Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 464South Africa
City of Matlosana Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Others :In re: Eskom Holdings SOC Limited v City of Matlosana Local Municipality (35921/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 464 (5 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 July 2022
Judgment
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## City of Matlosana Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Others :In re: Eskom Holdings SOC Limited v City of Matlosana Local Municipality (35921/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 464 (5 July 2022)
City of Matlosana Local Municipality v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd and Others :In re: Eskom Holdings SOC Limited v City of Matlosana Local Municipality (35921/20) [2022] ZAGPJHC 464 (5 July 2022)
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sino date 5 July 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
35921/20
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
REVISED.
6/7/2022
5/7/2022
In the matter between:
CITY OF MATLOSANA LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LIMITED
First Respondent
ABSA BANK
LIMITED
Second Respondent
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Third Respondent
THE SHERIFF,
KLERKSDORP
Fourth Respondent
In
re:
ESKOM HOLDINGS SOC
LIMITED
Applicant
And
CITY OF MATLOSANA LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
Respondent
JUDGMENT
GOEDHART
AJ:
Introduction
“
The
facts of these appeals graphically illustrate the distressing state
of municipal governance in this country, and depict the
dysfunctional
state of affairs bedevilling local government.”
[1]
[1]
The facts in this matter constitute yet
another chapter in an unedifying history of two dysfunctional state
organs; sadly the dysfunction
has escalated to the point where the
entire country suffers under a plague of continuous load shedding.
[2]
On 8 December 2020 a court order was
granted by agreement between the applicant, the City of Matlosana
Local Municipality (“the
municipality/the Matlosana
municipality”) and the respondent, Eskom Holdings SOC Limited
(“Eskom”). The 8 December
2020 court order and the
subsequent writ issued by Eskom attaching the municipality’s
bank accounts form the subject of the
current dispute.
Background
[3]
It is common cause that the
municipality is significantly in arrears with the debt owed by it to
Eskom for electricity supplied
to it in terms of a written
electricity supply agreement.
[4]
The municipality acknowledged its
indebtedness to Eskom in October and November 2019. As at 21 November
2019 it was indebted to
Eskom in an amount of R383 039 746.50.
[5]
On 14 August 2020, Gura J had granted a
court order, also by agreement between Eskom and the municipality, in
the North-West Division,
Mahikeng. The pertinent terms of the 14
August 2020 order were:
[5.1]
In respect of the “current
account” in the amount of R106 614 654.79 which are
reflected on the 2 July 2020
invoice of the first respondent [Eskom]
(a) an amount of R50 million on/or before 17 August 2020; (b) the
remainder of the amount
i.e. R55 614 854.79 in three equal
monthly payments of R18 871 551.30 payable on the first
business day of
the months of October 2020, November 2020 and
December 2020.
[5.2]
The amount of R122 176 822.81
as reflected on the “current account” on the 3 August
2020 invoice of the first
respondent on/or before 2 September 2020.
[5.3]
The “arrears account” in
the amount of R417 901 941.30 which are reflected on the 3
August invoice of the
first respondent by means of 48 equal monthly
instalments in the amount of R8 706 290.44 commencing from the first
business day
of January 2021 and monthly thereafter for 47 months
until the said “arrear account” debt is extinguished.
[5.4]
The first respondent undertakes to
supply electricity to the second respondent municipality in the
ordinary course, provided that
the second respondent municipality
complies with this order of court (and accepting load shedding as may
be scheduled nationally
from time to time).
[5.5]
…”
[6]
Notwithstanding the acknowledgements of
debt of October and November 2019, the repayment plan agreement
entered into between the
parties and the court order of 14 August
2020, the municipality failed to pay Eskom the current account due on
2 November 2020.
[7]
Eskom then gave notice to the municipality
that it would terminate its bulk electricity supply. Consequent upon
Eskom’s notice
to terminate the municipality’s bulk
supply, Pioneer Foods (Pty) Ltd (Pioneer Foods) – a rate payer
within the area
of jurisdiction of the Matlosana municipality which
was up to date with its payments for electricity usage to the
municipality
- brought an urgent application on 3 November 2020
against Eskom and the municipality in which it sought to interdict
Eskom from
terminating the electricity supply to the municipality
(and thus to its factory in Klerksdorp), and to review a decision by
Eskom
to terminate the municipality’s bulk electricity supply.
It appears that the urgent application was struck from the roll for
lack of urgency.
[8]
In the initial urgent application brought
by Pioneer Foods, Eskom instituted a counter-application against the
municipality. The
counter-application ultimately culminated in the 8
December 2020 court order granted by Bezuidenhout AJ.
[9]
The terms of the 8 December 2020 court
order, obtained by agreement between the parties, were as follows:
“
1)
The Municipality (Respondent) shall pay Eskom (Applicant) the amount
of R120 000 000.00 (One Hundred
and Twenty Million Rand)
on/or before 15 December 2020.
2)
The Municipality shall pay to Eskom an amount of R7.593.038.12 (Seven
Million Five Hundred and Ninety- Three
Thousand and Thirty-Eight
rand, Twelve Cents) every month, for twelve months commencing on 10
January 2021.
3)
The Municipality shall pay Eskom the amount of R8.706. 290.44
(Eight Million, Seven Hundred and
Six Thousand, Two Hundred and
Ninety Rand, Forty-Four Cents) every month commencing on 10 January
2021, every month for 48 months.
4)
From January 2021, the Municipality shall pay Eskom and keep up with
its payment obligation to Eskom
on the current account, in full that
which becomes due and payable, on/or before the 5th day of every
month.
5)
The Municipality shall comply with the payment conditions contained
in prayers 1-4 above. Should the
Municipality fail to comply with its
payment conditions as set out above then, and in that event, the full
outstanding amount shall
immediately become due and payable on demand
by Eskom.
6)
The Municipality shall pay Eskom for its electricity consumption in
line with sec 65(2) of the Municipal
Finance Management Act (“MFMA”)
in 30 days.
7)
The Municipality shall pay all monies due and payable on its current
account to Eskom as set out in the
ESA entered into between itself
and Eskom (“the parties herein”) as set out in the
Certificate of Balance issued by
Eskom.
8)
The Municipality shall deliver written notice, on Eskom (through
Eskom’s attorneys of record) on/or
before the 10
th
day of each month indicating and providing evidence of its compliance
with its payment obligations to Eskom.
9)
The Municipality’s manager, Mr Rodger Nkhumise (in his capacity
as municipal manager) or his successors
in title, shall give effect
and ensure compliance with the terms of this order;
10) Should
the Municipality fail to comply with its reciprocal payment
obligations in terms of this order, then Eskom
may approach this
Court on the same papers, duly supplemented, as necessary, to enforce
payment.
11)
Cost of suit against the Municipality, including the engagement of
two counsel.
”
[10]
Once again, the municipality failed to
comply with the terms of the court order.
[11]
On 18 May 2021, Eskom issued a writ of
execution to attach the municipality’s movable assets.
[12]
On 18 June 2021, Eskom’s attorneys of
record notified the municipality that it had received instructions to
issue a second
writ of execution to attach the municipality’s
bank accounts.
[13]
On 23 June 2021, Eskom’s attorneys
notified the municipality’s attorneys that they had received
instructions not to
proceed with the removal of the attached assets.
[14]
On 24 June 2021, the municipality’s
attorneys advised that the municipality had prepared a “goal
specific management
plan to address all financial matters”
relating to Eskom “in execution and advancement of the IGRFA
consultation process”.
[15]
On 30 June 2021 the municipality’s
attorneys indicated that they had received a document entitled
“Electricity Solution
Strategy” which would be used as a
“point of departure” for the Intergovernmental Relations
Framework Act, 13
of 2005 (IRFA) consultation process between the
municipality and Eskom. It was proposed that a meeting take place
between 19 to
23 July 2021.
[16]
On 2 July 2021, Eskom replied and advised
that the IRFA process does not affect the order of 8 December 2020.
It stressed that the
municipality remained obliged to obey and comply
with the court order, and that the IRFA process was not a basis upon
which the
municipality could avoid its obligations in terms of the
agreed court order. On that understanding, Eskom indicated that its
representatives
were available to meet on 7 July 2021.
[17]
Further correspondence was exchanged
regarding the proposed meeting between the representatives of Eskom
and the municipality. For
various reasons, the meeting did not take
place.
[18]
On 2 August 2021, Eskom issued a writ of
execution for the amount of R228 379 535.82 and instructed
the sheriff of Klerksdorp,
the fourth respondent, to attach and take
into execution the municipality’s right, title and interest in
and to the bank
accounts held by it with the second respondent, Absa
and with the third respondent, Nedbank.
[19]
Towards the end of August 2021 the
municipality paid an additional amount of R50 million to Eskom “
in
an attempt to show its bona fides to Eskom and hoping that Eskom
would uplift the attachment of the municipality’s bank
accounts
and the monies therein
.”
[20]
On 1 September 2021, Absa notified the
municipality and its attorneys that it was obliged to comply with the
court order and that
the funds attached would be transferred to the
sheriff within 48 hours.
[21]
On 2 September 2021 the municipality
launched an urgent application against Eskom in terms of which it
sought to uplift the attachments
in execution by Eskom of the funds
held by it with Absa and Nedbank, and an order that the respondent
banks release the attached
funds. It also sought an interim interdict
prohibiting Eskom from proceeding with the execution process, pending
the outcome of
the IRFA dispute resolution process commenced by the
municipality.
[22]
The urgent application was initially
enrolled for hearing on 3 September 2021 but was removed from the
roll by agreement between
the parties. The municipality’s
application was then enrolled as a special motion for hearing on 14
March 2022.
The municipality’s
application
[23]
The municipal manager of the municipality,
Mr Nkhumise, deposed to the founding affidavit. The municipality
avers that “due
to cashflow constraints, a low collection rate
as well as the financial impact of Covid-19” it “struggled
to affect
prompt payment of its current account”.
[24]
During the period June 2020 to June 2021 it
had paid Eskom an amount of R854 287 470.85, but during the
same period Eskom
had invoiced it for electricity reticulation in a
total amount of R667 587 448.07. Given that it had to pay
an amount
of approximately R60 300 000.00 per month to
settle its historical debts, it became increasingly difficult for the
municipality
to comply with its payment obligations set out in the
court order due to cashflow constraints. These difficulties emanated
from
inter alia
the struggle to implement credit control measures to collect
municipal debts due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and also because
various
of the municipality’s debtors indicated their inability
to pay for their municipal accounts as a result of the financial
impact that the Covid-19 pandemic had on the economy.
[25]
The municipality avers that it is not in
wilful default of the 8 December 2020 court order and that the cash
flow constraints are
not due to a fault on its part.
[26]
The execution steps taken by Eskom has
resulted in it being unable to pay service providers, its employees,
grants to beneficiaries
and its day to day running costs. The
inability to pay will have an extremely prejudicial effect on the
community as a whole and
on the municipality’s ability to
render constitutionally mandated services. Monies held by the
municipality in these accounts
which had been earmarked in favour of
other beneficiaries were also attached.
[27]
It avers that, when it breached its payment
obligations in terms of the court order of 8 December 2020, it
instituted the dispute
resolution mechanism contemplated by IRFA. In
consultation with the relevant executives of the municipality, an
Electricity Solution
Strategy was prepared in order to address the
municipality’s historical debt obligations with Eskom. Despite
the attempts
to present the Electricity Solution Strategy to Eskom’s
representatives, Eskom had proceeded to issue a warrant of execution.
[28]
In summary, the municipality does not deny
that it had breached the terms of the 8 December 2020 court order,
but denies being in
wilful default and seeks to explain its default
and provide reasons why the writs should be uplifted and why Eskom
should be precluded
from executing the writs pending the IRFA
process.
[29]
In its founding papers, the municipality
does not raise any issue with regard to the interpretation of the
terms of the 8 December
2020 court order.
[30]
In its replying affidavit, it raised a
number of new issues. These are that:
[30.1]
the writ was wrongly issued because the
amount was incorrect as it was based exclusively on arrear debt;
[30.2]
there was a dispute which pre-dates the
December 2020 order and therefore the order was not competently
granted;
[30.3]
the order is against public policy as it
affects the municipality for an indefinite period;
[30.4]
paragraphs 4 and 7 of the order does not
directly or indirectly deal with a
lis
between the parties;
[30.5]
the writ was not competently granted as it
related to a future debt;
[30.6]
Eskom ought to have pursued an order for
contempt rather than to issue a writ.
Eskom’s answer
[31]
Eskom denies that the municipality had
commenced any IRFA proceedings, despite pleas by Eskom for it to do
so. In its letter of
2 September 2021, Eskom records that it made
requests for engagement as early as 10 February 2021 at a stage when
the municipality
was already in breach of the terms of the court
order.
[32]
By 2 September 2021, the municipality had
not declared a dispute with Eskom as envisaged by IRFA, nor had it
furnished Eskom with
the financial documents requested to enable it
to assess the inability for the municipality’s failure to pay
its historical
debt and its current account. Without factual
knowledge of the municipality’s reticulation business, Eskom
states that is
not able to offer the assistance needed by the
municipality to improve the alleged low collection rate.
[33]
The obvious consequence of the
municipality’s failure to pay its current account is that the
arrear debt keeps escalating.
By the end of August 2021, the
municipality failed to pay its current account of R128 855 039,73
with the result that
the August unpaid current account became part of
the September arrear debt. The municipality’s debt at the time
that the
answering affidavit was deposed to in September 2021
amounted to R814 832 058.65.
[34]
Eskom asserts that the municipality
deliberately chose to frustrate the court order of 8 December 2020 by
paying lip service to
the IRFA process.
[35]
Eskom alleges that the municipality’s
application was not brought in good faith
inter
alia
because the municipality has ten
other bank accounts in its name which it has not disclosed to the
court. The failure to make full
disclosure includes a failure to
fully deal with the manner in which the municipality deals with the
funds collected for reticulation
services.
[36]
Eskom provides details of the efforts made
to engage with relevant stakeholders to assist municipalities
(including the Matlosana
municipality) with the failure to pay its
electricity accounts and to run the reticulation part of the
municipality’s business
efficiently. The stakeholders include
the Deputy President, the Department of Public Enterprise, the
Department of Public Works
and Infrastructure, the Department of
Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (COGTA), the
Department of Water and Sanitation,
National Treasury, the office of
the MEC’s, the South African Local Government Association
(SALGA) and the National Electricity
Regulator of South Africa
(NERSA).
[37]
Following interventions by the Ministers of
COGTA and Finance and Public Enterprise an Inter-Ministerial Task
Team (“the Task
Team”) was formed in February 2017 which
is chaired by the Minister of COGTA. Notwithstanding the work of the
Task Team and
the interventions by it, including the implementation
of the concessions recommended by the Task Team, municipal debt owed
to Eskom
has grown exponentially, as illustrated by the
municipality’s debt.
[38]
In 2018 the Eskom Technical Task Team (“the
Technical Task Team”) was formed at the request of the Minister
of COGTA
to address the challenges presented by the ever-escalating
municipal debt.
[39]
In 2018, the Minister of Department of
Energy formed the SALGA/Eskom task team in yet another attempt to
address the challenges
presented by the municipal debt owed to Eskom.
[40]
In a report by the Technical Task Team
dated 7 May 2020, Eskom reported that despite concessions implemented
by it to assist municipalities,
the municipal debt continued to
escalate. Eskom had made payment of the current account by
municipalities a priority.
[41]
A NERSA document on
Status
on Compliance to NERSA Regulations by Municipalities
and Eskom Engagement
dated 19 February 2021 recorded that 100% of municipalities in the
North West Province are not compliant with their electricity
licence
conditions as issued by NERSA and that there was 0% improvement. The
NERSA document further stipulated that bulk accounts
must be paid and
maintained as current, and that electricity reticulation businesses
must be ringfenced from the rest of the municipal
service. Eskom
records that only one municipality ringfenced its electricity
business and that in others there is cross-subsidisation
of municipal
services.
[42]
In another report entitled “Progress
Report on Resolving Municipal Debt to Eskom” dated 28 July
2021, which was a joint
presentation by
inter
alia
the National Treasury, COGTA,
SALGA and Eskom the following was reported:
[42.1]
Municipal debt had increased to R35.7
billion by the end of April 2021;
[42.2]
Eskom is pursuing the Active Partnership
model to ensure that it creates a sustainable distribution industry
securing the current
account;
[42.3]
The Matlosana municipality is in the top 20
of defaulting municipalities;
[42.4]
By the end of August 2021 the
municipality’s debt stood at a staggering amount of
R814 832 058.65.
[43]
The history set out by Eskom demonstrates
that whilst it had made consistent efforts to engage with the
municipalities that are
in default, which includes the Matlosana
municipality, these efforts have not been successful. The
interventions described by Eskom
in its answering affidavit have not
resulted in a significant decrease in the municipal debt owed to
Eskom.
[44]
It is self-evident that municipal debt has
become a national crisis. No service provider can continue to provide
services on a sustainable
basis without being paid for the services.
The municipality’s
conduct
[45]
In October and November 2019 the Matlosana
municipality acknowledged its debt to Eskom, entered into a repayment
plan agreement
with Eskom and on 14 August 2020 it agreed to the
terms of the court order in the Mahikeng High Court. That
notwithstanding, it
failed to pay Eskom the current account due on 2
November 2020.
[46]
It reached agreement with Eskom on the
terms of the 8 December 2020 order, pursuant to Eskom’s
counter-application. Again
it reneged. It is only when Eskom
commenced with the issue of writs that the municipality started to
act.
[47]
In
terms of Section 165(5) of the Constitution, court orders are binding
on everyone, including all state organs.
[2]
The compliance with court orders is a fundamental cornerstone of a
constitutional state based on the rule of law.
[3]
[48]
In
Nyathi
v Member of the Executive Council for the Department of Health,
Gauteng and Another
[4]
Madala J described the consequences of a failure to adhere to court
orders as follows:
“
Certain
values in the Constitution have been designated as foundational to
our democracy. This in turn means that as pillar-stones
of this
democracy, they must be observed scrupulously. If these values are
not observed and their precepts not carried out conscientiously,
we
have a recipe for a constitutional crisis of great magnitude. In a
State predicated on a desire to maintain the rule of law,
it is
imperative that one and all should be driven by a moral obligation to
ensure the continued survival of our democracy. That
in my view,
means at the very least that there should be strict compliance with
court orders.
”
[49]
The
right of access to court includes the right to an effective remedy
and the right to enforce that remedy.
[5]
In particular:
“
The
constitutional right of access to courts would remain an illusion
unless orders made by the courts are capable of being enforced
by
those in whose favour such orders were made.”
[6]
[50]
The question is whether the municipality
can, as it now seeks to do, rely on the dispute resolution process
contemplated by IRFA
to avoid the consequences of the breach of the 8
December 2020 court order.
[51]
The
municipality did not deal with all the requirements for an interim
interdict in its founding affidavit.
[7]
That should be the end of that part of the relief sought. However,
given that the municipality sought to rely on the dispute resolution
mechanisms contemplated by IRFA as the basis for the interim
interdict sought, it is necessary to deal with this issue.
[52]
IRFA was enacted to fulfil the requirements
of s 41(2) of the Constitution, which provides that an Act of
Parliament must establish
or provide for structures and institutions
to promote and facilitate intergovernmental relations, and provide
for appropriate mechanisms
and procedures to facilitate settlement of
intergovernmental disputes.
[53]
Section 41(3) of the Constitution provides
that an organ of state involved in an intergovernmental dispute must
make every reasonable
effort to settle the dispute by means of
mechanisms and procedures provided for that purpose and must exhaust
all other remedies
before it approaches a court to resolve the
dispute. Section 41(4) of the Constitution stipulates that a court
may refer a dispute
back to the organs of state involved if it is not
satisfied that the requirements of section 41(3) have been met.
[54]
Section 40(1) of IRFA provides:
“
All
organs of state must make every reasonable effort –
(a)
to avoid intergovernmental disputes
when exercising their statutory powers or performing their statutory
functions; and
(b)
to settle intergovernmental disputes
without resorting to judicial proceedings.”
[55]
Section 41 (1) of IRFA stipulates that an
organ of state that is a party to an intergovernmental dispute may
declare a dispute a
formal intergovernmental dispute by notifying the
other party of such declaration in writing. Section 41(2) provides
that before
declaring a formal intergovernmental dispute, the organ
of state in question must, in good faith, make every reasonable
effort
to settle the dispute, including the initiation of direct
negotiations with the other party or negotiations through an
intermediary.
Section 45(1) prohibits an organ of state from
instituting judicial proceedings unless the dispute has been declared
a formal intergovernmental
dispute in terms of section 41 and all
efforts to settle the dispute in terms of Chapter 4 of IRFA were
unsuccessful.
[56]
Viewed against the provisions of IRFA, in
this matter a court order was granted by consent on 8 December 2020
between the parties.
To the extent that the municipality sought to
raise the provisions of IRFA, the appropriate time to have done so
was in answer
to Eskom’s counter-application. The first time
the IRFA process was raised in correspondence by the municipality’s
attorneys was on 24 June 2021, at a time when Eskom had already
proceeded to issue writs in execution of the court order obtained.
Eskom agreed to engage with the municipality’s representatives,
but cautioned from the outset the negotiations did not absolve
the
municipality from compliance with the 8 December 2020 court order.
Eskom denies that the municipality formally declared a dispute
as
contemplated by the provisions of section 41(1) of IRFA.
[57]
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Resilient Properties (Pty) Ltd and Others, Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Sabie Chamber of Commerce and Tourism
and Others;
Thaba Chweu Local Muncipality and Others v Sabie Chamber of Commerce
and Tourism and others
[8]
is
not authority for the proposition that the consequences of a validly
obtained court order may be circumvented by a belated reliance
on
section 41 of IRFA. In
Resilient
it was held that Eskom was required to attempt, in good faith, to
settle its disputes with the municipalities concerned before
deciding
to interrupt the supply of electricity to them. The fact that it had
not done so meant that a precondition for the valid
exercise of its
power in terms of section 21(5) of the Electricity Regulation Act 4
of 2006 (ERA) was absent. Section 21(5) of
ERA empowers Eskom to
reduce or terminate the supply of electricity to a customer without a
court’s prior authorisation.
[58]
It
is only where state organs have failed to take all reasonable steps
to resolve their intergovernmental disputes that a court
may decline
to hear the matter until it is satisfied that the parties have
exhausted the IRFA processes.
[9]
[59]
In
Resilient
,
there had been no prior court order as between any of the relevant
municipalities and Eskom, as is the case here. Further, in
this
matter Eskom made it clear that it did not intend to interrupt the
supply of electricity to the municipality (other than in
terms of the
national load shedding schedule), but that it sought to exercise its
rights in terms of the court order of 8 December
2020 as it is
entitled to do.
[60]
Eskom is bound, by
section 51(1)(b)(i)
of
the
Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999
, to take effective and
appropriate steps to collect all the revenue due to it.
[61]
On the facts of this matter, Eskom has done
what was within its powers to do, and it has given the municipality
ample opportunity
to comply with its undertakings in terms of the
acknowledgements of debt signed in October and November 2019, as well
as in terms
of the August 2020 and December 2020 court orders.
Notwithstanding these efforts, the municipality breached its
undertakings in
terms of the acknowledgements and in terms of the
court orders to which it had agreed and only sought to invoke the
IRFA process
in a letter once Eskom had proceeded to issue the writs
of execution.
[62]
It would be inimical to the rule of law if
organs of state, such as the municipality, who fail to comply with
court orders were
able to seek “upliftment” of validly
issued writs aimed at enforcement of the court orders, pending an
IRFA protracted
process. It would mean that court orders ought to
revert to the executive branch of government in terms of IRFA. Such a
process
would be completely inimical to a constitutional state. The
IRFA process is not intended to usurp the judicial function.
[63]
In
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Letsemeng Local Municipality & others
[10]
the Supreme Court of Appeal held,
obiter
dictum
,
that IRFA provided no defence to the Letsemeng municipality in
relation to Eskom’s counter-application for payment.
[64]
IRFA, and the processes contemplated by it,
does not present a basis to frustrate a writ which has been issued in
terms of a valid
and executable court order.
[65]
The
municipality, as a bearer of public power sourced in the
Constitution, is expected and required to be a role-model and to
conduct
itself in an exemplary manner in its dealings with others,
including other organs of state.
[11]
[66]
The
attempt to obtain an interim interdict based on IRFA to prevent Eskom
from executing the writs issued consequent upon a competent
court
order to which the municipality had agreed is unacceptable. The
failure to adhere to its undertakings and to comply with
the court
orders to which it agreed is conduct, as described by Plasket JA in
Madibeng
Local Municipality v Public Investment Corporation Limited,
[12]
which is unbecoming of a state organ and unconscionable.
Lack of resources
[67]
The
central mandate of local government is to develop a service delivery
capacity in order to meet the basic needs of all inhabitants
of South
Africa. The provision of basic municipal services is a cardinal
function, if not the most important function, of every
municipal
government.
[13]
[68]
The municipality’s essential
justification is that, if the writs are not uplifted, it will
prejudice its ability to provide
services within its jurisdiction. It
pleads a lack of resources as justification for the failure to comply
with the terms of the
December 2020 court order to which it had
agreed.
[69]
In
Rail
Commuters Action Group v Transnet Limited t/a Metrorail
[14]
the Constitutional Court set out the test for the assessment of a
plea of budgetary constraints by a public functionary. That test
entails an enquiry as to whether the state organ or functionary has
shown that it has taken all reasonable measures within its
available
resources.
[70]
The
municipality bears the onus to demonstrate that it has taken all
reasonable measures within its available resources.
[15]
This notwithstanding, the municipality failed to provide any details
of the actual resources available to it, the steps taken by
it to
ensure compliance with the court orders to which it had agreed or how
it dealt with the funds received by it from National
Treasury during
the Covid-19 pandemic.
[16]
[71]
Section 153(a) of the Constitution requires
the municipality to structure and manage its administration and
budgeting and planning
process to give priority to the basic needs of
the community, and to promote the social and economic development of
the community.
Under circumstances where the municipality agreed,
presumably on an informed basis, to the 8 December 2020 court order
setting
out specific payment terms, it is not sufficient to make
vague and unsubstantiated allegations of a “lack of funds”
arising inter alia from the Covid-19 pandemic which by that stage had
been raging since March 2020.
[72]
It is inconceivable that the municipality
would have consented to the court order and the payment terms set out
in the court order
knowing that it could not adhere to those terms.
However, once the reality of defaulting became evident, it was
incumbent upon
the municipality to take proactive steps to avert a
failure to comply with the court order.
[73]
Eskom argues that it was open to the
municipality to request a temporary stay of its financial obligations
to its creditors in terms
of Section 152 of the Municipal Finance
Management Act, 56 of 2003 (the MFMA), and that it could have taken
the steps contemplated
by sections 138 and 139 of the MFMA.
[74]
In
Letsemeng
[17]
,
the SCA held that the Letsemeng municipality’s defence on the
merits to Eskom’s counter-application for payment –
that
it should not be ordered to pay what it had agreed to pay due to its
financial weakness to do so – was not a defence.
Further that:
“
To
the extent that this may amount to the tacit raising of a defence of
impossibility of performance, the position is clear: if
a person
promises to do something that can be done, such as delivering a thing
or paying a debt, but which that person cannot do
due to
circumstances peculiar to themselves, they are nonetheless liable on
the contract. The commercial mayhem that would result,
if the rule
was otherwise, is not difficult to imagine.
Contractual
obligations are enforced by courts irrespective of whether a
defaulting party is able to pay or not. The focus is on
the rights of
the innocent party, not the means of the defaulting party.”
[18]
[75]
Eskom’s developmental role to ensure
universal electrification of electricity to the Republic as
contemplated in its governing
statute, the
Eskom Conversion Act 13 of
2001
requires of it to promote universal access to and the provision
of affordable electricity taking into account the cost of
electricity,
financial sustainability and the competitiveness of
Eskom. It cannot fulfil this role in a sustainable manner if it is
not paid
for the services which it has rendered and where it is then
prevented from executing a writ pursuant to a validly obtained court
order, after having done what was within its power to negotiate with
the defaulting municipality.
New issues raised in
reply
[76]
The
municipality raised a number of new issues in reply. It is not
permitted to make out a case in reply.
[19]
[77]
The
municipality argued that the court should exercise its discretion to
permit the new issues in reply with reference to
Shephard
v Tuckers Land and Development Corporation (Pty) Ltd
[20]
and
Lagoon
Beach Hotel (Pty) Ltd v Lehane NO.
[21]
In
Lagoon
Beach
it was held that a common sense approach must be used and that where
an initial application was moved as a matter of urgency, the
courts
are commonly sympathetic to an applicant in those circumstances and
often allow papers to be amplified in reply subject
to the
respondent’s right to file further answering papers.
[22]
It was contended that the new facts introduced in reply should be met
with the same degree of sympathy as was done in
Lagoon
Beach
,
particularly where the new issue introduced in reply is purely legal
in nature.
[78]
This matter was ultimately not heard as a
matter of urgency on 3 September 2021. There was ample opportunity
for the municipality
to amplify its founding affidavit and to seek
condonation to do so. In the same vein, Eskom could have delivered
further answering
papers to deal with the new matter in reply once it
became evident that the matter would not proceed on an urgent basis.
[79]
Whilst I do not agree that the municipality
is deserving of the degree of sympathy consequent upon the urgency
with which the application
was brought as set out in
Lagoon
Beach
, it is so that the issue of the
interpretation of the court order of 8 December 2020 is legal in
nature. Both parties have dealt
with this issue in their heads of
argument and it is dispositive of most of the issues raised in reply.
New factual issues raised
in reply will not be dealt with.
The interpretation of
the court order
[80]
A
court order obtained by agreement between the parties has the same
effect as any order granted by the court. It is to be interpreted
like any other order.
[23]
[81]
The municipality argued that paragraphs 4
and 7 of the order of 8 December 2020 could not be used in support of
a writ of execution.
This is because it was directed
ad
factum praestandum
, and not
ad
pecuniam solvendam.
On that basis, it
is argued that a writ was not competent and Eskom should have
proceeded with an application for contempt of court.
[82]
Paragraph 4 of the order provides:
From January 2021, the
Municipality shall pay Eskom and keep up with its payment obligation
to Eskom on the current account, in
full that which becomes due and
payable, on/or before the 5th day of every month.
[83]
Paragraph 7 provides for a certificate of
balance.
[84]
In
Engelbrecht
and another NNO v Senwes Ltd,
[24]
Malan AJA (as he then was) dealt with the terms of a court order
which recorded an agreement of settlement between the parties.
He
reiterated that the basic principles of interpretation of contracts
needed to be applied to ascertain the meaning of the agreement.
The
well-established test is that the intention of the parties is to be
ascertained from its contextual setting and in the light
of
admissible evidence. The facts probably present in the mind of the
parties when they contracted are part of the context and
explain the
genesis of the transaction or its factual matrix.
[25]
In
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd
[26]
Unterhalter AJA cautioned that the triad of text, context and purpose
should not be used in a mechanical fashion.
[27]
[85]
In
Eke
v Parsons
[28]
Madlanga J held that, for an order to be competent and proper, it
must, in the first place, relate directly or indirectly to an
issue
or lis between the parties.
[86]
By the time the court order was agreed to
between the municipality and Eskom, the municipality had reneged on
two undertakings as
well as a court order obtained, also by
agreement, in August 2020. In answer to Eskom’s
counter-application it only filed
a notice to argue a point of lack
of jurisdiction. It did not file an answering affidavit in answer to
the allegations in the counter-application.
Thereafter, and whilst
legally represented, it reached agreement on the terms of the court
order of 8 December 2020 with Eskom.
[87]
In its urgent application to uplift the
attachments, the case made was that it was in breach of the court
order, not because it
had misunderstood what was required of it or
because the writ had been improperly issued, but because of a lack of
resources attributable
to
inter alia
the Covid19 pandemic and based on the provisions of IRFA.
[88]
In
my view, the municipality understood what it had agreed to and what
was required of it in the order of 8 December 2020. The order
is to
be read as a whole within the context that gave rise to the order.
The order of 8 December 2020 is clear and unambiguous
in its terms.
The argument that, because paragraph 4 of the order makes no mention
of specific amounts which the Municipality has
to pay and that it is
therefore not readily enforceable with reference to
Lujabe
v Maruatona
[29]
is without merit.
[89]
Lujabe
dealt
with an application for contempt of court after the respondent failed
to pay what was described as “his equal share”
of a
property jointly owned with the applicant. It is distinguishable on
the facts.
[90]
Paragraph 4 of the order provides that the
municipality is required to keep payment of its current account up to
date and must pay
what is due on its current account on or before the
5
th
of
every month. Paragraph 4 is to be read with paragraph 6. The order is
clear and unambiguous.
[91]
The argument that the order precludes Eskom
from proceeding with a writ and that it should first have approached
the court for an
order holding the municipality in contempt is
similarly without merit. Paragraph 5 of the order sets out what the
consequences
would be if its terms were not be complied with.
[92]
An
order of a similar nature was made in
Letsemeng.
[30]
There is no basis for the argument that the terms of the order are
“contrary to public policy” on the basis that it
will
endure “ad infinitum”.
[93]
The issues raised in reply are contrived.
Conclusion
[94]
For these reasons, the municipality’s
application must fail.
[95]
I make the following order:
[95.1]
The application is dismissed with costs,
such costs to include the costs of two counsel.
GOEDHART
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Date
of hearing: 14 March 2022
Date
of judgment: 5 July 2022
(This judgment was handed
down electronically by
circulation to the
parties’ representatives via email.)
For
the Applicant:
Adv Els
Instructed
by:
Oosthuizen Du Plooy Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Adv
SL Shangisa SC
Adv L
Rakgwale
Instructed
by:
Ledwaba Mazwai
Attorneys
[1]
Per
Petse DP in Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd v Resilient Properties (Pty) Ltd
& others (‘
Resilient
’)
(663/2019; 664/2019; 583/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 185
(29 December
2020);
2021 (3) SA 47
(SCA);
[2021] 1 All SA 668
(SCA) at para 2.
[2]
Section
165(5):
“
An
order or decision issued by a court binds all persons to whom and
organs of state to which it applies.”
[3]
Section
1(c) of the Constitution provides that the Republic of South Africa
is one, sovereign, democratic state founded on the
supremacy of the
constitution and the rule of law.
[4]
[2008]
ZACC 8
;
2008 (5) SA 94
(CC);
2008 (9) BCLR 865
at para 80.
[5]
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Another v Modderklip Boerdery
(Pty) Ltd
[2005] ZACC 5
;
2005 (5) SA 3
(CC);
2005 (8) BCLR 786
(CC)
at para 50; Government of the Republic of Zimbabwe v Fick and Others
[2013] ZACC 22
;
2013 (5) SA 325
(CC);
2013 (10) BCLR 1103
(CC) at
para 61.
[6]
Mjeni
v Minister of Health and Welfare, Eastern Cape
2000 (4) SA 446
(TK)
at 453C, quoted with approval in Moodley v Kenmont School and others
[2019]
ZACC 37
;
2020 (1) SA 410
(CC);
2020 (1) BCLR 74
(CC) at para 20.
[7]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
at 227.
[8]
Resilient,
footnote 1 above.
[9]
Ibid.
See also City of Cape Town v Premier, Western Cape 2008 (6) SA (C)
345 at paras 17 and 18.
[10]
(990/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 26
(9 March 2022);
[2022] 2 All SA 347
(SCA)
(“Letsemeng”) at para 24.
[11]
Letsemeng,
footnote 10 above, at para 71.
[12]
(955/2019);
[2020] ZASCA 157
(30 November 2020).
[13]
Joseph
v City of Johannesburg (CCT43/09);
[2009] ZACC 30
;
2010 (3) BCLR 212
(CC);
2010 (4) SA 55
(CC) (9 October 2009) at para 34.
[14]
[2004]
ZACC 20
(CC);
[2005] JOL 13509
(CC);
2005 (2) SA 359
(CC)(‘
Rail
Commuters’
).
[15]
Rail
Commuters at para 88.
[16]
The
latter is dealt with by Eskom in its answering affidavit.
[17]
Footnote
10 above.
[18]
Ibid,
at para 22.
[19]
Titty’s
Bar and Bottle Store (Pty) Ltd v ABC Garage (Pty) Ltd
1974 (4) SA
362
(T) at 368H- 369B.
[20]
1978
(1) SA 173
(W) at 177H-178A.
[21]
2016
(3) SA 143 (SCA).
[22]
Ibid,
para 16.
[23]
Eke
v Parsons
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC);
2015 (11) BCLR 1319
at para 29.
[24]
2007
(3) SA 29 (SCA).
[25]
Ibid
at paras 6 and 7.
[26]
2022
(1) SA 100 (SCA).
[27]
Ibid
at para 25.
[28]
Footnote
23 above, at para 25.
[29]
(35730/2012)
[2013] ZAGPJHC 66 (15 April 2013); 2013 JDR 0782 (GSJ).
[30]
Footnote
10 above, at paras 27 (2) (a) and (b).
sino noindex
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