Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 684South Africa
Gibela Rail Consortium RF (PTY) Ltd v Ndobe (4241/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 684 (14 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 September 2022
Headnotes
by the Court to be vague and embarrassing and lacking the necessary averments to sustain a cause of action. The irresistible conclusion therefore is that the application to strike out is premature and falls to be dismissed. [7] The issue that is central to the alternative relief sought by the applicant is whether the amended particulars of claim do comply with the Court order of the 15th of April 2021. It is therefore useful to restate the relevant paragraphs of the said Court order to put the matters into the correct context which are the following: “The objections
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Gibela Rail Consortium RF (PTY) Ltd v Ndobe (4241/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 684 (14 September 2022)
Gibela Rail Consortium RF (PTY) Ltd v Ndobe (4241/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 684 (14 September 2022)
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sino date 14 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 4241/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
14
September 2022
In
the matter between:
GIBELA
RAIL CONSORTIUM RF
(PTY)
LTD
APPLICANT/EXCIPIENT
And
RODGERS
NDOBE
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines.
The date
of the judgment is deemed to be the 14
th
September 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
The applicant, who is a defendant in the main action, brought this
application against
the respondent seeking an order in the following
terms:
1.1
That the respondent’s entire amended particulars of claim,
dated 28 April 2021, be struck out for failing
to disclose a cause of
action and or being vague and embarrassing and or failing to comply
with Rule 18 of the Uniform Rules as
more fully set out in this
Honourable Court’s judgment dated 15 April 2021;
1.2 In
the alternative to paragraph 1.1 above, that the respondent’s
claim be dismissed for the respondent’s
failure to comply with
this Honourable Court’s judgment dated 15 April 2021;
1.3
That the respondent pays the costs of this application.
[2]
It is common cause that the respondent issued summons against the
applicant in which
it claimed payment of the sum of R5 million for
damages it suffered as a result of the publication of a defamatory
report compiled
by the applicant on the manner respondent conducted
itself whilst in the employ of the respondent. On receipt of the
summons, the
applicant filed a notice of exception and later launched
an application excepting to the respondent’s particulars of
claim
to the summons in that they do not disclose the cause of action
and are vague and embarrassing. The exception was opposed by the
respondent which culminated in a judgment and order that was handed
down by Malindi J on the 15
th
of April 2021. The order
directed the respondent to amend its particulars of claim and remove
the cause of complaint.
[3]
In May 2021 the respondent filed its amended particulars of claim as
directed by the
Court order of the 15
th
of April 2021. Not
entirely satisfied with the amendment to the particulars of claim
filed by the respondent, the applicant launched
these proceedings to
strike out the amended particulars of claim for failing to disclose a
cause of action and or being vague and
embarrassing. In the
alternative, the applicant sought the respondent’s claim to be
dismissed for failing to comply with
the Court order of the 15
th
April 2021.
[4]
It is trite that where any pleading is vague and embarrassing or
lacks the averments
which are necessary to sustain an action, the
opposing party may deliver an exception thereto and may set it down
for hearing in
terms of the rules of court. In casu, the applicant
obtained a Court order against the respondent which directed the
respondent
to amend its particulars of claim in order to remove the
cause of complaint. Subsequently the respondent filed its amended
particulars
of claim as directed by the Court order. The issue that
serves before this Court is whether the amended particulars of claim
have
removed the cause of complaint as directed by the Court order
and or do disclose the cause of action. If not, what are the remedies
available to the applicant.
[5]
If after the respondent has effected the amendment to the particulars
of claim but
they still do not disclose a cause of action, then the
applicant’s remedy was to lodge an objection to the amended
particulars
of claim. Having failed to lodge an objection to the
amended particulars of claim, the applicant’s other remedy was
to file
another exception directed to the new pleading (i.e. the
amended particulars of claim) for failing to disclose a cause of
action.
It is a trite proposition that the applicant should first
afford the other party an opportunity to remove the cause of
complaint,
by giving a notice of exception. The applicant has failed
to give the respondent a notice excepting to the amended particulars
of claim nor did it launched an application to except to the amended
particulars of claim.
[6]
It is therefore not open to the applicant to simply bring an
application to strike
out the claim of the respondent when the
respondent has filed an amendment to its particulars of claim which
were held by the Court
to be vague and embarrassing and lacking the
necessary averments to sustain a cause of action. The irresistible
conclusion therefore
is that the application to strike out is
premature and falls to be dismissed.
[7]
The issue that is central to the alternative relief sought by the
applicant is whether
the amended particulars of claim do comply with
the Court order of the 15
th
of April 2021. It is therefore
useful to restate the relevant paragraphs of the said Court order to
put the matters into the correct
context which are the following:
“
The objections
Paragraph 22: A claim
for defamation is that a defamatory statement was published about the
plaintiff. In this case the respondent
claims that the excipient
published the report clandestinely prior to the disciplinary action
against him he does not state:
22.1
who published the Report;
22.2
the method of publication and to whom;
22.3
when the Report was published or distributed;
22.4
whether fellow employees had come into possession of the report or
that they reported to him what they
had heard from others;
22.5
state how many employees came to hear about the contents of the
Report prior to the disciplinary hearing;
22. 6 who,
and how many people were responsible for generating the report;
22.7
who, and how many people were consulted with in generating the
report;
22.8
who, and how many employees participated in the disciplinary hearing;
22.9
the basis for suing the excipient if an identified member(s) of the
management, or any other person
linked to the excipient ‘leaked’
the report.
Conclusion
Paragraph 33: Having
considered the issues and grounds of exception above, I am satisfied
that the excipient has made out a case
for relief in terms of Rule
23(1). To recapitulate, vagueness and embarrassment complained about
is the following:
33.1
the excipient does not know whether direct or vicarious liability is
alleged. It is certainly not pleaded.
33.2
it is not pleaded who published the alleged defamatory material.
33.3
a general allegation is pleaded that publication was to other
employees without identifying them if
they would be called as
witnesses.
33.4
considering the employer/employee relationship, and the relevant
documents having formed part of a
disciplinary action, whether the
employer did anything beyond what is required which would strip it of
any defences such as that
the proceedings took place under a
privileged occasion.
Paragraph 34: The
details, read together with paragraph 22 must be provided.
Paragraph 36
I therefore make the
following order:
1.
The exception application is granted.
2.
The respondent is directed to amend his
particulars of claim to remove the above causes of complaint
identified herein within (10)
days of this order, failing which the
excipient can return to Court on the same papers, supplemented as it
may necessary, to seek
an order dismissing the claim
3.
………………………
[8]
Before embarking on the discussion of interpreting a Court order, it
is salutary to
remember the trite principles underlying the exception
proceedings. An exception that a pleading does not disclose a cause
of action
or lacks the averments necessary to sustain an action
strikes at the formulation of the cause of action and its legal
validity.
The complaint is not directed at a particular paragraph in
the pleading but at the pleading as a whole, which must be
demonstrated
to be lacking the necessary averments to sustain a cause
of action. Furthermore, it is trite that exceptions should be dealt
with
sensibly as they provide a useful mechanism to weed out cases
without legal merit. However, an overly technical approach should
be
avoided because it destroys the usefulness of the exception
procedure
. (See Telematrix (Pty) Limited v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
2006 1 ALL SA 6
(SCA);
2006 1 SA 461
(SCA))
.
[9]
Counsel for the applicant submitted that the amendment as pleaded
does not comply
with the Court order of the 15
th
of April
2021 in that it does not state the words used by the applicant that
the respondent alleges to be defamatory. To ascertain
the purpose of
the Court order, the judgment should be read as a whole and not only
to consider the order. The applicant agreed
with the respondent that
it has furnished so much information in its amended particulars of
claim as if it was a founding affidavit
but has failed to state the
words that are alleged to be defamatory.
[10]
In the recent past, the Constitutional Court had an opportunity to
deal with the issue of interpretation
of documents in
University
of Johannesburg v Auckaland Park Theological Seminary and Another
(CCT 70/20)
[2021] ZACC 13
;
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC);
2021 (6) SA 1
(11
June 2021)
wherein it stated the following:
“
Paragraph 65:
This approach to interpretation requires that ‘from the outset
one considers the context and the language together,
with neither
predominating over the other’.’ In Chisuse, although
speaking in the context of statutory interpretation,
this Court held
that this ‘now settled’ approach to interpretation, is a
‘unitary’ exercise. This means
that interpretation is to
be approached holistically: simultaneously considering the text,
context and purpose.
Paragraph 66: The
approach in Endumeni ‘updated’ the position, which was
that context could be resorted to if there
was ambiguity or lack of
clarity in the text. The Supreme Court of Appeal has explicitly
pointed out in cases subsequent to Endumeni
that context and purpose
must be taken into account as a matter of course, whether or not the
words used in the contract are ambiguous.
A court interpreting a
contract has to, form the onset, consider the contract’s
factual matrix, its purpose, the circumstances
leading up to its
conclusion, and knowledge at the time of those who negotiated and
produced the contract.
[11]
It has been decided in a number of judgments that in interpreting a
Court order or any other
document, the starting point is to determine
the manifest purpose of the order. The process of determining the
purpose of the order
involves a unitary exercise of considering the
language used in light of ordinary rules of grammar, the context and
purpose of
the order and can only be achieved by reading and
considering the whole judgment. It is plain from the judgment and
order of the
15
th
April 2021 that the intention was to
afford the respondent an opportunity to amend its particulars of
claim in order to furnish
such particularity and or to make such
averments as to sustain a cause of action in order to enable the
applicant to plead thereto
without being embarrassed.
[12]
The respondent contended that it has complied with the order
considering paragraph 22, 33, 34
and 36 of the judgment and the
order. The respondent has given more details in its amended
particulars of claim as ordered by the
Court. There is no merit in
the applicant’s contention that the words alleged to be
defamatory have not been stated in the
amended particulars of claim.
It is the whole report, so it was contended, that is defamatory for
it was clandestinely published
and contained incorrect information
about the respondent.
[13]
The concern of the judgment and order of the 15
th
of April
2021 was that the respondent has not disclosed or mentioned the
identity of the person who published the report and to
whom was it
published. These concerns were to be addressed and have been
addressed by the amended particulars of claim. It should
be recalled
that the Court did not order the respondent to amend its particulars
of claim to the extent that it proves the facts
that are alleged
therein. The respondent has furnished sufficient particularity in its
amended particulars of claim and as such
has complied with the Court
order of the 15
th
April 2021. It is sufficient for the
respondent to allege in its particulars of claim that the defamation
was caused by the report
that was compiled by the applicant and will
have to lead evidence to prove such allegation. It follows
ineluctably therefore that
the application falls to be dismissed.
[14]
Courts have in a number of decisions emphasised
the point that parties should at all times attempt to bring
finality
to litigation between them and that unnecessary technicalities which
delay the proper ventilation of the real issues should
be avoided.
This is one such matter where a litigant raises technical issues
which are dilatory and are intended to delay the other
party from
receiving the remedy it seeks without incurring further unnecessary
costs. It is patently an abuse of the process of
the Court which
should not be countenance. Such conduct by a litigant deserves to be
censured by the Court with a punitive costs
order.
[15]
In
Cherangani Trade and Invest 50 (Pty) Ltd v Razzmatazz (Pty) Ltd
and Another (2795/2018) [2020] ZAFSCHC 100 (28 May 2020)
the
Court stated the following:
“
Paragraph 20:
Unnecessary technicality should be avoided during litigation as
reliance thereon by a litigant is often aimed at trying
to evade
judgment on the merits and more often than not, the party relying on
a technicality know full well that he/she does not
have a proper
defence on the merits.”
[16]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs on the scale as between
attorney and client.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
29
th
August 2022
Date
of Judgment:
14
th
September 2022
For
the Applicant:
Advocate N Luthuli
Instructed
by:
Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
Tel: 011 269 7600
dlambert@ensafrica.com
For
the Respondent:
Advocate N Moropene
Instructed
by:
E.S Kgaka Attorneys
Tel: 012 881
1349
elson@kgaka.co.za
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