Centurion Home Owners Association NPC v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (23534/2013) [2013] ZAGPPHC 373 (20 November 2013)

78 Reportability
Municipal Law

Brief Summary

Municipal Law — Water Supply — Dispute regarding water consumption charges — Applicant, a homeowners association, sought to interdict the municipality from terminating services pending resolution of a dispute over an alleged excessive water bill — Respondent contended that the dispute was resolved and sought payment — Court held that the applicant's dispute was still pending as the municipality's Chief Financial Officer had not made a decision, thereby entitling the applicant to protection under section 102(2) of the Municipal Systems Act.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings concerned the confirmation on the return day of a rule nisi granting an interim interdict against a municipality. The applicant was Centurion Home Owners Association NPC, the homeowners’ association responsible for a residential development known as the Centurion Residential Estate and Country Club in Centurion, Gauteng. The respondent was the City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality, the local authority responsible for, among other things, municipal water and electricity services and the levying and collection of charges for those services.


On 7 May 2013, the applicant obtained a rule nisi interdicting and directing the respondent to reconnect electricity supply to the applicant’s premises (including the supply at Estate Walk, Irene), and further providing that pending finalisation of the parties’ dispute concerning water charges for the period 29 April 2009 to 2 July 2009, the respondent should not terminate or reduce municipal services to the applicant due to non-payment of the disputed amount. The judgment determined whether that interim relief should be confirmed.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether an outstanding municipal account item—an unusually large water-consumption charge—was the subject of an unresolved dispute such that the municipality was statutorily precluded from implementing credit control measures (including termination or reduction of services) in respect of that disputed amount.


2. Material Facts


The dispute arose from recorded water consumption on a particular portion of the estate under the applicant’s control, located at Estate Walk, Irene, Centurion. The court noted the portion was small: from the metered supply point to the end of the line was approximately 100 metres, and water usage on the portion was limited to a guard house with a small bathroom and a small garden irrigated by approximately 14 micro water sprayers. Historically, up to the end of June 2009, the water consumption on this portion fluctuated monthly but was never more than 100 kilolitres per month, with a typical monthly water charge of approximately R400.


The material event triggering the dispute was the respondent’s account for the period 29 April 2009 to 2 July 2009, which reflected consumption of 10 164 kilolitres, charged at R122 804,03. The applicant regarded this as anomalous and, on 19 January 2011, it delivered a written dispute letter declaring an “official dispute” regarding the “10 000 kl water consumption”. In that letter, the applicant recorded that its normal consumption at the metering point was around 100 kl per month, and asserted that over three years (January 2008 to January 2011) the total metered consumption at that point was less than 4 000 kl, excluding the additional 10 000 kl attributed for May and June 2009. The letter further recorded that the municipality had suggested the high consumption was due to a leak that allegedly caused a wall collapse in the vicinity, which the applicant disputed (including on the basis that the collapse occurred in 2004, years before the disputed period). The applicant requested a meeting and attached a “water pressure test” report.


The attached report by a civil and structural engineer concluded that the abnormally high reading led the author to believe the reading was obtained from a defective meter. The judgment treated the dispute letter as the only written document in terms of which the dispute was raised.


As to what was disputed and what was common cause, the court recorded as common cause that the respondent’s Chief Financial Officer had not made a decision as envisaged by the respondent’s Credit Control and Debt Collection Policy dispute procedure. The respondent, however, contended that the dispute had in fact been resolved as far back as March 2011, and that the applicant was liable to pay the full amount claimed.


It also emerged from the papers that the respondent obtained a verification certificate in respect of the water meter on 5 November 2009, and that the meter was found to comply with the requirements of the Trade Metrology Act 77 of 1973. The court treated this as relevant to the respondent’s contention that the matter fell within the ambit of the respondent’s Water Supply By-Law, which provides a mechanism for testing allegedly defective meters.


The immediate practical consequence giving rise to urgency and interdictory relief was the respondent’s declared intention to interrupt the electricity supply to the estate administered by the applicant due to the disputed unpaid amount.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether, on the facts, there existed a “dispute” as contemplated by section 102(2) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000, and if so, whether that statutory protection prevented the respondent from implementing credit control measures (including termination or reduction of services) in relation to the disputed amount.


A closely related question was which internal municipal mechanism governed the applicant’s complaint: the respondent’s Water Supply By-Law procedure dealing with allegedly defective measuring devices, or the respondent’s Credit Control and Debt Collection Policy dispute procedure. This required the court to characterise the applicant’s dispute letter and determine whether it constituted a request for meter testing under the by-law, or a dispute under the policy.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of law to fact, namely how the legislative and policy framework applied to the applicant’s dispute letter and to the respondent’s intended enforcement measures. In addition, the court had to make an evaluative judgment typical of interim interdict proceedings: whether the applicant satisfied the requirements for an interim interdict, including prima facie right, well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm, balance of convenience, and absence of an adequate alternative remedy.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by identifying the governing framework as the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000, the respondent’s Water Supply By-Law (published under Local Authority Notice 2267 in the Provincial Gazette Extraordinary No 470 on 5 November 2003), and the respondent’s Credit Control and Debt Collection Policy adopted in terms of section 96 of the Act.


The court emphasised section 102(2) of the Municipal Systems Act, which provides that a municipality’s powers to consolidate accounts, credit payments across accounts, and implement credit control measures in respect of arrears do not apply where there is a dispute between the municipality and a person concerning a specific amount claimed. Against that statutory backdrop, the court addressed the respondent’s contention that the dispute had been resolved and that the applicant remained liable for payment, contrasted with the applicant’s contention that the dispute process had not been finalised.


The applicant relied on paragraph 6 of the respondent’s policy, which regulated disputes about municipal accounts and provided that a dispute is deemed finalised when the respondent’s Chief Financial Officer reaches a decision. The court recorded that it was common cause that such a decision had not yet been made, which supported the applicant’s position that the policy-based dispute procedure had not been completed.


The respondent sought to recharacterise the applicant’s dispute as one falling under section 24 of the Water Supply By-Law, which provides that a customer who believes a measuring device is defective may apply in writing, against payment of a fee, to have the device tested, and that if the meter is within the prescribed range of accuracy under the Trade Metrology Act, the customer bears the costs and remains liable for amounts outstanding. On this approach, the respondent pointed to the verification certificate obtained on 5 November 2009 showing compliance with the Trade Metrology Act, contending that this meant the dispute had been resolved.


To determine which mechanism applied, the court examined the contents of the applicant’s dispute letter of 19 January 2011. The court accepted the applicant’s submission that the letter was not an application under the by-law because the applicant did not apply for the device to be tested under the by-law procedure, and did not pay the prescribed fee. The court also noted that the test conducted on 5 November 2009 appeared to have been initiated by the respondent of its own volition.


A decisive element of the court’s reasoning was its conclusion that a customer has a choice either to utilise the by-law procedure (section 24) or to declare a dispute under the policy. The court rejected an interpretation that would allow the respondent to unilaterally channel the complaint into the by-law process (whether or not the customer elected that procedure), because that would produce “absurd results” by depriving the customer, without choice, of rights afforded under the Act and the policy. On that basis, the court treated the applicant as having invoked the policy dispute route, with the consequence that the dispute had not yet been finalised due to the absence of a Chief Financial Officer decision.


Having found that the applicant was entitled to the protection of section 102(2), the court turned to the requirements for interim interdictory relief. It held that the applicant established a prima facie right to the relief claimed, grounded in section 102(2) and the unresolved dispute. The court further held that the respondent’s declared intention to interrupt electricity supply established a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the relief were not granted and if the dispute were later determined in the applicant’s favour.


In assessing the balance of convenience, the court concluded that the respondent would not be prejudiced by the interim relief because it merely required the respondent to follow its own dispute procedure; if the dispute were resolved in the respondent’s favour, it would remain free to enforce its credit control measures thereafter. The court also found that the applicant lacked another satisfactory remedy, supporting the grant of interim relief. On costs, the court applied the ordinary principle that costs follow the event.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court confirmed the rule nisi and thereby maintained the interim interdict preventing termination or reduction of municipal services pending finalisation of the dispute regarding the disputed water charges for the period 29 April 2009 to 2 July 2009, and requiring reconnection of electricity supply as set out in the original rule.


The respondent was ordered to pay the applicant’s costs, the court stating that costs would follow the event.


Cases Cited


No case law was cited in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000.


Trade Metrology Act 77 of 1973.


City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality Water Supply By-Law, published in Local Authority Notice 2267 in the Provincial Gazette Extraordinary No 470 of 5 November 2003.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the applicant was entitled to the protection in section 102(2) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 because the parties were in dispute concerning a specific amount claimed by the municipality and that dispute had not been finalised in accordance with the respondent’s own Credit Control and Debt Collection Policy, given that it was common cause that the respondent’s Chief Financial Officer had not made the decision contemplated by the policy.


The court further held that a customer is not compelled to proceed only under the Water Supply By-Law meter-testing procedure, and may instead invoke the dispute procedure under the policy. On the facts, the applicant’s letter constituted a policy-based dispute rather than a by-law application for meter testing.


Applying the requirements for an interim interdict, the court held that the applicant established a prima facie right, a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm arising from threatened electricity interruption, that the balance of convenience favoured interim relief, and that no satisfactory alternative remedy existed. The rule nisi was therefore confirmed with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Section 102(2) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 operates to preclude a municipality from applying the credit control and debt collection measures contemplated in section 102(1) in relation to arrears where there is a dispute between the municipality and a person concerning a specific amount claimed.


Where a municipality has adopted a dispute-resolution mechanism in its credit control and debt collection policy, and that mechanism contemplates finalisation by a decision of a designated official, the absence of such a decision may support a finding that the dispute has not been finalised for purposes of determining whether section 102(2) protection is engaged.


In assessing interim interdictory relief in the context of threatened termination or reduction of municipal services, the court applies the established interdict requirements, including prima facie right, apprehension of irreparable harm, balance of convenience, and lack of adequate alternative remedy, and considers the practical prejudice to each party pending final determination of the dispute.

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[2013] ZAGPPHC 373
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Centurion Home Owners Association NPC v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality (23534/2013) [2013] ZAGPPHC 373 (20 November 2013)

IN THE NORTH GAUTENG HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
(REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA)
Case No: 23534/2013
Date: 20 November 2013
Not Reportable
Not of interest to other
judges
In the matter between:
Centurion Home Owners Association
NPC
......................................
Applicant
and
City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality
.................................
Respondent
DATE
HEARD:
........................................................................
30
October 2013
DATE JUDGMENT HANDED
DOWN:.
...........................
20
November 2013
JUDGMENT
JANSE VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ
[1] The applicant is the Home Owners
Association of a residential development known as Centurion
Residential Estate and Country
Club situated in Centurion, Gauteng.
[2] On 7 Mei 2013, the applicant
obtained a rule nisi against the respondent, in the following terms:
"1.1 That the
Respondent be interdicted and directed to reconnect the electricity
supply to the Applicant's premises at the
Centurion Residential
Estate and Country Club, 41 Centurion Drive, Highveld, Centurion, and
more particularly the supply of electrical
power at Estate Walk,
Irene, Centurion.
That, pending the
finalisation of the resolution of the dispute between the parties
relating to the charge for water use for
the period 29 April 2009
until 2 July 2009, the Respondent shall not terminate or reduce the
municipal services rendered to
the Applicant due to the fact that
the disputed amount has not been paid."
[3] This is the return date of the rule
nisi.
[4] The dispute between the parties
emanates from the water consumption on a portion of the estate under
the applicant's control,
which portion is located on Estate Walk,
Irene, Centurion ("the portion").
[5] The applicant alleges that the
water consumption on the portion, up and until the end of June 2009,
fluctuated monthly, but
was never more than 100 kilolitres per month.
[6] I pause to mention, that the
portion in question is quite small and the point where the water
supply is metered to the end of
the water line is a mere 100 metres.
[7] The water consumption on the
portion is limited to a guard house with a small bathroom and a tiny
garden using approximately
14 micro water sprayers.
[8] The monthly charge in respect of
water consumption on the portion amounted to approximately R 400, 00.
[9] Quite understandably and in view of
the aforesaid history, the applicant was suitable perturbed upon
receipt of the water consumption
account for the period 29 April 2009
to 2 July 2009.
[10] According to the respondent's
records the water consumption for the period was 10 164 kilolitres at
a charge of R 122 804,
03.
[11] The applicant, thereupon and on 19
January 2011 declared an official dispute regarding the charge
concerned. The dispute is
contained in a letter addressed to the
respondent. The contents of the letter is relevant to the present
dispute between the parties
and will be referred to in more detail
infra.
[12] The applicant contends that the
dispute between the parties has to date not been resolved and
consequently, pending the resolution
of the dispute, the respondent
is not legally entitled to interrupt any of the municipal services
rendered to the applicant.
[13] The respondent does not agree.
According to the respondent, the dispute was resolved as long ago as
March 2011 and as a result,
it submits that the applicant is liable
to pay the amount of R 122 804, 03 in respect of the water
consumption on the portion for
the period in question.
[14] In order to resolve the impasse
between the parties, it is necessary to have regard to the
legislation applicable to the dispute.
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK:
[15] The dispute between the parties
are governed by:
the Municipal Systems Act, 32 of
2000 ("the Act");
the Water Supply By-Law of the
respondent published in Local Authority Notice 2267 in the
Provincial Gazette Extraordinary (No
470 on 5 November 2003) ("the
By-Law"), and
the respondent's Credit Control
and Debt Collection Policy ("the Policy").
[16] Section 13 of the Act makes
provision for the publication of by-laws and the By-Law was duly
published in terms thereof.
[17] Chapter 9 of the Act regulates
Credit Control and Debt Collection and section 96 prescribes the debt
collection responsibility
of a municipality. The section reads as
follows:
"96. Debt collection
responsibility of municipalities. - A municipality-
(a) must collect all money that is due
and payable to it, subject to this Act and any other applicable
legislation; and
(b) for this purpose, must adopt,
maintain and implement a credit control and debt collection policy
which is consistent with its
rates and tariffs policies and complies
with the provisions of this Act.
[18] The Policy was adopted by the
respondent on 30 August 2012, in terms of the provisions of section
96 of the Act.
[19] The relevant portion of paragraph
13 of the Policy reads as follows:
"The Policy shall
be interpreted as supplementing other applicable by-laws of the
Municipality In the
case of conflict, the Policy, read together with the Municipality's
Credit Control and Debt
Collection By-law, shall prevail."
[20] I was informed by counsel
appearing on behalf of the parties, that the provisions of the
respondent's Credit Control and Debt
Collection By-law, are not
relevant to dispute between the parties.
[21] Lastly; section 102 of the Act,
dealing with accounts, reads as follows:
(1) “A
municipality may -
(a) consolidate any
separate accounts of persons liable for payments to the municipality;
(b) credit a payment
by such a person against any account of that person; and
(c) implement any of
the debt collection and credit control measures provided for in this
Chapter in relation to any arrears on
any of the accounts of such a
person.
(2) Subsection (1)
does not apply where there is a dispute between the municipality and
a person referred to in that subsection
concerning any specific
amount claimed by the municipality from that person.
SUBMISSIONS:
[22] Mr Welgemoed, counsel for the
applicant, relied on the provisions contained in paragraph 6 of the
Policy, in support of his
submission that the dispute lodged by the
applicant, is still pending.
[23] The paragraph deals,
inter
alia
, with the procedure to be followed by:
a debtor who disputes certain
amounts and/or items on a municipality account; and
the municipality in considering
the dispute.
[24] Mr Welgemoed argued that the
procedure prescribed in the Policy has not been finalised. Paragraph
6(f)(iii) of the Policy states
that the dispute is deemed to be
finalised when the Chief Financial Officer of the respondent has
reached a decision in respect
thereof.
[25] It is common cause between the
parties that the respondent's Chief Financial Officer has not yet
made a decision as envisaged
in the Policy.
[26] Mr Mnyandu, counsel for the
respondent, submitted that the complaint lodged by the applicant
falls within the ambit of the
respondent's By-Law.
[27] Section 24 of the By-Law provides
for the procedures to be followed in the event of a defect in the
device measuring water
consumption.
[28] The relevant portion of the
section reads as follows:
"24 (1) If a customer has
reason to believe that a measuring device supplied to him or her by
the Municipality is defective,
he or she may, against payment of the
applicable charge, apply in writing for the measuring device to be
tested.
(2) If the
outcome of any test referred to in subsection (1) shows that a
measuring device is-
(a) within the range of accuracy
prescribed by the Trade Metrology Act, 1973, the customer is liable
for the cost of the test and
any other amounts outstanding;
[29] Mr Mnyandu submitted that the
applicant's letter dated 19 January 2011, amounts to a written
request in terms of the provisions
of section 24 of the By-Law.
[30] Should this submission be correct,
it is clear from the papers that the respondent did obtain a
verification certificate in
respect of the meter on 5 November 2009.
The meter was found to comply with the requirements of the Trade
Metrology Act, 77 of
1973.
[31] In order to determine which
provision applies to the dispute lodged by the applicant, it is
necessary to have regard to the
contents of the letter of dispute.
LETTER OF DISPUTE:
[32] The letter reads as follows:

DISPUTE:
WATER ACCOUNT

1. In July 2009 the Centurion
Homeowners Association received an account for water consumption that
was 10 000 kl in excess of our
normal consumption. Our “normal”
consumption at this metering point is in the order of 100 kl per
month. Over a period
of three years from January 2008 to January
2011, the total metered consumption at this point has been less that
4 000 kl. This
excludes the extra 10 000 kl usage attributed to us
for the months of May and June 2009.
We herewith wish to declare an
official dispute regarding the 10 000 kl water consumption as
discusses in the attached documents.
2. After several discussions between
the attorneys of both parties, Hugo & Ngwenya, it is the wish of
the Centurion Homeowners
Association to resolve this matter through
discussions, rather than the litigation route.
3. The Centurion Homeowners
Association was informed that the Metro Council is of the opinion
that the high consumption was due
to a water leak which also lead to
the collapsing of a wall in the vicinity. Apart from the fact that
our attached document indicates
that is was physically impossible to
discharge the 10 000 kl through a fully open connection (let alone a
leak), this collapse
in fact took place in 2004 which was several
years before the current dispute. Documentation regarding the
collapse of the wall
in 2004 is available from the Centurion Home
Owners’ office if needed. Please find the following document
attached for your
perusal:
a) A water pressure test that proves
that the water consumption was impossible.
4. Taking above into consideration
we believe that you will come to the conclusion that such a leak
(water consumption) would not
have possible and could not have taken
place. We respectfully request a meeting with you in order to explain
the situation as we
see it."
[33] The "water pressure test"
attached to the letter was provided by Rudy Koekemoer, a civil and
structural engineer.
[34] The report concluded with the
following finding:
".....leads the writer to believe
that the abnormally-high meter reading by Tshwane was obtained from a
defective meter."
[35] Mr Welgemoed contends that the
letter was not a request in terms of section 24(1) of the By-law, but
a dispute submitted in
writing as contemplated in paragraph 6 of the
Policy.
[36] He emphasised the fact that the
applicant did not apply in writing for the device to be tested, nor
did the applicant pay the prescribed
fee.
[37] It appears that the test conducted
on 5 November 2009, was done at the respondent's own volition.
[38] The letter under discussion, is
the only written document in terms of which a dispute was raised.
[39] I am of the view that a client has
a choice to utilise either section 24 of the By-law or to declare a
dispute as envisaged
in paragraph 6 of the Policy.
[40] To hold otherwise, would lead to
absurd results. The respondent would be authorised to utilise the
procedure stipulated in
the By-law, with or without the client's
knowledge or consent. As a result a client will, without a choice, be
deprived of her/his/its
rights afforded by the Act and the Policy.
Such a scenario is clearly untenable.
CONCLUSION:
[41] In view of the aforesaid, the
applicant is entitled to the protection afforded by section 102(2) of
the Act and I am satisfied
that the applicant has established a prima
facie right to the relief claimed.
[42] The respondent's declared
intention to interrupt the electricity supply to the estate
administered by the applicant, satisfies
the requirement of a
well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the relief is not
granted and the pending dispute is decided
in favour of the
applicant.
[43] The respondent will not be
prejudiced by the relief granted herein. The respondent merely needs
to follow the procedure laid
down in its own policy. Should the
dispute be decided in favour of the respondent, it is at liberty to
enforce its credit control
measures. I find that the balance of
convenience favours the granting of this interim interdict.
[44] The applicant does not have
another satisfactory remedy.
[45] Costs will follow the event.
ORDER:
I make the following order:
1. The rule is confirmed with costs.
JAMSE VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
ACJING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Applicants’ attorneys:
Snyman De Jager Attorneys
6th Floor, Bureau Forum Building
Bureau Lane, Pretoria
Tel: 012 663 1680
Applicant’s
counsel:
................
Adv C Welgemoed
Respondent attorneys:
Dlamini Attorneys
12th Floor, Forum Building
2 Maude Street
Po box 785490, Santon, 2196
Tel: 011 783 2599
c/o Noko Attorneys
Respondent’s
counsel:
.................
Adv K Mnyandu