Rural Maintenance (Pty) Limited v Maluti-a-Phofong Local Municipality and Another (3447/2013) [2019] ZAFSHC 186 (17 October 2019)

80 Reportability
Unjust Enrichment Law

Brief Summary

Unjust Enrichment — Claim for payment of expenses — Plaintiff sought recovery of expenses incurred under an unlawful contract — Plaintiff claimed R155,733,925.00 based on unjust enrichment after the Electricity Management Contract was set aside — Defendant raised defences including res judicata and lack of enrichment — Court held that the plaintiff's claim for unjust enrichment was valid and not barred by previous judgment, allowing the claim to proceed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings concerned the second phase of litigation between the parties following an earlier determination that the underlying contract was invalid. The matter came before the Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein, as a trial in which the plaintiff pursued monetary relief on the basis of just and equitable relief following judicial review, framed primarily as a claim founded on unjustified enrichment, and alternatively on negotiorum gestio.


The plaintiff was Rural Maintenance (Pty) Limited. The first defendant was Maluti-a-Phofung Local Municipality. The second defendant was the Premier: Free State Province N.O., although the trial and ultimate relief in this “second leg” focused on the municipality’s alleged enrichment and liability to compensate the plaintiff.


The procedural history was central to the posture of the dispute. In the previous trial, the validity of the parties’ Electricity Management Contract (EMC) was litigated. In that earlier judgment, the court held that the EMC was unlawful and set it aside ab initio, which disposed of the plaintiff’s contractual damages claim while leaving an alternative claim based on enrichment-type relief for later determination. This judgment accordingly dealt with the surviving claim and the defences raised to it.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether, notwithstanding the EMC’s invalidity, the plaintiff was entitled to recover expenses incurred and liabilities assumed in performing and implementing the EMC (including preparatory work and operational expenditure), to the extent that the municipality was enriched or ought, as a matter of just and equitable relief under constitutional and administrative-law remedial provisions, to compensate the plaintiff.


Material Facts


A significant portion of the material facts were admitted in pre-trial proceedings. The parties recorded that, as at about April 2011, the municipality’s electricity distribution network was in a severely deteriorated state, described as being “on the brink of collapse”. Major transformers suffered oil leaks; circuit breakers were damaged beyond repair; outages were frequent; live electricity distribution points were unsecured and posed electrocution risks; and extensive upgrading and replacement of infrastructure was required. These facts formed the factual backdrop to why the EMC was pursued and why the plaintiff undertook extensive preparatory and implementation work.


It was also common cause by agreement that the plaintiff performed work and incurred expenses or liabilities as pleaded (including as amplified by further particulars), and that the municipality admitted the supporting vouchers for those expenses or liabilities. The parties further agreed that evidence led in the first trial would form part of the evidentiary material in the second trial, and that various expert reports and underlying financial documents were admitted. An affidavit by a former senior municipal official, Mr Ungerer, was admitted by agreement.


Chronologically, the plaintiff’s evidence (particularly through Mr Bosch) described extensive activity before and after the EMC’s takeover date. The plaintiff undertook preparatory work to enable it to be operational by takeover, including mapping and plotting infrastructure, locating customers, planning outlet points, obtaining and installing systems and software, training personnel, replacing transformers, repairing and building lines, fencing substations, improving metering, and establishing operational facilities such as a control room, warehousing, and staff accommodation. The plaintiff also procured vehicles and specialised equipment after the EMC was concluded, to be used for implementation.


A further material aspect was the plaintiff’s state of mind and the surrounding circumstances regarding the EMC’s procurement regularity. The plaintiff accepted that statutory procurement requirements existed but contended that it had been assured by the municipal manager and the then executive mayor that requirements and formalities had been met. The plaintiff’s evidence was that the municipality’s stance changed after a new executive mayor was appointed, at which point allegations of invalidity intensified. National Treasury suggested that any uncertainty about authorisation could be addressed by submitting a new proposal to the municipal council for approval, and the plaintiff prepared such a submission, but it did not resolve the dispute.


It was also material that the municipality, at a point, instructed the plaintiff to refrain from implementing and executing the EMC. The plaintiff’s case, as accepted in part in the reasoning, was that by then substantial work and expenditure had already been incurred and that withdrawing at that stage risked a breakdown in electricity supply.


On the expert and affidavit evidence, the plaintiff’s work resulted in the electricity distribution system being described as overhauled and functional. Mr Ungerer stated that the municipality lacked manpower, skills, tools, funding, and structures necessary to operate and maintain the network at the time, and that the plaintiff performed a vast amount of work prior to takeover. He expressed the view that the value of improvements and work was in the region of R185 million, though the court later assessed the evidentiary adequacy of that valuation.


The municipality’s financial position in relation to Eskom also formed part of the factual matrix. The municipality owed Eskom more than R100 million when the EMC was concluded, and the debt later escalated significantly. The plaintiff paid the municipality’s Eskom account for seven months, totalling more than R120 million, and the court treated the nature and effect of those payments as relevant when addressing enrichment and the defences.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the plaintiff, after the EMC had been declared invalid and set aside ab initio, was entitled to monetary relief under section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution read with section 8(1)(c)(ii)(bb) of PAJA, and if so, on what juridical basis and to what extent. The plaintiff pleaded the claim as one of unjustified enrichment, alternatively as negotiorum gestio “to the extent that the First Defendant has been unjustly enriched”.


A further set of issues concerned the municipality’s defences, including whether the second trial was barred by res judicata, whether implementation was premature or reckless, whether the plaintiff proceeded with knowledge of invalidity and thereby assumed the risk of non-recovery, and whether the municipality was not enriched (or not unjustly enriched), including the contention that Eskom, rather than the municipality, was enriched by payments made.


The dispute therefore involved a mixture of the application of legal principles to largely admitted factual performance and expenditure, evaluative judgments about excusable error and the appropriateness of compensatory relief as a just and equitable remedy, and a quantification enquiry determining which categories of expenditure could properly be treated as representing the municipality’s enrichment (or saved expenditure) rather than merely the plaintiff’s costs of performance.


Court’s Reasoning


The court first addressed the pleaded defences. The res judicata defence was rejected on the basis that the earlier judgment expressly left open a claim founded on enrichment-type relief after setting aside the EMC. The court held that the present claim was indeed advanced on enrichment/negotiorum gestio grounds, and that the question whether particular items constituted enrichment was a matter for determination in the present proceedings rather than a bar to them.


On the “red flags” and knowledge-based defences (premature implementation, reckless conduct, proceeding with knowledge of invalidity, and assumption of risk), the court treated the municipality’s argument as asserting that the plaintiff’s conduct amounted to an inexcusable error that should preclude recovery. The court declined to examine every alleged warning sign in isolation and instead assessed them against the broader context. Specific points addressed included that the signing of the EMC away from the municipality’s offices was not viewed as inherently suspicious on the evidence, and that certain reactions from provincial structures (including the Premier’s stance) were linked to an alleged lack of National Treasury knowledge, which the court accepted was “patently false” to the plaintiff’s knowledge. The appointment of Amber consultancy after conclusion of the EMC was treated as capable of causing concern, but also as potentially consistent with an intention to implement the EMC.


The court emphasised contextual factors reinforcing the plaintiff’s belief that it was entitled to proceed. These included the plaintiff’s reliance on assurances of compliance by the municipal manager and executive mayor, the municipal manager’s prior experience with a similar contract at another municipality, the municipality’s supportive stance in Labour Court litigation arising from the EMC, and the municipality’s non-opposition to an interim interdict obtained by the plaintiff when opposition to the EMC peaked. The court accepted the plaintiff’s explanation that preparing a submission for a new council resolution was intended to remove doubt following a Treasury suggestion, and did not necessarily show acceptance of invalidity.


In dealing with the municipality’s “assumption of risk” argument, the court distinguished between ordinary commercial risk in implementing a concluded contract and the asserted proposition that the plaintiff assumed the risk of non-recovery if the contract were later declared unlawful. The court rejected the latter as unsupported, particularly given the court’s finding that there was no basis to conclude that the plaintiff knew procurement requirements were not met.


The court also disposed of the argument that the municipality was not enriched because Eskom was paid. It reasoned that payments were made on behalf of and to the credit of the municipality, and in any event those payments were effectively recovered from electricity consumers and accounted for in the plaintiff’s computation; accordingly, they did not negate enrichment in principle on the court’s approach to the claim.


Turning to the remedial framework, the court accepted that the applicable principles were largely common cause, but it addressed the municipality’s argument that enrichment recovery required proof that the plaintiff acted under an excusable error of fact or law, and that the “red flags” rendered any error inexcusable. The court held that, viewed in isolation, proceeding in the face of mounting opposition might appear questionable, but that the broader circumstances—large-scale investment already made, substantial work already utilised, and the risk to sustainable electricity supply—supported the conclusion that continuing was justified and at least an excusable error.


The court further stated that the “just and equitable” relief under section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution read with section 8(1)(c)(ii)(bb) of PAJA was not necessarily limited to enrichment claims. It emphasised that PAJA expressly contemplates an order directing payment of compensation, and that the constitutional and statutory provisions confer a wide discretion to structure a remedy that is just and equitable in all the circumstances. While public-law relief was described as the usual form, the court considered private-law relief not excluded.


When considering whether to allow compensatory relief, the court took into account the potential effects on the parties and the community, including taxpayers. It accepted that the municipality was enriched by having an upgraded and functional electricity distribution network, achieved at the plaintiff’s expense, and that the municipality’s Eskom account had been paid for a period. However, the court did not accept the asserted enrichment valuation of approximately R185 million as usable for quantification because Mr Ungerer’s valuation lacked supporting detail and was not evaluable.


The court then approached the quantification through the pleaded list of expenses and disbursements, while noting that the claim as formulated was not based on a valuation of actual enrichment. Because the expenses were diverse and did not align neatly with a single recognised condictio, the court regarded the claim as more appropriately classified as an actio negotiorum gestio. In doing so, it also considered that the plaintiff continued operations contrary to an explicit municipal instruction to cease, which could render the plaintiff, “at the worst”, a mala fide gestor. Relying on Standard Bank Financial Services v Taylam 1979 (2) SA 383 (CPD), the court accepted that a mala fide gestor cannot claim a refund of expenses as such, but may claim to the extent of the dominus’s enrichment.


Applying these principles to the various heads of expenditure, the court largely relied on Mr McDonald’s expert report and reasoned that some costs were not appropriate measures of municipal enrichment because they were costs the municipality would not realistically have been able or likely to incur given its capacity and financial constraints. The court accepted as enrichment, in substance, amounts relating to purchases comprising bulk electricity payments and materials for repairs and maintenance, as well as repairs and maintenance costs, transport and travel costs linked to servicing and repairs, and technology and software costs necessary for operating the distribution and commercial system.


Conversely, the court rejected several categories as not constituting calculable enrichment. It rejected the salaries and wages head because of evidentiary and conceptual difficulties, including that the municipality would not have employed staff to that extent, and because permanent staff costs would have existed for the plaintiff regardless of the EMC. It rejected bad debts written off, because they remained unrecoverable on the evidence and could not amount to enrichment, and rejected depreciation because it was an accounting measure and not shown to be enrichment, with the court noting the plaintiff’s ability to deduct depreciation in its own statements. It rejected business plan (feasibility study) costs as having been incurred before conclusion of the agreement as part of the plaintiff’s own risk, and it rejected much of the “other costs of service” category as not shown probably to have been incurred by the municipality, though it accepted certain identified sub-items within that category as constituting savings/enrichment.


Finally, the court deducted from the amounts treated as enrichment an amount described as income received from electricity consumers by the plaintiff, producing a net enrichment figure. The court concluded that the circumstances were exceptional and justified an award of compensation, but confined that award to the net amount it calculated as representing enrichment (or saved expenditure) on the evidence and its evaluative assessment.


Outcome and Relief


The court ordered the first defendant to pay the plaintiff R33 891 645,00. The amount was ordered to bear interest at the prescribed mora interest rate from the date of judgment to date of payment.


On costs, the court held that costs should follow the result, but it made a specific costs order relating to a postponement. The plaintiff was ordered to pay the wasted costs occasioned by the postponement on 23 May 2019, including costs of two counsel where employed. The defendant was ordered to pay the costs of suit in respect of the trial, including the costs of two counsel where employed, and including the qualifying, reservation, and attendance fees of the experts Mr R McDonald and Mr A Van der Merwe.


Cases Cited


Standard Bank Financial Services v Taylam 1979 (2) SA 383 (CPD)


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 172(1)(b)


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000, section 8(1)(c)(ii)(bb)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were expressly cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the earlier decision setting aside the EMC did not render the enrichment/negotiorum gestio claim res judicata, because the earlier judgment expressly left that claim open. It held that the plaintiff did not, on the evidence and in context, proceed with implementation in a manner that rendered its conduct an inexcusable error barring relief, and that the plaintiff’s continued performance amid opposition was at least excusable given the assurances relied upon, the scale of investment already made, and the public-service implications for electricity supply.


The court held further that the municipality was enriched by the plaintiff’s performance, but that the plaintiff could recover only to the extent of enrichment, particularly because continued operation contrary to an instruction to cease could render it, at worst, a mala fide gestor who cannot recover expenses as such but may recover the measure of enrichment. The court therefore assessed the pleaded expenditure categories and allowed recovery only for those items it accepted as constituting enrichment or saved expenditure on the evidence, with a deduction for income received from consumers, arriving at a net award of R33 891 645,00, together with mora interest and the stated costs orders.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that, after an administrative act or contract is set aside, a court has a remedial discretion under section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution and section 8(1)(c)(ii)(bb) of PAJA to craft a remedy that is just and equitable in all the circumstances. The court treated the statutory reference to compensation as confirming that relief is not necessarily confined to traditional enrichment formulations, although the present claim was ultimately resolved through enrichment/negotiorum gestio reasoning and quantification.


The court applied the approach that enrichment recovery (and similarly a negotiorum gestio claim in the circumstances described) is limited to the extent of the defendant’s enrichment, and that the claimant’s own expenditure is not automatically the measure of enrichment. The judgment further applied the principle, drawn from Standard Bank Financial Services v Taylam 1979 (2) SA 383 (CPD), that even where a gestor is mala fide because it acted contrary to the dominus’s expressed wishes, the gestor is not necessarily barred from recovery altogether but is confined to a claim measured by the dominus’s enrichment rather than a refund of expenses.


In quantifying enrichment, the court applied an evaluative principle that certain expense items do not constitute enrichment where they are not shown to be expenses the municipality would probably have incurred or savings the municipality would probably have realised, especially where the municipality lacked capacity and financing. On that basis, the court distinguished between categories such as infrastructure-related purchases, repairs, maintenance, transport, and operational systems (accepted as enrichment), and categories such as salaries and wages, depreciation, bad debts written off, and business plan costs (rejected as not constituting calculable enrichment on the evidence and rationale accepted by the court).

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[2019] ZAFSHC 186
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Rural Maintenance (Pty) Limited v Maluti-a-Phofong Local Municipality and Another (3447/2013) [2019] ZAFSHC 186 (17 October 2019)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE
STATE DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case
number: 3447/2013
In
the matter between:
RURAL
MAINTENANCE (PTY)
LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
MALUTI-A-PHOFUNG
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
1
st
Defendant
THE PREMIER: FREE
STATE PROVINCE
N.O.
2
nd
Defendant
HEARD
ON:
26,27,28 AUGUST & 05 SEPTEMBER 2019
JUDGMENT
BY:
JORDAAN, J
DELIVERED
ON:
17 OCTOBER 2019
[1]
This trial concerns the second leg of the litigation between the
parties, more particularly the plaintiff’s claim for
payment of
expenses incurred, based on section 172 of the Constitution read with
section 8(1)(c)(ii)(bb) of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice
Act,3 of 2000. Plaintiff alleges that the defendant was enriched to
the value of R155,733,925.00 and claims payment of
that amount.
[2]
In the previous trial, the validity of the Electricity Management
Contract (EMC) was at stake. In my judgement on that issue
I
summarised the background facts. It is therefore not necessary to
repeat those facts and the history of the matter. In that judgement
I
found the EMC to be unlawful and set it aside
ab initio
. That
effectively disposed of the plaintiff’s claim for contractual
damages, keeping alive only the alternative claim based
on
enrichment.
THE
PLEADINGS AND ISSUES.
[3]
In further pre-trial minutes the parties agreed on various issues;
inter-alia it was agreed that the evidence tendered in the
previous
trial forms part of and may be used as evidentiary material in the
present trial. It was agreed that the documents pertaining
to the
financial statements and information, on which the expert Rowan
McDonald based his report, are admitted. It was also placed
on record
that the defendant admitted the aforesaid expert report as well as
that of the expert Mr A van der Merwe. By agreement
an affidavit by
Mr B Ungerer was admitted in evidence.
[4]
In an addendum to the pre-trial minutes the following agreements and
admissions were recorded;

1. As at April
2011 the electricity distribution network of MAP was on the brink of
collapse with major transformers suffering oil
leaks, which could
cause the transformers to malfunction. The oil leaks contributed to
ground pollution and many circuit breakers
were damaged beyond
repair.
2. There were constant
electricity outages occurring due to the poor state of MAP’s
electricity distribution infrastructure.
3. There were many live
electricity distribution points which were not secured and which
points could be accessed by members of
the public. This was
self-evidently very dangerous and could lead to electrocution.
4. The bulk of the
electricity distribution infrastructure required upgrading and
replacing of conductors, isolators, etc.
Work performed by Rural
prior to and after takeover date of the EMC:
5. Rural attended to the
maintenance and upgrading of the electricity distribution network in
all the aspects that formed part of
or were referred to in the
previous bids and as set out in the pleadings.
6. The parties agree that
Rural performed the work and incurred the expenses (or the
liabilities) as set out the Plaintiff’s
(sic) particulars of
Claim as well as the Plaintiff’s reply to the Defendant’s
Request for further particulars.
7. The Defendant admits
the supporting vouchers in support of the expenses (or liabilities)
aforesaid.
8. These admissions do
not prevent the advancing of legal arguments in respect of any
specific defences raised by the first defendant.”
[5]
The plaintiff claims, as a just and equitable remedy in terms of
section 172 (1) (b) of the Constitution, amounts expended and

liabilities incurred in purported compliance with its contractual
obligations, based on unjustified enrichment. In the alternative
the
claim is based on the
negotiorum gestio utilis
for payment of
amounts expended in administering the affairs of the defendant, which
were necessary and useful, “to the extent
that the First
Defendant has been unjustly enriched”.
[6]
In its plea the defendant raised the following main defences namely;
1. That my previous
judgement amounts to a
res iudicata
;
2. That the plaintiff
prematurely implemented the EMC;
3. That the plaintiff
acted recklessly, irrationally and unreasonably in implementing the
EMC and should have refrained from doing
so in the circumstances;
4. Plaintiff accepted the
risk of non-recovery of its expenses and disbursements;
5. The plaintiff
implemented and performed in terms of the EMC with full knowledge of
its invalidity;
6. The defendant was not
enriched and, if enriched, not unjustly. In so far as the plaintiff
paid the Eskom account of the defendant,
it was not the defendant but
Eskom that was enriched.
THE
EVIDENCE.
[7]
Apart from the extensive evidence tendered in the first trial, the
plaintiff called two witnesses namely Mr C Bosch, the group
chief
executive of a group of companies of which the plaintiff is one and
Mr A v/d Merwe, a professional electrical engineer and
expert in
business economics with extensive experience in the electrical supply
industry and the management of turnaround projects.
As aforesaid, the
evidence of Mr Ungerer was tendered by means of an affidavit, by
agreement.
[8]
Mr Bosch largely repeated the run of events leading up to the signing
of the EMC and thereafter, up to the takeover date and
implementation
of the contract. Because of the poor state of the infrastructure of
the large network involved, the plaintiff started
preparing and
repairing infrastructure so as to be up and running on the takeover
date. That included taking aerial photographs,
plotting the
infrastructure, locating customers, planning outlet points, obtaining
and installing software and systems, training
of personnel, replacing
various transformers, repairing and building new lines, properly
fencing substations and installing proper
metering systems. A control
room was installed, warehousing obtained, housing for personnel
obtained and backup supplies bought
and stored.
[9]
During this period about 90% of the plaintiff’s workforce and
management were involved in the aforesaid. He conceded that
the
feasibility study was done before the contract was signed and without
any certainty that the contract will be awarded to the
plaintiff. It
was done at no cost to the defendant and the cost thereof in excess
of R 2.5 million paid by plaintiff. According
to him, should the
plaintiff not have been awarded the contract and the business plan
utilised by defendant, either itself or in
the appointment of a
different contractor, plaintiff would have claimed the cost thereof
from the defendant. He conceded that the
feasibility study was more
of a business plan depicting the viability of the project, in
financial terms, for the plaintiff and
did not reflect the financial
implications over the period for the defendant.
[10]
For the purposes of executing the EMC, various vehicles, some
specialised and equipment were bought. These were ordered after

conclusion of the contract and effectively delivered and bought in
the period up to implementation of the agreement.
[11]
He knew that there were various statutory requirements that had to be
complied with in the procurement process leading up to
the signing of
the agreement. He was however assured by the   municipal manager
and the executive mayor at the time that all
the necessary
requirements were complied with and that all formalities that were
necessary were concluded.
[12]
The attitude of the defendant municipality towards the EMC only
changed after the previous executive mayor was replaced by
a new one.
Only then did the allegations to the effect that the EMC was invalid
start to surface. Notwithstanding all the problems
experienced with
the new leadership of the defendant municipality, he remained
convinced that the EMC was valid and binding, inter
alia based on the
assurances of the erstwhile mayor and the municipal manager. He was
strengthened in his conviction, inter alia
by the fact that the
defendant supported the plaintiff in the Labour Court proceedings
emanating from the EMC and by the fact that
the defendant did not
oppose the interim interdict that was obtained by the plaintiff in
late August 2013.
[13]
He concedes that, after the executive mayor alleged that no proper
Council resolution authorising the EMC existed, National
Treasury
suggested that the problem could be laid to rest by the plaintiff
submitting a new proposal to Council for approval by
a new
Council resolution. To put the matter beyond doubt, the plaintiff
prepared such a proposal for submission to the council
but nothing
came of it. That was only done in an attempt to put the dispute
beyond doubt and not because the plaintiff accepted
that the EMC was
invalid because of any non-compliance with required formalities.
[14]
At the time that the executive mayor demanded that the plaintiff
refrain from implementing and executing the EMC, most of the

preparatory work and investment in the project were already utilised
by the defendant and, moreover, should the plaintiff adhere
to the
request, it would most probably have resulted in a chaotic breakdown
of electricity supply to the detriment of the community.
[15]
Mr Van Der Merwe testified that, for the implementation of the EMC,
extensive preparation and investment are required consisting
of
repairing the network and installing the necessary hardware and
software to run the commercial side of the project. Those
preparations
and planning had to commence in the vicinity of about
200 days before implementing the takeover of the electricity supply.
[16]
He inspected the work done by the plaintiff and was satisfied that
the formerly dilapidated infrastructure was properly repaired,
a
complete customer base, database, vending and other systems were
brought up to date and put in place and customer walk in centres

created. He was impressed by the remarkable improvements brought
about by the plaintiff in such a short period of time.
[17]
From the affidavit of Mr Ungerer it appears that he holds various
qualifications in electrical engineering as well as a MBA
degree. He
was employed by the defendant for many years, the last 15 years in
the capacity of director of municipal infrastructure
services. He was
inter-alia in charge of the electrical services division. He confirms
that the defendant lacked the necessary
manpower, skills, employees,
tools, funding and structures necessary to operate and maintain the
electrical distribution network.
As a result, the electricity
distribution infrastructure was on the brink of collapse when the EMC
was concluded.
[18]
The plaintiff performed a vast amount of work prior to the actual
takeover date. The plaintiff changed the electricity distribution

network to a system that was completely overhauled and functional.
[19]
He was asked to provide his opinion as to the value of the
improvements made and work performed by the plaintiff and concluded

that the value was in the region of R 185 million.
[20]
The time that the EMC was concluded, the defendant owed Eskom more
than R100 million. As at present that debt escalated to
more than R3
billion.
DISCUSSION:
DEFENCES.
[21]
The defence based on
res judicata
is founded on the contention
that the plaintiff in effect claims damages and not a claim based on
enrichment. This defence holds
no water. My previous judgement
explicitly left it open for the plaintiff to proceed with its claim
based on enrichment. That is
clearly the claim now advanced by the
plaintiff. Whether the amounts and items included in the claim indeed
constitute enrichment
of the defendant, has to be decided and will be
dealt with later.
[22]
The alleged premature implementation of the EMC, reckless
implementation thereof and the performance in terms of the EMC with

full knowledge of the invalidity thereof, are all based on the events
that allegedly raised red flags which should have alerted
the
plaintiff to the possible or actual invalidity of the EMC.
[23]
I do not intend to deal with each and every such event. I have dealt
with some of those in my previous judgement. Without doubt
and
admittedly the change of attitude after the new Mayor was appointed
and which led to the events raising the red flags, was
a matter of
concern for the plaintiff.
[24]
It was argued that the first red flag should have been the fact that
the EMC was signed in Frankfort and not at the offices
of defendant.
I am not convinced that that fact should have raised any concerns. It
was logically and acceptably explained in the
evidence of Mr Bosch.
[25]
The attitude of the Premier following upon the meeting of the
provincial coordinating committee was clearly based on the fact
that
the representatives of national Treasury disavowed any knowledge of
the EMC. On the evidence this was patently false to the
knowledge of
the plaintiff and therefore no reason for real concern.
[26]
The appointment of Amber consultancy after conclusion of the EMC may
have been a matter of concern. On the other hand it also
conveyed
some reassurance that the defendant seriously intended to give effect
to the EMC and was committed to it.
[27]
These red flags should be viewed in the context of the broader
picture:
27.1-Firstly, the EMC was
negotiated and concluded after the plaintiff has already concluded a
similar agreement with the Mafube
municipality successfully. The
municipal manager, at the time, of the latter municipality was the
same individual who became the
municipal manager of the defendant
when the EMC was negotiated and concluded. The plaintiff could
certainly accept that he was
aware of all the requirements that had
to be met and complied with, drawing from his experience at Mafube.
27.2-According to the
evidence, the plaintiff strongly relied on the assurances of
compliance given by the municipal manager and
the executive mayor the
time. There is no reason why the plaintiff should have disbelieved
them and rather believe the new Mayor.
The plaintiff was certainly
reassured by the support of the municipality in the Labour Court
matter.
27.3-The interdict
application was brought at a time when the resistance against the EMC
and the plaintiff reached its peak. It
was however unopposed and
served as further reassurance and indication that the opposition to
implementation of the EMC was not
factually based but rather
politically motivated.
27.4-The fact that the
plaintiff prepared a submission to Council for the purpose of
obtaining ratification of the EMC by means
of a Council resolution,
has been satisfactorily explained. It was done as a result of a
suggestion by Mr Hatting of National Treasury
in order to remove any
doubt and make doubly sure. It certainly does not imply that the
plaintiff knew or accepted that the EMC
was invalid and unlawful.
27.5-The defence that the
plaintiff accepted the risk of loss is largely based on the
presentations to the defendant by the plaintiff
during the
negotiation process and on the terms of the EMC. Clearly the
acceptance of risk related to normal business risk should
the EMC be
concluded and successfully implemented. It certainly could not imply
that the plaintiff accepted the risk of loss should
the EMC be
invalidated. The alleged acceptance of risk is also based on the view
that the plaintiff knew that the necessary requirements
were not
complied with and, in particular, that there was no proper Council
resolution in place. With that knowledge, it is argued,
plaintiff
proceeded in implementing and performing in terms of the EMC, thereby
accepting the risk in expending vast amounts of
money in terms of an
unlawful contract and persisting in doing so.
27.6-I have already shown
that there is no reason to find that the plaintiff knew that the
necessary requirements were not complied
with. There was no reason
for the plaintiff to disbelieve the assurances given by the previous
Mayor and the municipal manager
and rather believe the new Mayor. The
acceptance of risk- defence is without substance.
27.7-The last defence
raised, namely that the defendant was not enriched, is also without
substance. The payments to Eskom were
done on behalf of and to the
credit of the defendant. Eskom was paid for electricity sold and
certainly not enriched. In any event,
those payments have been
effectively recovered from electricity sold and supplied to customers
by the plaintiff. The amount so
recovered has been taken into account
in formulating and calculating the plaintiff’s claim. The
payments to Eskom therefore
effectively do not form part of the
enrichment claim. In any event, the defendant agreed to the
submission of the affidavit of
Mr Ungerer and accepted the contents
thereof. As shown above, the witness stated that the defendant was
indeed enriched.
THE
LAW
[28]
The applicable legal principles are uncontested and common cause. In
so far as the claim is based on enrichment, the defendant
contends
that enrichment can only be recovered where the claimant shows that
it acted as such and expended money due to an excusable
error of fact
or law. It is argued that, due to all the red flags, the plaintiff’s
proceeding with implementing the EMC and
investing vast amounts of
money notwithstanding the red flags, constitute inexcusable errors,
preventing a claim for recovery.
[29]
I am not convinced that the “just and equitable” relief
envisaged in section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution read
with section
8(1)(c)(ii)(bb) of PAJA is limited to a claim based on enrichment.
The last mentioned section explicitly provides
for an order directing
payment of compensation. The effect of the aforesaid enactments is to
afford a court a wide discretion,
taking into account all relevant
circumstances, to structure an order which will constitute just and
equitable relief.
[30]
It is common cause that the relief envisaged in the aforesaid
sections as a rule is meant to be in the nature of public law
relief.
However, private law relief in appropriate circumstances is not
excluded.
DISCUSSION
[31]
Viewed in isolation, the plaintiff’s decision to proceed with
implementing the EMC in the face of surmounting opposition,

especially in the month preceding the takeover, is questionable.
However one has to take into account all the surrounding
circumstances:
vast amounts of money were spent before and after
conclusion of the EMC. The whole network was extensively repaired,
specialised
equipment and vehicles ordered and bought, employees
trained and the network already utilised by the defendant. The
investment
in the project amounted to several hundred million rand.
[32]
As aforesaid, there were several reassuring factors which justified
the belief that the opposition and interference were politically

motivated and not factually founded.
[33]
In terms of the EMC, the plaintiff effectively took over the
defendant’s constitutional responsibility of supplying
electricity in a sustainable manner. If the plaintiff acceded to the
pressure and simply walked away because of the possibility
of the EMC
being invalid, chances were that the supply of electricity in a
sustainable manner would be compromised. A huge investment
would have
to be abandoned, simply on the strength of the word of those opposed
to the project.
[34]
In these circumstances I am convinced that the plaintiff’s
decision to proceed with the implementation of the EMC was
justified
and at least an excusable error.
[35]
In deciding whether to allow compensatory relief, I have to take into
account all the relevant circumstances, including the
possible effect
of granting or refusing such relief on the parties and the community,
especially the taxpayers.
[36]
It is beyond doubt that the defendant was enriched. The evidence of
Mr Ungerer was admitted. He computed the value of enrichment
to be in
excess of R 185 million. However his evidence lacks any detail as to
how he arrived at that figure and how it was computed.
It is
therefore unsubstantiated and impossible for me to evaluate.
[37]
To the extent that the defendant was enriched, either by payments and
expenses incurred by the plaintiff or expenses saved
which would have
been payable by the defendant, it was obviously also advantageous to
the community served by the defendant.
[38]
The defendant was left with an upgraded and functional electricity
distribution network. This was done at the expense of the
plaintiff.
The amount involved is huge and at the time certainly not within
reach of the defendant’s financial capabilities.
The
defendant’s current Eskom account was paid for seven months,
totalling more than R120 million.
[39]
I am satisfied that the facts of this matter constitute exceptional
circumstances, justifying an order for compensation.
THE
CLAIM
[40]
The plaintiff’s claim is expressly based on enrichment,
alternatively the
actio negotiorum gestio
. The computation of
the claim consists of a list of expenses and disbursements by the
plaintiff. The claim is not based on a valuation
of the actual
enrichment of the defendant.
[41]
Due to the divergent types of expenses and amounts included in the
computation of the claim, it is difficult to classify the
claim as
resorting under any one of the known
condictiones
. I am of the
view that it can more appropriately be classified as an
actio
negotiorum gestio.
[42]
In considering the claim I keep in mind that the plaintiff proceeded
with the takeover and execution of the agreement contrary
to an
explicit instruction by the defendant to cease operations. That would
render the plaintiff, at the worst, a
mala fide
gestor.
[43]
In
Standard Bank Financial Services v Taylam
1979 (2) SA 383
(CPD)
the position of such a gestor was considered and discussed.
At
p391 C-D, the following appear:

on the grounds
postulated by Van der Keessel there is no justification other than
Justinian’s decision - for refusing the
gestor an action on the
grounds of unjust enrichment. The blanket decision to deny the
mala
fide
gestor an action on the grounds of unjust enrichment in all
circumstances where he has acted contrary to the expressed wishes of

the
dominus
smacks so much of disapproval that it can well be
seen, as Groenewegen did, as a
poena legalis
.”
A
mala fide
gestor can however not claim a refund of expenses
but is allowed a claim to the extent that the
dominus
is
enriched.
[43]
Turning to the computation of the claim I mainly rely on the report
of the expert, Mr McDonald. I also keep in mind that some
of the
expenses claimed on the basis that the defendant would have had to
incur the same expenses, would not necessarily have been
incurred by
the defendant, simply because the defendant would not have been in
the position to incur the same expenses, due to
lack of capacity and
financing. I proceed to deal with a specific heads of expenses as
claimed by plaintiff.
-Purchases
R156 744 925.
[44]
These consist of bulk electricity payments and material purchased for
repairs and maintenance. The defendant was enriched by
that.
-Salaries
and wages R48 940 938.
[45]
This amount represents salaries and wages for management and
employees. It represents 92% of total salaries and wages over
the
period, apportioned in proportion to the number of customers. This
item constitutes one of the expenses that the defendant
would
obviously not have incurred, at least not to that extent. Although
the plaintiff took over some employees from the defendant,
which
would constitute a saving for the defendant, there is no evidence as
to what their salaries and wages amounted to. What is
more, as far as
permanent staff and management are concerned, the plaintiff would
obviously have had to pay their salaries and
wages, even if the EMC
was not concluded. On the evidence the plaintiff had to employ more
personnel to execute the contract. The
exact number of such employees
and their salaries are unknown due to the fact that it has not been
recorded separately. Again,
it is highly improbable that the
defendant would have employed such employees. I am not convinced that
the aforesaid claim equates
to a calculable enrichment of the
defendant.
-Repairs
and maintenance R10 471 933.
[46]
This item relates to repairs and maintenance of the distribution
network. It is highly probable that the defendant would have
had to
incur these expenses. It therefore qualifies as enrichment.
-Bad
debts R49 326 524.
[47]
This amount consists of bad debts written off but allegedly
transferred to the defendant. In its nature it consists of debts
not
recoverable. It was argued on behalf of the plaintiff that a large
part of those debts are owing by government institutions
and
therefore recoverable. In the absence of any evidence as to the
recoverability of those debts, it remains bad debts and cannot
be
viewed as an enrichment of the defendant.
-Transport
and travel R15 209 162.
[48]
This item represents actual costs of transport and travel in
repairing and servicing the electricity distribution network and

business. It is reasonable to accept that the defendant would most
probably have had to incur the same expenses. It therefore represents

a saving.
-Technology
and software R13 472 611.
[49]
This represents the expenses incurred in obtaining and installing the
necessary technology and software needed for operating
the
electricity distribution network and business. I am satisfied that
this item qualifies as an enrichment of the defendant.
-Depreciation
R5 563 719.
[50]
It is difficult to see how the defendant was enriched by the
depreciation of the plaintiff’s assets. The argument that
the
defendant would have had to buy similar assets and suffer the same
depreciation is unconvincing. The probabilities that the
defendant
would have bought the same assets or similar assets are almost
non-existent. What is more, the depreciation is only an
accounting
method of building up a replacement fund. In its financial statements
the plaintiff is entitled to deduct depreciation
from income, in
effect recovering the amount from SARS. I am not convinced that this
amount qualifies as enrichment of the defendant.
-Business
plan costs R2 585 729.
[51]
This represents the costs involved in compiling the feasibility study
or business plan. It was incurred before the agreement
was entered
into and in the calculated risk that an agreement might not
eventuate. Mr Bosch attempted to justify this part of the
claim but
not convincingly. His evidence in this trial is in contrast with his
evidence in the first trial. I am not convinced
that the defendant
was enriched in this respect due to the plaintiff’s performance
of the invalid agreement.
-Other
costs of service R18 481 233.
[52]
This amount represents various items including administration and
management fees, accounting fees, advertising, auditor’s

remuneration, bank charges, commission paid, consulting fees,
insurance, lease rentals, legal fees, licenses, et cetera. I do not

intend to deal with each and every one of them. These items are
claimed on the basis that it represents savings for the defendant
in
that the defendant would have had to incur similar costs.
[53]
I am not convinced that the defendant would probably have had to
incur the same costs. Some of these expenses were allegedly
incurred
by a related company, Rural Free State and not the   plaintiff.
I regard the following items and costs incurred by
the plaintiff as
costs that the defendant would probably have had to incur, therefore
constituting a saving and enrichment:
-Vendor commission R1 855
145,
-licenses and permits R13
300,
-motor vehicle expenses
R52 379,
-office supplies R215
832,
-postage R50 325,
-cash in transit R741
148,
-printing and stationery
R474 046,
-protective clothes R233
179 and
-Telephone and fax R1 307
873.
The total of these
amounts amount to R4 943 227.
[54]
Against these amounts which I regard as representing enrichment of
the defendant, an amount of R166 950 213 has to be
deducted,
being income received from electricity consumers by the plaintiff.
The
net amount amounts to R33 891 645.
COSTS.
[55]
There is no reason that costs should not follow the result. When the
matter was to commence on 23 May 2019, it was postponed
by agreement,
costs to stand over. The postponement was sought to enable the
defendant to consider a late amendment to the plaintiff’s

particulars of claim. The plaintiff should be held liable for the
wasted costs occasioned by this postponement.
IN
CONCLUSION THE FOLLOWING ORDERS ARE GRANTED:
[56]
1. First defendant is ordered to pay an amount of R33 891 645,00
to plaintiff.
2.
The aforesaid amount shall bear interest at the prescribed mora
interest rate from date of judgement to date of payment.
3.
Plaintiff is ordered to pay the wasted costs occasioned by the
postponement on 23 May 2019, including the costs occasioned by
the
employment of two counsel, where so employed.
4.
Defendant is ordered to pay the costs of suit in respect of this
trial, including the costs occasioned by the employment of two

counsel, where so employed, including the qualifying, reservation and
attendance fees of the experts mr. R McDonald and mr. A Van
der
Merwe.
___________________
A.F.
JORDAAN, J
On
behalf of the plaintiff: Adv. EC Labuschagne SC
Adv.
SG Maritz
Instructed
by:
Shepstone & Wylie
C/O Attorneys:
Symington & De Kok Bloemfontein
On
behalf of the 1
st
defendant: Adv. C Ploos van Amstel SC
Instructed
by: Majuva Inc. Attorneys.
C/O
Attorneys: Rampai Attorneys.
BLOEMFONTEIN