SAFLII Note: Certain personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been redacted from this document
in compliance with the law and SAFLII Policy
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 620/2024
In the matter between:
SIPHOKAZI MAFILIKA FIRST APPELLANT
ONESIPHO GUZA SECOND APPELLANT
VUYOLWETHU NDAMASE THIRD APPELLANT
THEMBANI BREAKFAST FOURTH APPELLANT
LINDELWA KLAAS FIFTH APPELLANT
ASTHOBELE MKHANGALA SIXTH APPELLANT
and
ELUNDINI LOCAL MUNICIPALITY FIRST RESPONDENT
MUNICIPALITY MANAGER:
ELUNDINI LOCAL MUNICIPALITY SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral citation: Mafilika and Others v Elundini Local Municipality and
Another (620/2024) [2025] ZASCA 142 (01 October 2025)
Coram: HUGHES, WEINER, MOLEFE and KOEN JJA and CHILI AJA
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Heard: 1 September 2025
Delivered: This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication on the Supreme Court of Appeal
website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for the hand -down of the
judgment is deemed to be 11h00 on 01 October 2025.
Summary: Municipal Law – Administrative Law – Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 – termination of electricity supply to
property on the instructions of the title owner – lack of pre-termination notice –
Constitutional right to electricity – prima facie right not to have electricity
supply terminated unfairly and without adequate notice.
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ORDER
On appeal from: Eastern Cape Division of the High Court, Makhanda (Beshe J,
sitting as court of first instance):
1 The appeal is upheld with costs , such costs to include the costs of two
counsel.
2 The order of the Eastern Cape Division of the High Court, Makhanda is
set aside and replaced with the following:
‘Pending the final determination of the orders sought in Part B, the respondents
are directed to restore the electricity supply within 24 hours after service of this
court order by the applicants’ attorneys at the offices of the second respondent.’
JUDGMENT
Molefe JA (Hughes, Weiner and Koen JJA and Chili AJA concurring):
[1] This is an appeal against an order of the Eastern Cape Division of the High
Court, Makhanda (the high court), dismissing the appellants’ application for the
restoration of electricity and water supply to E rf 3[...], M[...] , Eastern Cape
(the property) by the first respondent, the Elundini Local Municipality
(the municipality), pending the determination of the lawfulness of the
municipality’s termination of the services . The issue on appeal is whether the
services can be lawfully disconnected from the property, which was leased,
without providing the tenants with a reasonable pre-termination notice and if
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required, an opportunity to be heard in terms of section 3(1) of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).1
[2] The appellants occupy the property as tenants . They leased the property
from Ms Pinky Madikane. The municipality provides electricity to the property.
The appellants allege that they regularly purchase water and electricity from the
municipality.
[3] The municipality is a structure duly established pursuant to the
Constitution, in terms of the Local Government: Municipal Structures Act 117
of 1998 (the Structures Act), and the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act
32 of 2000 (the Systems Act). The second respondent is the Municipal Manager
of the municipality, a repository of the functions and powers set out in the
Structures Act and the Systems Act.
[4] At all material times, the munici pality had a contractual agreement with
the owner/title holder of the property, Ms Nosipho Flora Nyezi (Ms Nyezi), for
the provision of electricity to the property. On 4 February 2023, Ms Nyezi
addressed a letter to the municipality requesting it to ‘temporarily disconnect the
power connection’ to the property.
[5] On 7 February 2023, at the instance of Ms Nyezi and pursuant to the
aforesaid contractual arrangement between her and the municipality, the
municipality terminated the electricity supply to the property. The next day, on
8 February 2023, the water supply was terminated. Both terminations were done
without any pre-termination notice(s).
1 Sec 3(1) of PAJA provides that ‘[a]dministrative action which materially and adversely affects the rights or
legitimate expectations of any person must be procedurally fair’.
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[6] Consequently, the appellants launched an urgent application in the high
court. Part A of the application sought urgent relief and a mandatory interdict,
compelling the respondents to restore the electricity and water supply to the
property immediately, and an interim interdict restraining the respondents from
terminating the electricity and water supply pending Part B of the application.
The relief in Part B, which was not urgently sought, was an order declaring the
municipality’s termination of the electricity and water supply without prior
notice to be unlawful; null and void ab initio, and not procedurally fair in terms
of PAJA.
[7] The municipality opposed the application and raised a non -joinder point
in limine, asserting that the authority to provide water does not fall within its
mandate but within the scope of Joe Gqabi District Municipality (the district
municipality), which was not joined as a party to the proceedings. It denied
disconnecting the water supply to the property.
[8] The municipality further denied that the disconnection of the electricity
supply was unlawful. It argued that the disconnection of the electricity supply
was purely contractual, carried out at the property owner's request, and therefore
not an administrative action.
[9] The high court upheld the non -joinder point in limine and dismissed
Part A of the application. It found that the municipality’s termination of the
electricity was not an administrative action, and that the appellants had not
established a prima facie right for the interim relief. The high court also did not
believe that the appellants would be successful in Part B of the application, and,
therefore, dismissed the entire application with costs. The appellants appeal
against that judgment and order , having been granted leave by this Court on
3 May 2024.
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The non-joinder special plea
[10] The case presented by the respondents in the non -joinder special plea is
that the authority to supply water to the property rested with the district
municipality. Section 84 of the Structures Act addresses the division of functions
and powers between district and local municipalities. One of the functions and
powers of the district municipality is the bulk supply of water that affects a
significant portion of municipalities within the district . ‘Municipal services’ in
the district municipality ’s by-laws2 means, ‘services provided by the
[m]unicipality, including refuse removal, water supply , sanitation, electricity
services and rates or any one of the above’. (Emphasis added.)
[11] In Absa Bank Limited v Naude N O & Others,3 this Court held that ‘[t]he
test whether there has been a non -joinder is whether a party has a direct and
substantial interest in the subject matter of the litigation which may prejudice
the party that has not been joined ’.4 In Gordon v Department of Health,
KwaZulu-Natal,5 it was held that if an order or judgment cannot be sustained
without necessarily prejudicing the interest of third parties that ha ve not been
joined, then those third parties have a legal interest in the matter and must be
joined.
[12] In Johannesburg Society of Advocates and Another v Nthai and Others ,6
Ponnan JA held as follows:
‘. . . [J]oinder of a party is necessary if that party has a direct and substantial interest that may
be affected prejudicially by the judgment of the court in the proceedings concerned. This court
2 Joe Gqabi District Municipality (Ukhahlamba District Municipality) Water Services and Sanitation By-Laws
published under Local Authority Notice 13 in Eastern Cape Provincial Gazette 1851 of 7 March 2008.
3 Absa Bank Limited v Naude N O & Others [2015] ZASCA 97; 2016 (6) SA 540 (SCA).
4 Ibid para 10.
5 Gordon v Department of Health, KwaZulu-Natal [2008] ZASCA 99 (SCA); 2008 (6) SA 522 (SCA); [2009] 1
All SA 39 (SCA); 2009 (1) BCLR 44 (SCA); [2008] 11 BLLR 1023 (SCA); (2008) 29 ILJ 2535 (SCA.
6 Johannesburg Society of Advocates and Another v Nthai and Others [2020] ZASCA 171; 2021 (2) SA 343
(SCA); [2021] 2 All SA 37 (SCA).
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has set out the test as follows:
“The issue in our matter, as it is in any non-joinder dispute, is whether the party sought to be
joined has a direct and substantial interest in the matter. The test is whether a party that is
alleged to be a necessary party, has a legal interest in the su bject-matter, which may be
affected prejudicially by the judgment of the court in the proceedings concerned.”
The court went on to hold that the primary question is the impact of the order that is sought
on the interest of third parties. Particularly important is the question whether the order sought
cannot be carried into effect without substantially affecting their interests . For the purposes
of assessing whether a party must be joined: “it suffices if there exists the possibility of such
an interest. It is not necessary for the court to determine that it, in fact, exists; in many cases,
such a decision could not be made until the party had been heard”.’7 (Emphasis added.)
[13] The position in the present matter is not so much that the district
municipality has a direct and substantial interest in relation to the water supply
to the property , but that on the respondents’ version, which prevails,8 the first
respondent supplies only electricity to the property and that it terminated the
electricity supply, but it does not supply water to the property, that being the
responsibility of the district muni cipality, and it had not terminated the water
supply to the property. As the district municipality had not been cited as a
respondent, no relief restoring the water supply was competent against the
respondents. To the extent that any relief relating to the restoration of the water
supply was claimed, such relief would potentially affect the rights of the district
municipality. To that extent, it could be prejudicially affected if an or der was
made against it for the reconnection of the water supply . The high court was
therefore correct in upholding the non-joinder point in limine. Thus, no order
therefore correct in upholding the non-joinder point in limine. Thus, no order
can be granted in relation to the provision and/or reconnection of the water
supply.
7 Ibid para 31. Citations omitted. This was recently reaffirmed by this Court in Tshivhase v Tshivhase N O and
Another [2025] ZASCA 131; [2025] JOL 69707 (SCA) para 19.
8 Plascon-Evans Paints (TVL) Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [1984] 2 ALL SA 366 (A); 1984 (3) SA 623;
1984 (3) SA 620.
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Discussion
[14] The core question to be determined by this Court is, however, whether the
high court erred in finding that the appellants had not established a prima facie
right for an interdict of this nature, particularly in light of the municipality’s
powers and obligations in respect of the supply of electricity.
[15] The duty of the municipality to provide electricity to the people of South
Africa is regulated by the Constitution, statutes and municipal by-laws. The
relevant provisions of the Constitution are as follows:
‘Objects of the local government
152(1) The objects of the local government are –
(a) to provide democratic and accountable government for local communities;
(b) to ensure provision of services to communities in a sustainable manner;
(c) to promote social and economical development;
(d) to promote a safe and healthy environment; and
(e) to encourage the involvement of communities and community organisations in
the matters of local government.
(2) A municipality must strive, within its financial and administrative capacity, to achieve
the objects set out in subsection (1).
Development duties of municipalities
153 A municipality must –
(a) structure and manage its administration and budgeting and planning processes
to give priority to the basic needs of the community, and to promote the social and
economic development of the community; and
. . . .
Powers and functions of municipalities
156(1) A municipality has executive authority in respect of, and the right to administer –
(a) the local government matters listed in Part B of the schedule 4 . . .; and
(b) any other matter assigned to it by national or provincial legislation.
(2) A municipality may make and administer by-laws for the effective administration of
the matters which it has the right to administer.
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. . . .’
[16] The provision of electricity is a competency of the local government.
Section 4(2)(f) of the Systems Act requires municipal councils to ‘give members
of the local community equitable access to the municipal services to which they
are entitled’. Sections 73(1)(c) and 73(2)(a) further provide that a municipality
‘must ensure that all members of the local community have access to at least the
minimum level of basic services’ and that such services must ‘be equitable and
accessible’.
[17] It is apposite that I should highlight the relevant provisions of the Elundini
Local Municipality Electricity Supply By -Laws (the Elundini by -laws).9 The
purpose thereof is to provide for the supply of electricity to the residents within
its area of jurisdiction, and to provide for procedures, methods and practices to
regulate such provision of electricity.
[18] The Elundini by-laws defines ‘consumer’ and ‘occupier’ as follows:
‘“Consumer” in relation to premises means:-
(a) any occupier thereof or any other person with whom the [m]unicipality has contracted
to supply or is actually supplying electricity thereat;
. . . .
“Occupier” in relation to any premises means:-
(a) any person in actual occupation of such premises;
(b) any person legally entitled to occupy such premises;
(c) in the case of such premises being subdivided and let to lodgers or various tenants, the
person receiving the rent payable by such lodgers or tenants, whether on his own account
or as agent for any person entitled thereto or interested therein; or
. . . .’
9 Elundini Local Municipality Electricity Supply By-Laws published under Local Authority Notice 60 in Eastern
Cape Provincial Gazette 1929 of 30 July 2008.
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[19] The Constitutional Court, in Mkontwana v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan
Municipality,10 held that electricity is a component of basic services . It
concluded that municipalities are constitutionally and statutorily obliged to
provide their residents with electricity.11
[20] In Joseph and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others (Joseph),12 the
Constitutional Court dealt with the nature of the relationship between a local
government as a service provider and the user of the service where the service
is provided through a third party , such as a landlord. The Court was asked to
decide whether the tenants of a block of flats were entitled to notice before their
electricity supply was disconnected by the municipality, City Power. Similar to
the present matter, the tenants contended that the disconnection without notice
violated their constitutional rights to, inter alia, human dignity under s 10 of the
Constitution and their access to electricity per their lease agreement . They also
challenged the constitutional validity of by-laws that allowed for termination
without notice and affording an opportunity to make a representation.
[21] Unanimously reversing the decision of the high court, the Constitutional
Court found that electricity is an important basic municipal service. It held that
the local government has a constitutional and statutory obligation to provide it,
which means that the tenants were entitled to procedural fairness in the context
of the exercise of the right. This included an adequate notice of at least 14 days
before disconnection . As a result, b y-laws dispensing with the obligation to
adequately inform those receiving electricity of a proposed termination , were
declared unconstitutional.
10 Mkontwana v Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality; Bissett and Others v Buffalo City Municipality and
Others; Transfer Rights Action Campaign and Others v MEC, Local Government and Housing, Gauteng, and
Others (KwaZulu-Natal Law Society and Msunduzi Municipality and Amici Curiae) [2004] ZACC 9; 2005 (1)
SA 530 (CC); 2005 (2) BCLR 150 (CC).
11 Ibid paras 35 and 38.
12 Joseph and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others [2009] ZACC 30; 2010 (3) BCLR 212 (CC); 2010 (4)
SA 55 (CC).
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[22] In the present matter, t he appellants contended that the municipality’s
decision to terminate their electricity and water supply was an administrative
action under PAJA . They further contended that , as such, the municipality
should have complied with the requirement of procedural fairness . The
appellants sought to enforce their right to just administrative action, to be warned
and notified of the impending termination of services , and an opportunity to
make representations.
[23] The municipality argues that its contractual relationship with the property
owner supersedes any obligations to the tenants. This argument fundamentally
misunderstands the nature of municipal services, the supply thereof to persons
who are occupiers but not consumers, and administrative action.
[24] In Joseph, the Constitutional Court settled the law regarding the
relationship between a local government body as a service provider and the end
user of the service, even when a direct contractual relationship does not exist.
The Constitutional Court explicitly rejected the argument that a lack of
contractual privity between tenants and service providers eliminates the rights
of tenants to procedural fairness. The decision established a crucial precedent,
affirming that the constitutional rights to dignity and access to services create a
legal relationship that obliges a municipality to provide notice and an
opportunity to be heard before disconnecting a service, regardless of who the
property owner is.
[25] In the present matter, t he high court misdirected itself in its finding that
the municipality ’s disconnection of electricity to the property was not
administrative action under PAJA, and that they were merely executing the
owner’s contractual instructions. The municipality’s actions fall squarely within
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s 3(1) of PAJA, as they materially and adversely affected the appellants’
constitutional rights to basic services. Consequently, the high court should have
granted the order in favour of the appellants, as they did satisfy the requirements
of an interim interdict.13
[26] This judgment only deals with the procedural unfairness in terminating
the electricity supply without proper notice of termination. It does not deal with
the issue whether the appellants are entitled to the further supply of electricity
from the first respondent, if the supply was terminated after due and proper
notice of termination was delivered to the appellants. That is a different enquiry
altogether.
[27] In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1 The appeal is upheld with costs , such costs to include the costs of two
counsel.
2 The order of the Eastern Cape Division of the High Court, Makhanda is set
aside and replaced with the following:
‘Pending the final determination of the orders sought in Part B, the respondents
are directed to restore the electricity supply within 24 hours after service of this
court order by the applicants’ attorneys at the offices of the second respondent.’
________________________
D S MOLEFE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
13 The requirements for an interim interdict are well established. This Court in KSL v AL [2024] ZASCA 96;
2024 (6) SA 410 (SCA) para 16 held as follows:
‘The requirements for an interim interdict are: (a) a prima facie right, even if it is open to some doubt; (b) injury
actually committed or reasonably apprehended; (c) the balance of convenience; and (d) the absence of similar
protection by any other remedy.’ See also Setlogelo v Setlogelo 1914 AD 221 at 227; Webster v Mitchell 1948
(1) SA 1186 (W) at 1187.
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Appearances
For the appellants: D Skoti with T Coto
Instructed by: SB Bavu Inc. Attorneys, Kokstad
Maduba Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the respondents: A Badlani SC with L Ntikinca and H Miya
Instructed by: TL Luzipho Attorneys, Mthatha
Moroka Attorneys, Bloemfontein.