Tarcia and Another v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (2023/044543) [2025] ZAGPJHC 847 (25 August 2025)

55 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Appeal — Leave to appeal — Correction of patent error — City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality sought leave to appeal against judgments correcting a date in a prior order regarding prescription of municipal debts — The original judgment declared debts due before May 2018 as prescribed, while the reasoning indicated a cut-off date of May 2020 — The court revised the order to correct the date to May 2020, finding it a patent error — The City contended that the court acted functus officio and that the correction was unfair — The court held that the correction aligned the order with the judgment's reasoning, did not revisit the merits, and was permissible under Rule 42(1)(b) — Leave to appeal denied as no reasonable prospects of success were established.

Comprehensive Summary

Case Note


City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Tarica

Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg (unreported, judgment delivered 25 August 2025 by Mahon AJ)


Reportability


This judgment is reportable because it clarifies the scope of a High Court’s power under Rule 42(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court to correct a patent error in its own order after the order has been handed down. It further explains the interaction between section 102 of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 and the running of prescription under the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, questions that frequently arise in municipal billing disputes. By confirming that the lodging of a dispute with a municipality does not suspend prescription and by delineating the onus questions that arise once prescription is raised, the judgment settles issues of practical significance to municipalities and account-holders alike.


In addition, the decision contributes to the rapidly developing body of jurisprudence on municipal services accounts, the allocation of payments, and the enforcement of credit-control measures. Because the judgment deals with a leave-to-appeal application, it also restates the proper test under section 17(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, offering guidance to practitioners on what amounts to “reasonable prospects of success” and what may constitute “compelling reasons” for leave.


Finally, the case illustrates how a court must balance the principle of finality (functus officio) against the equally important objective of ensuring that its orders convey the court’s true intention. The analysis of procedural fairness, particularly the importance of notifying parties before a variation is effected, will be useful across civil practice beyond the municipal-law context.


Cases Cited


The court referred to and discussed the following authorities in full: Body Corporate Croftdene Mall v eThekwini Municipality (603/2010) [2011] ZASCA 188 (10 October 2011); City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Vresthena (Pty) Ltd and Others 2024 JDR 1616 (SCA) (18 April 2024); MEC for Education, Gauteng Province, and Others v Governing Body, Rivonia Primary School and Others 2013 (6) SA 582 (CC); 39 Van Der Merwe Street Hillbrow CC v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another 2023 JDR 3278 (GJ); Mwelase Korffie (Pty) Ltd v Free State Development Corporation (Free State Division, case no 5020/2022, 11 April 2025); Barstow v City of Johannesburg (Gauteng Local Division, case no 534/2020, 7 July 2023); Euphorbia (Pty) Ltd t/a Gallagher Estates v City of Johannesburg (Gauteng Local Division, case no A5052/2015, 17 June 2016); and the Constitutional Court matter cited as R[…] v R[…] [2023] ZACC 5.


Legislation Cited


The judgment engaged principally with the Prescription Act 68 of 1969, the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 (especially section 102), the Uniform Rules of Court (with emphasis on Rule 42), and the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013.


Rules of Court Cited


Rule 42(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules of Court was central; incidental reference was also made to Rule 42 in general and to practice directives on electronic delivery of judgments.


HEADNOTE


Summary


The City of Johannesburg applied for leave to appeal against two judgments of Mahon AJ that (a) declared all municipal debts relating to Ms Tarica’s property that became due before May 2020 to have prescribed, (b) ordered the City to rectify the municipal account accordingly, and (c) dismissed the City’s counter-application with costs. After receiving correspondence pointing out a date-related inconsistency between the reasons and the order, the court had, under Rule 42(1)(b), corrected the cut-off date in the order from May 2018 to May 2020. The City argued that the High Court was functus officio, that the order was vague and unenforceable, that the onus regarding prescription had been wrongly allocated, and that section 102 of the Systems Act barred the relief granted. The court rejected all grounds, found no reasonable prospects of success, and consequently refused leave to appeal.


Key Issues


The court had to determine whether it retained the power to correct a patent error after handing down its order; whether the correction was procedurally fair; whether the prescription cut-off date and the rectification order were sufficiently clear; whether the onus of proving prescription had been misplaced; and whether a section 102 dispute suspends prescription or removes the High Court’s jurisdiction.


Held


Mahon AJ held that Rule 42(1)(b) expressly empowers a court, mero motu, to correct a patent error in its own order provided that the substance of the judgment remains unchanged. Because the City had been placed on notice of the proposed correction and had chosen silence, procedural fairness was satisfied. The order, once corrected, was clear and executable, and the onus had not been reversed: Ms Tarica had already proved prescription. Section 102 of the Systems Act does not interrupt prescription and does not oust the High Court’s jurisdiction to declare debts prescribed. Accordingly, none of the City’s grounds met the statutory threshold for leave to appeal.


THE FACTS


The litigation arose from a long-running dispute over a residential municipal services account. The account was historically in the name of Ms Tarica’s late husband. After his death, irregular billing, alleged misallocations of payments, and the City’s refusal to recognise a formally lodged dispute led Ms Tarica to launch motion proceedings in May 2023. She sought declaratory and mandatory relief compelling the City to remove prescribed charges and to render an accurate account. The City counter-applied for orders compelling her to register the account in her own name and to accept liability for all arrears.


On 6 December 2024 Mahon AJ granted relief largely in Ms Tarica’s favour, dismissed the counter-application, and declared debts due on or before “4 May 2018” prescribed. The reasons, however, repeatedly fixed prescription by reference to “three years prior to the notice of motion”, i.e., May 2020. Noticing the mismatch, Ms Tarica’s attorneys wrote to the Registrar on 9 December 2024, copying the City, requesting a correction. Receiving no response from the City, the court on 27 January 2025 issued a revised judgment substituting “4 May 2020” for “4 May 2018”.


The City then sought leave to appeal both the original and the revised judgments, contending that the court was functus officio, that the order lacked clarity, and that various substantive findings were wrong in law.


THE ISSUES


The central legal questions were:


First, whether a High Court may correct, under Rule 42(1)(b), an obvious clerical error in an order once that order has been issued; and whether procedural fairness required a formal application or hearing before such correction. Second, whether the prescription declaration was justified on the pleadings and whether the onus regarding prescription had been correctly applied. Third, whether section 102 of the Systems Act suspends prescription or otherwise deprives a court of jurisdiction while a dispute is pending. Fourth, whether the rectification order was sufficiently precise to be enforceable. Finally, the court had to decide if, in terms of section 17 of the Superior Courts Act, the City had reasonable prospects of success or compelling reasons warranting an appeal.


ANALYSIS


The court began by examining the functus officio doctrine. It reiterated that a court is generally without power to revisit its final orders, but Rule 42(1)(b) carves out a narrow exception for the correction of patent errors or ambiguities. Because the error related only to the cut-off date—and because the body of the judgment unmistakably fixed the relevant date at three years prior to service of the notice of motion—the correction did not alter the substance of the judgment and therefore fell squarely within Rule 42.


Procedural fairness, the court held, was satisfied because the City had been copied on the correspondence alerting the court to the error and had ample opportunity to object or make submissions. Choosing silence, the municipality could not complain of ambush.


Turning to the clarity of the order, Mahon AJ reasoned that an instruction to remove “all charges that became due before May 2020” is perfectly intelligible: municipal invoices show billing periods and due dates, and the City as record-holder is best placed to identify and excise the relevant entries. The fact that arithmetic or clerical work must still be carried out does not render an order vague.


On the onus question, the court reaffirmed that a debtor bears the initial burden of proving prescription. That burden had been discharged when Ms Tarica demonstrated, by reference to undisputed billing histories, that the debts in issue were older than three years. Once prescription was established, the practical duty to adjust the account necessarily fell on the creditor municipality.


The argument that section 102 of the Systems Act suspends prescription was rejected. Section 102 regulates credit-control enforcement tools; it does not purport to amend or override the Prescription Act. The municipality therefore remained obliged to recover any debt within the statutory prescription period regardless of whether a dispute was lodged.


Finally, the court assessed the authorities cited by the City. None contradicted the proposition that Rule 42 permits correction of patent slips, nor did they show that section 102 can interrupt prescription. Consequently, Mahon AJ concluded that the City had no reasonable prospects of obtaining a different result on appeal.


REMEDY


The court refused leave to appeal to either a Full Bench or the Supreme Court of Appeal. It confirmed the corrected order, further aligning the cut-off date with the precise date three years before service of the notice of motion, and ordered the City to pay the costs of the application for leave to appeal.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


First, Rule 42(1)(b) empowers a court, on its own initiative, to correct a patent error in an order after handing down judgment, provided the correction does not alter the substance of the judgment and the parties have had notice.


Second, the doctrine of functus officio yields where a court exercises its Rule 42 power; a court is not divested of jurisdiction to correct clerical or typographical mistakes that thwart the true intention of its reasons.


Third, section 102 of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act does not suspend or interrupt prescription under the Prescription Act; it merely restricts certain credit-control mechanisms while a dispute is pending.


Fourth, once a debtor proves that a debt is older than the applicable prescription period, prescription is complete and the creditor bears the practical duty to adjust its records and refrain from further collection.


Fifth, clarity is judged objectively: an order that identifies a determinable period or category of charges is sufficiently certain even if further clerical calculations are required for implementation.


These principles, now reinforced by Mahon AJ’s judgment, provide concrete guidance on municipal billing disputes, the reach of section 102, and the permissible scope of post-judgment corrections under Rule 42.

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This judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email and by being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for
hand down is deemed to be 25 August 2025.

MAHON AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1] This is an application by the respondent in the main proceedings, the City of
Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality, for leave to appeal against the
judgments I handed down on 6 December 2024 and the revised judgment
delivered on 27 January 2025. The revision of the judgment was effected as a
result of a patent error in the order forming part of the initial judgment, under the
circumstances described more fully below. The subsequent revision was
effected under Rule 42(1)(b), to correct a patent error in the order.
[2] I shall refer to the applicant in the application for leave to appeal as “the City ”
and to the respondents in the application for leave to appeal as “Ms Tarica”.
[3] The City seeks leave to appeal to the Full Bench of this Division, alternatively
to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[4] The underlying proceedings concerned Ms Tarica’s challenge to the accuracy
and administration of a municipal services account relating to the first
applicant’s residential property, together with the City’s counterapplication
seeking to compel her to regularise the account in her own name and to accept
liability for the arrears. After hearing the matter on 22 August 2024 and
considering further written submissions, I delivered judgment on 6 December
2024. That judgment granted Ms Tarica relief substantially as sought, dismissed

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the counterapplication with costs, and declared that all unpaid debts in respect
of the property which became due on or before “4 May 2018” had prescribed.
[5] Shortly after the judgment was handed down, on 9 December 2024 Ms Tarica’s
attorneys addressed correspondence to the Registrar. In that letter, they drew
attention to an apparent inconsistency between the reasoning in the judgment
and the terms of the order. Specifically, they pointed out that in paragraphs 91
and 92 of the judgment, reference was made to the three-year prescription
period running from the date of the notice of motion, which had been issued in
May 2023. On that approach, debts that became due before May 2020 (and not
May 2018 as stated in the order) would have been extinguished by prescription.
They therefore suggested that the reference in the order to May 2018 was a
typographical error and requested that the order be corrected to reflect the date
consistent with the reasoning in the judgment.
[6] The City’s attorneys were copied on the aforesaid correspondence and, despite
the lapse of more than a month, had provided no submissions in response to
Ms Tarica’s identification of what obviously constituted a patent error in the
order granted.
[7] Having considered the contents of that correspondence, and being satisfied that
the date appearing in the order was indeed inconsistent with the reasoning set
out in the body of the judgment and with the terms of the notice of motion, I
regarded the error as one susceptible of correction. Accordingly, on 27 January
2025, I issued a revised judgment in which the order was amended to substitute
the date “4 May 2020” for “4 May 2018.”

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[8] It is against both the original and the revised judgments that the City now seeks
leave to appeal, contending that I erred both in my substantive findings and in
revisiting the order after it had been handed down.
SUMMARY OF GROUNDS OF APPEAL
[9] The City advances a series of grounds upon which it contends that there are
reasonable prospects of success on appeal:-
[9.1] It argues that by issuing the revised judgment of 27 January 2025,
this Court impermissibly revisited its own final judgment. The City
maintains that I was functus officio, and that the correction was made
mero motu, without a substantive application and without affording it
an opportunity to be heard. It further contends that in varying the order
without prior notice, the Court acted unfairly, contrary to constitutional
authority which emphasises the need for affected parties to be heard
before a judgment is varied.
[9.2] The City also maintains that the order directing it to rectify the
municipal account lacks the clarity and precision required of a court
order. It submits that the order improperly places the onus on the
municipality to identify and remove prescribed charges, contrary to
the principle that the party alleging prescription bears the onus of
proving it. In addition, the City argues that the Court erred in failing to
hold the first applicant jointly and severally liable for historical
municipal debts associated with the property, notwithstanding that the
account was in her late husband’s name.

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[9.3] The final ground of appeal concerns the finding that Ms Tarica had
properly raised a valid dispute under section 102 of the Local
Government: Municipal Systems Act, Act 32 of 2000, which barred
the City from allocating payments to disputed amounts. The City
submits that the dispute was not properly constituted and that this
Court erred in treating it as valid. It also contends that the dispute
involved administrative decisions of the municipality which were
reviewable rather than justiciable in motion proceedings, and that this
Court lacked jurisdiction to declare debts prescribed without directing
Ms Tarica to exhaust internal remedies first.
SUBMISSIONS AND DEBATE DURING THE HEARING
[10] At the hearing of the application for leave to appeal, the City ’s counsel, Mr
Sithole, submitted that the principal error lay in my revision of the order. He
argued that Ms Tarica had sought relief pegged to the date of judgment,
whereas I had substituted a different reference point, namely three years prior
to the notice of motion. On his submission, this was a case where the Court had
stepped into the shoes of Ms Tarica, recast her case, and thereby acted outside
of its powers. He emphasised that prescription is a matter that must be raised
and proved by the party who relies on it, and that it was not competent for the
Court to “choose a different cause of action” for Ms Tarica.
[11] In the course of debate, I put to him that if Ms Tarica had contended that all
debts over a five-year period had prescribed, and it was shown that only three
years had in fact prescribed, there was no difficulty in granting relief for the three

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years proved. Mr Sithole accepted that this was the essence of Ms Tarica’s
case but maintained that the date ultimately chosen in the order—initially 4 May
2018 and then revised to 4 May 2020—was not derived from the pleadings, and
that this reflected an impermissible judicial amendment of the case. He also
argued that the revised judgment created an unexplained “gap” between May
2020 and May 2021 which, he contended, left the order uncertain and
incoherent.
[12] A further submission advanced on behalf of the City was that the order was
incapable of implementation because it did not identify with sufficient precision
which amounts had prescribed. Mr Sithole argued that the municipality issues
consolidated monthly accounts, and that without Ms Tarica specifying in rands
and cents which charges had prescribed, the City was left to “guess” what was
to be written off. I engaged with counsel on this point, observing that on a plain
reading of the order, all charges reflected as due prior to the reference date
would be removed, which was capable of determination from the City’s own
invoices. Mr Sithole nevertheless maintained that the order left uncertainty and
was thus unenforceable. The Court does not require the respondents to state
rands-and-cents line items in the order; that is an implementation task for the
City.
[13] On the issue of section 102 of the Municipal Systems Act, Mr Sithole contended
that Ms Tarica had not properly raised a dispute, and that in any event, the
raising of a dispute precluded the municipality from instituting proceedings to
recover the debt, with the effect that prescription could not run while the dispute
remained unresolved. I queried with him whether section 102 did more than

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suspend the City’s entitlement to implement credit control measures such as
disconnections, and whether it in fact prevented the City from issuing summons.
Counsel insisted that it did, and that this consequence meant that prescription
could not run during the pendency of a dispute. I expressed difficulty with that
submission, noting that the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 governs when
prescription commences and runs, and that nothing in the Systems Act
expressly suspends or interrupts prescription.
[14] Mr Paige-Green, who appeared for Ms Tarica, advanced a somewhat different
emphasis. He conceded that the reference to 4 May 2018 in the original order
was plainly a patent error, not supported by the reasoning in the judgment. He
confirmed that Ms Tarica’s attorneys had written to draw attention to the error
and that the letter had been copied to the City. He confirmed that the City did
not dispute having received the letter. He conceded, however, that even the
corrected date of 4 May 2020 might not align perfectly with the date of the notice
of motion, which was 12 May 2023. In his submission, this discrepancy was
negligible, and indeed operated in the City’s favour, giving it a margin o f eight
days. He nevertheless accepted that the correction was competently made
under Rule 42 as the correction of a patent error.
[15] In relation to the allegation of vagueness, Mr Paige-Green submitted that the
order must be read in its entirety. He argued that paragraph 3 of the order,
declaring all debts older than three years to have prescribed, provided the
necessary context, and that paragraph 4, directing rectification of the account,
simply gave effect to that finding. On this approach, he submitted, the order was
clear and enforceable. He also dealt with the onus point, submitting that Ms

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Tarica had discharged her onus by identifying the relevant period, and that the
City, being the custodian of its own records, was best placed to implement the
order.
[16] On the issue of joint liability, it was accepted in argument that I had not made a
finding, and had expressly stated that it was unnecessary to do so given the
conclusion on prescription. Counsel for the City nevertheless maintained that
this left the matter inadequately determined. I observed that the finding on
prescription rendered the issue of joint liability moot, whether the debtor was
the first applicant, her late husband, or both.
[17] Finally, considerable debate took place concerning the effect of a section 102
dispute on the running of prescription. I put to counsel that the Prescription Act
governs when debts prescribe, and that the Systems Act, properly construed,
does not carve out exceptions to prescription but only regulates the exercise of
debt-collection measures. Mr Paige-Green submitted that even if the lodging of
a dispute were to preclude the City from certain enforcement steps, it did not
interrupt prescription. He argued that the City could not postpone prescription
indefinitely by failing to resolve disputes, and that the responsibility lay with the
City to manage its processes so as to issue summons in time, before any decbts
prescribed. Mr Sithole pressed the contrary view, relying on authorities which
he said suggested that the lodging of a dispute “ring-fences” the debt and
precludes any claim until resolution.
[18] In reply, Ms Tarica’s counsel submitted that the grounds relied upon were
without merit, that the correspondence correcting the date was properly copied

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to the City which chose not to respond, and that the issues of vagueness, onus,
and section 102 had been settled by prior authority. He argued that the
application raised no novel point and that another court would not reasonably
come to a different conclusion.
ANALYSIS OF GROUNDS OF APPEAL
The functus officio point
[19] The City ’s primary contention is that by revisiting my original order of 6
December 2024, I acted when I was already functus officio. It submits that I
impermissibly varied the order of my own accord, without a formal application,
and without affording the City an opportunity to be heard.
[20] This characterisation does not withstand scrutiny. Shortly after judgment was
handed down, Ms Tarica’s attorneys wrote to the Registrar on 9 December
2024, drawing attention to an inconsistency between the reasoning in the body
of the judgment and the terms of the order. Specifically, they noted that the
order referred to “4 May 2018” as the cut-off date for prescription, whereas the
judgment itself (at paragraphs 91 and 92) made plain that the correct reference
point was three years prior to the notice of motion, namely May 2020.
[21] That letter was copied to the City, which was thus aware of the point and in a
position to make submissions had it wished to do so. It elected not to respond.
In those circumstances, the correction did not amount to a reopening of the
merits, but rather a clarification of a patent error so that the order accurately
reflected the reasoning and relief already granted. Rule 42 of the Uniform Rules
of Court expressly empowers a court to correct such errors.

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[22] On the merits, the judgment made clear that using “date of judgment” could
notionally capture amounts the City had not yet had a fair opportunity to
address. The reasoning therefore adopted the date of service of the notice of
motion as the appropriate reference point. That is what paragraph 92 says, and
it is what the parties debated at the hearing. Nothing advanced in the leave
application dislodges that rationale.
[23] The first revision corrected the month and year (from May 2018 to May 2020)
but retained the “4th” day of the month.
[24] That happened because Ms Tarica’s letter identified the patent error only at the
level of the month and year; it did not address the day within the month. My
initial Rule 42 correction accordingly confined itself to what was put up.
[25] However, the ratio of the judgment makes plain that the day “4” was equally out
of step with the judgment’s reasoning. It was common cause that the notice of
motion was served on 12 May 2023. What is not in dispute is that “4 May 2020”
does not reflect the ratio.
[26] Because the persistence of “4” arose from the same initial slip, it too is a patent
error attributable to the court and correctable mero motu under Rule 42(1)(b).
The correction does not alter the reasoning; it gives effect to it. At the hearing,
even the City’s counsel acknowledged that, on my stated approach, the correct
alignment would be with the date of service of the notice of motion in May 2023.
[27] It follows that the order should be amended again, this time to align the day with
the notice-of-motion reference point fixed by the judgment. For clarity, and
consistently with the hearing debate, the operative cut-off date is to be

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calculated with reference to 12 May 2023, yielding an “on or before May 2020”
date that matches that reference point. This is a textual alignment to the ratio,
not a new conclusion on prescription.
Procedural fairness in the correction
[28] The City further contends that the process was unfair, emphasising that parties
should have notice before an order is varied. That submission ignores the fact
that the City did have notice: it was copied on the very correspondence that
identified the error and proposed the correction. Nothing prevented it from
placing submissions before the Court, but it chose silence. The correction in
these circumstances was therefore neither unilateral nor procedurally unfair.
[29] Moreover, the City’s contention overlooks Rule 42(1)(b), which permits a court,
mero motu, to “rescind or vary an order or judgment in which there is an
ambiguity, or a patent error or omission, but only to the extent of such ambiguity,
error or omission.” That is the narrow power I exercised. The reasoning in the
body of the judgment fixed the prescription reference point at the date of the
notice of motion; the stray reference in the order to “May 2018” was plainly
inconsistent with that reasoning and thus a patent error susceptible to
correction.
[30] The City relies on a Constitutional Court decision (referenced as R[…] v R[…]
[2023] ZACC 5) to suggest that unilateral variation is impermissible.
[31] That submission misses the point. The authority concerned the impermissibility
of altering a final order to change its substance absent a recognised basis.

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[32] Here, the revision did not change the substance or reasoning; it aligned the text
of the order with the judgment’s expressly stated reference point for
prescription—the date of service of the notice of motion. That is precisely the
type of “patent error or omission” Rule 42 allows a court to correct, and only “to
the extent” of the error.
Clarity and enforceability of the order
[33] Another ground is that the order directing the City to rectify the municipal
account lacks clarity and is unenforceable. I do not accept this. The order
required the City to remove from the account all charges that had prescribed as
at 4 May 2020. Leaving aside the patent error in regard to the day of the month,
that is a readily identifiable category of charges: any amounts that became due
before that date. The City’s own records enable it to identify which amounts fall
within that category. The fact that some calculation is required does not render
the order vague or incapable of implementation.
Onus in relation to prescription
[34] The City submits that the order improperly shifted the onus of proof in relation
to prescription. That argument misconceives the judgment. Ms Tarica had
already discharged her burden by showing, with reference to the billing history
and the date of the notice of motion, that debts older than three years had
prescribed. Once that conclusion was reached, the order necessarily required
the City to implement the result in its accounts. That was not a reversal of the
onus; it was a practical direction flowing from the finding on prescription.

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[35] The reference to ‘amounts charged’ directs attention to invoiced line items dated
before the cut-off . Thus, minor cycle-day issues do not affect months prior to
the cut-off and are resolved administratively.
Liability of the property owner
[36] The City argues that I erred in not holding the first applicant jointly and severally
liable for historical debts associated with the property, even though the account
was in her late husband’s name. This ground ignores the decisive finding that
such historical debts had prescribed and were therefore unenforceable. Once
that conclusion was reached, the question of joint liability for those amounts
was moot. The first applicant was held liable for charges arising after her
husband’s death, and she was directed to regularise an account in her own
name, but the extinguished debts could not be revived through reliance on joint
liability principles.
Existence of a valid dispute under section 102 of the Systems Act
[37] The City challenges the finding that Ms Tarica had declared a valid dispute
under section 102 of the Municipal Systems Act. It contends that no valid
dispute was raised, and that this Court erred in treating the correspondence and
complaints as such.
[38] That contention is not supported by the facts. Ms Tarica had raised formal
disputes as early as 2014, reiterated them repeatedly, and pursued the internal
mechanisms under the City’s own credit control policy, including a letter of
demand and a letter of appeal. Those steps plainly constituted a properly raised
and specific dispute. The law is clear that once a bona fide dispute exists, the
municipality is precluded from allocating payments to the disputed charges.

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Jurisdiction and internal remedies
[39] The City also seeks to recast the matter as one of administrative law, arguing
that Ms Tarica’s complaints ought to have been pursued through review
proceedings or internal remedies such as the Ombudsman, and that this Court
lacked jurisdiction to make the orders it did.
[40] That argument was considered and rejected. The relief sought and granted was
the enforcement of statutory rights under the Prescription Act and the Systems
Act, not the review of an administrative decision. Courts are plainly competent
to declare debts prescribed and to compel municipalities to render accurate
accounts.
SCOPE OF THE CORRECTION: MONTH VERSUS DAY OF THE MONTH
[41] The first revision corrected the month and year in the prescription cut-off,
aligning the order with the judgment’s reasoning by substituting May 2020 for
May 2018. It did not alter the day of the month, which remained as in the original
slip. That outcome reflects the fact that Ms Tarica’s correspondence drew
attention to the error at the level of month and year only; the ensuing revision
therefore addressed precisely what was raised.
[42] Although the revised judgment substituted “May 2020” for “May 2018”, it left
intact the “4th” day of the month. That residual day was not the product of
reasoning but part of the same patent slip: the applicants’ letter identified only
the month/year error, and my first correction was confined accordingly. It is now
apparent that the day likewise fails to reflect the ratio, which fixes the cut-off by
reference to three years prior to the date of service of the notice of motion. In

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terms of Rule 42(1)(b), the order therefore stands to be further corrected, mero
motu and only to that extent, by aligning the day to that reference point; this
textual alignment occasions no prejudice, does not revisit the merits, and the
order below gives effect to it and makes no other change.
[43] For avoidance of doubt, the order will be amended to align the day with the
actual date of service of the notice of motion (which is common cause), so that
the cut-off reads “on or before [the date three years prior to the date of service
of the notice of motion] in May 2020”. This textual alignment gives effect to the
judgment’s stated approach; it does not supply new reasoning, and it does not
afford any ground for leave to appeal.
SUBSEQUENT AUTHORITIES PROVIDED BY THE CITY
[44] During the hearing, Mr Sithole indicated that he intended to upload additional
authorities onto Caselines, which, so it was submitted, would demonstrate the
merits of the City’s case for leave to appeal.
[45] On 29 May 2025, the City uploaded the following further authorities:
[45.1] Body Corporate Croftdene Mall v eThekwini
Municipality (603/2010) [2011] ZASCA 188 (10 October 2011);
[45.2] City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Vresthena (Pty) Ltd
and Others 2024 JDR 1616 (SCA) (18 April 2024, case no
1346/2022);
[45.3] MEC for Education, Gauteng Province, and Others v Governing
Body, Rivonia Primary School and Others 2013 (6) SA 582 (CC);

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[45.4] 39 Van Der Merwe Street Hillbrow CC v City of Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality and Another 2023 JDR 3278 (GJ);
[45.5] Mwelase Korffie (Pty) Ltd v Free State Development Corporation
(FB, case no 5020/2022, 11 April 2025);
[45.6] Barstow v City of Johannesburg (GJ, case no 534/2020, 7 July
2023); and
[45.7] Euphorbia (Pty) Ltd t/a Gallagher Estates v City of
Johannesburg (Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg, case no
A5052/2015, 17 June 2016).
[46] These judgments do not alter the analysis or the result. Croftdene, Vresthena
and 39 Van Der Merwe concern credit-control measures (disconnection and
reconnection) and say nothing about the running of prescription or the power in
Rule 42(1)(b) to correct a patent error. Rivonia Primary is an administrative-
law decision on fairness in a different statutory setting. Barstow and Euphorbia
address billing accuracy and onus, and are consistent with an order requiring
the City to correct an account by reference to objective data in its own records.
Mwelase Korffie restates orthodox prescription principles in a contractual
context and is entirely consonant with fixing the cut-off by reference to the date
of institution.
[47] None of these authorities bears on the two points that dispose of this
application: the three-year cut-off measured from the notice-of-motion date, and
this Court’s narrow competence to correct a patent error mero motu so as to
align the order with its reasons.

17


[48] Having considered these judgments, I am of the view that they do not take the
matter any further.
CONCLUSION
[49] Having considered the City’s written grounds together with the oral submissions
and the record, I am not persuaded that any of the issues raised meet the
threshold in section 17(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act. The challenged
variation corrected a patent slip and did not revisit the merits; the City had notice
of the proposed correction and elected not to engage; the order is clear and
capable of implementation; the judgment did not reverse the onus; the question
of historical joint liability was rendered moot by prescription; sect ion 102 of the
Municipal Systems Act does not suspend or interrupt prescription; and the relief
granted lay squarely within this Court’s jurisdiction. The assertion of “novelty”
does not, without more, constitute a compelling reason to grant leave. There
are no reasonable prospects that another court would reach a different
conclusion.
[50] One residual matter concerns the day of the month reflected in the revised
order. It is apparent that the retention of the “day” was part of the same original
patent error that the revision corrected at the level of month and year.
Consistently with Rule 42(1)(b), the Court may correct such an error mero motu
and, as this further adjustment merely aligns the text of the order with the ratio
(prescription calculated from the date of the notice of motion), it occasions no
prejudice and does not alter the reasoning. Costs should follow the result.
[51] For these reasons, the following order is made: