they have a
right to
just administrative action that includes a fair procedure, in that a
disconnection must comply with the prescripts of
s 3(2)(b) of PAJA.
The disconnection of electricity causes harm in that the tenants'
security is at risk; they have difficulty
preparing meals and keeping
food from going off in the fridges, hygiene becomes a problem, and it
impacts on their work and schoolwork.
The balance of convenience
favours the tenants because Eskom's grid will not collapse should it
reconnect the electricity in the
interim while following a proper
procedure before disconnecting should it wish to do so.
There
is no
alternative
satisfactory remedy for the immediate reconnection.
[39]
During the argument, I made it clear that
this court cannot force Eskom to continue to supply electricity free
of charge to customers
when it is entitled in terms of s 21(5) of ERA
to disconnect customers who are not paying. What this court requires
from Eskom,
however, is that when it does decide to disconnect, it
complies with its obligations in terms of PAJA and give proper notice
to
the tenants to enable them to participate in the decisions that
will affect them and possibly influence the outcome of these
decisions.
[40]
In her notice of motion, the tenant asked
that Eskom be interdicted and restrained from disconnecting the
electricity supply pending
the finalisation of the dispute lodged
with Eskom. Eskom, however, denied that there was a dispute pending,
as alluded to above.
It was, furthermore, not a dispute lodged by her
but by the landlord. I do not grant this prayer, as I am not
convinced that a
case was properly made out for granting it. What is
clear and imminent in the urgent court is that the tenants'
electricity was
disconnected without proper notice as required in
terms of PAJA, and that they should be granted the relief to have it
restored,
and if Eskom wishes to continue with the disconnection,
that they must do so with proper notice.
[41]
Thus, I order the reconnection of the
supply, with an order not to disconnect again unless proper notice is
given to the tenants.
This ensures that Eskom complies with its
constitutional duties of just administrative action that is
procedurally fair, as set
out in PAJA, by giving adequate notice to
the tenants affected by the decision. This will allow the tenants to
make representations
to Eskom if they so wish. It also allows Eskom
and the tenants to consider alternative arrangements.
[42]
To not sanction non-payment, I also deem it
prudent to order that, pending the order being made final or
disconnection in line with
PAJA, the monies collected by the prepaid
meters during this time are paid over to Eskom.
[43]
As to costs, there is no reason why costs
should not follow the result.
# Order
Order
[44]
I, therefore, make the following order:
1.
Non-compliance with the Rules of the Court
and service of process is condoned and the matter is heard as urgent
in terms of Rule
6(12) of the rules of this court.
2.
A
rule nisi
is issued calling upon the Respondents on 12 September 2023 to show
cause why the following order must not be made final:
a.
That the Respondent be ordered to reconnect
electricity supply to property described as Stand 231, Blesbok
Street, Meyerton ("Ikamvalethu
Gardens"), within 4 hours
after receipt of this order.
b.
That the Respondent is not to disconnect
the electricity supply to the property described in 2.1 unless there
is proper notice given
to the tenants of the property.
3.
Notice in 2.2 will be to be deemed proper
if a notice of disconnection is attached to the outside security gate
of the property,
as well as inside in the common area of the
property, 14 (fourteen) days before such disconnection.
4.
The landlord is to pay over all the moneys
collected through the prepaid meters for consumption, from date of
this order, until
date of disconnection, if any, or the date of
return, whichever comes first.
5.
The Applicants must serve this order on the
Second Respondent.
6.
The costs of this application will be paid
by the First Respondent.
wj
du Plessis
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered: This
judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
It will be sent to the
parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel for the
Applicant:
Mr J Schoeman
Instructed by:
Van der Walt attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent: Mr
Nalane SC
Ms
S Magxaki
Instructed
by: Ramatshila
Mugeri Inc
Date
of the hearing:
04
August 2023
Date of the
order: 04
August 2023
Date
of reasons for the order:
19
September 2023
[1]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Resilient Properties (Pty) Ltd; Eskom Holdings
SOC Ltd v Sabie Chamber of Commerce and Tourism; Chweu
Local
Municipality and Others v Sabie Chamber of Commerce and Tourism
[2020]
ZASCA 185
para 12.
[2]
4
of 2006.
[3]
Par
37 of the Founding Affidavit, CaseLines 11-24.
[4]
Paras
40 of the Founding Affidavit, CaseLines 11-25.
[5]
3 of 2000.
[6]
S
51(1)(b)(i).
[7]
[2018]
ZAGPJHC 584; 2019 (2) SA 577 (GJ); [2019] 2 All SA 185 (GJ).
[8]
Resilient
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings Soc
1
All SA 668 (SCA).
[9]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd
[2022]
ZACC 44
para 199.
[10]
[2020]
ZAGPPHC 429.
[11]
Vaal
River Development Association (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd;
Lekwa Rate Payers Association NPC v Eskom Holdings SOC
Ltd
[2020] ZAGPPHC 429 p
ara
38.
[12]
See
the majority in
Joseph
v City of Johannesburg
[2009] ZACC 30
; see also Dube, Felix, and Chantelle G. Moyo. "The
right to electricity in South Africa."
Potchefstroom
Electronic Law Journal/Potchefstroomse Elektroniese Regsblad
25.1 (2022) p 9 and
Dugard,
Jackie. "Power to the people? A rights-based analysis of South
Africa’s electricity services."
Electric
capitalism: Recolonising Africa on the power grid
(2008) p
267.
[13]
[2022]
ZACC 44.
[14]
The
court listed the following rights: dignity, access to healthcare
service, an environment that is not harmful to health or
well-being,
basic education and life.
[15]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd
[2022]
ZACC 44
para 197.
[16]
[2022]
ZACC 44.
[17]
Resilient
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Eskom Holdings Soc
1
All SA 668 (SCA).
[18]
Para
91.
[19]
In
terms of s6(2)(c), a court has the power to judicially review an
administrative action that was procedurally unfair.
[20]
Joseph
v City of Johannesburg
[2009]
ZACC 30
para 42.
[21]
[2009]
ZACC 30; 2010 (3) BCLR 212 (CC); 2010 (4) SA 55 (CC).
[22]
Joseph
v City of Johannesburg
[2009]
ZACC 30
para 47.
[23]
Para
61.
[24]
2019
(5) SA 386
(SCA) par 22.
[25]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd
[2022]
ZACC 44
para 8.
[26]
[2009]
ZACC 30.
[27]
S
3(2)(b)(i).
[28]
S
3(2)(b)(ii).
[29]
Joseph
v City of Johannesburg
[2009]
ZACC 30.
[30]
Webster
v Mitchell
1948 (1) SA 1186
(W) at 1189.
[31]
Dugard,
Jackie. "Power to the people? A rights-based analysis of South
Africa’s electricity services."
Electric
capitalism: Recolonising Africa on the power grid
(2008) p
267;
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd
[2022] ZACC 44
para 59.
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