Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 689South Africa
Arnold and Another v ABSA Bank Limited and Others : In re: EOH Managed Services (PTY) Ltd v Creswick (42876/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 689 (14 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 September 2022
Headnotes
“It may even be that no order on the merits was made in the court a quo because by the time the matter came before that court the necessity for an order was gone and the sole question that one of costs. This shows the merits of the dispute in the court below must be investigated in
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Arnold and Another v ABSA Bank Limited and Others : In re: EOH Managed Services (PTY) Ltd v Creswick (42876/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 689 (14 September 2022)
Arnold and Another v ABSA Bank Limited and Others : In re: EOH Managed Services (PTY) Ltd v Creswick (42876/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 689 (14 September 2022)
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sino date 14 September 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
42876/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
NO
In
the matter between:
ARNOLD,
PHILLIP HENRY
First Applicant
ULTIMAX
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
and
ABSA
BANK LIMITED
First Respondent
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK LIMITED
Second Respondent
FITZGERALD,
MICHAEL N.O.
Third Respondent
COWIN,
MONICA N.O.
Fourth Respondent
VAN
JAARSVELDT, ANKIA N.O.
Fifth Respondent
EOH
MANAGED SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Sixth Respondent
SILVER
TOUCH IT SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
Eighth Respondent
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
WERKSMANS
ATTORNEYS
Ninth Respondent
In re:
EOH
MANAGED SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
ADAM
CRESWICK
First Respondent
ARNOLD,
PHILLIP HENRY
Second Respondent
ULTIMAX
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail. The date and time
for hand-down is deemed to be 11h30 on the 14th of September 2022.
DIPPENAAR
J
[1]
The central issue to be determined is the costs of an urgent
application
as between the applicants and the sixth respondent. The
other parties did not participate in the proceedings. The sixth
respondent
seeks costs on the scale as between attorney and client
against the applicants and their attorney, Mr Creswick on a
de
bonis propriis
basis.
[2]
The genesis of this application is an urgent application launched
by
the applicants on 21 April 2021 in terms of which the applicants
sought relief against Absa Bank Ltd and First National Bank
Limited
to prohibit them from providing certain documents pursuant to
subpoenas issued to provide such documents to a commission
of enquiry
under s417 and 418 of the Old Companies Act, 1973 (“the
enquiry”).
[3]
The application was opposed by the sixth respondent, represented
by
senior counsel. The application came before Vally J in the urgent
court on 21 April 2021, but was at the discretion of the presiding
judge not enrolled for hearing. No costs order was made.
[4]
The application was brought on truncated time periods and on less
than 2 hours’ notice, albeit that the application was heard
later than the time stipulated in the notice of motion. There
were
also issues with service on the fourth and fifth respondents. The
costs were later reserved by agreement between the parties.
[5]
Pursuant thereto, the applicant delivered a further notice of motion
and a voluminous supplementary affidavit. The sixth respondent had
delivered substantial answering papers to the original founding
affidavit and also delivered substantial supplementary answering
papers responding to the supplementary founding papers.
[6]
The application was again enrolled for hearing in the urgent court
on
29 April 2021. On that date Wright J was concerned with proper
service on the fourth and fifth respondents, the liquidators,
and
removed the matter from the roll. Costs were reserved.
[7]
No substantive relief was ever granted in relation to the urgent
application.
[8]
On 4 May 2021 at the enquiry, Absa Bank Ltd provided the documents
forming the subject matter of the urgent application. The relief
sought against First National Bank Limited had already become
moot
earlier, when it provided the documents referred to in the subpoena.
[9]
The applicants, on their own version and in an affidavit deposed
to
by their attorney, Mr Creswick, had elected not to pursue the urgent
application but to rather make submissions at the enquiry.
The
applicants did not further pursue the application and it was common
cause that the urgent application had become moot.
[10]
On 6 May 2021, the attorneys for the sixth respondent addressed
correspondence to
the applicant’s attorneys seeking a tender of
costs in relation to the urgent application. No tender was
forthcoming. Pursuant
to further correspondence between the parties,
the sixth respondent delivered a notice of motion seeking leave to
file a supplementary
affidavit for costs. It then enrolled the
application for hearing, initially on the unopposed roll. On 18
January 2022, Mudau J
granted a consent order setting dates for the
delivery of opposing papers and postponing the application. The
matter was on 27
June 2022 set down on the opposed roll.
[11]
The applicants conceded that part B of the urgent application had
become moot as
of 4 May 2021, but argued that the sixth applicant was
not entitled to a dismissal of the application with costs as it had
not
set the main application down for hearing. In my view, this
argument lacks merit. From the notice of set down it is clear that
the main application was enrolled for hearing on the opposed roll and
not any interlocutory application, albeit that a supplementary
notice
of motion and supplementary affidavit were delivered during July
2021.
[12]
The sixth
respondent argued that the procedure followed in placing the
supplementary affidavit before court was proper and required
in the
circumstances given the relevant subsequent events which occurred
after the original application papers were delivered.
I agree that
this is a case where the supplementary affidavit should be
allowed
[1]
.
[13]
According to the affidavit of Mr Creswick, the applicants erroneously
but
bona fide
thought Werksmans attorneys, the attorneys of
the sixth respondent, were representing the joint liquidators, and
thus the urgent
application was initially not served on the
liquidators. It is thus undisputed that there was an issue with
service on the fourth
and fifth respondents when the application was
heard on 21 April 2021.
[14]
In his affidavit, Mr Creswick further contended that Wright J could
not be persuaded
to allow the matter to stand down on 29 April 2021
to the following day for the liquidators to assess their position. He
contended
that if the matter had been stood down, the merits would
have been determined and that the applicants had good prospects of
success
if the matter had been heard.
[15]
In argument, the applicants contended that the application should be
determined on
its merits in order to determine an appropriate costs
order, despite the merits of the application having become moot.
[16]
Relying on
Pretoria
Garrison Institutes v Danish Variety Products (Pty) Ltd
[2]
and
Jenkins
v SA Boiler Makers, Iron& Steel Works & Ship Builders
Society
[3]
,
the applicants argued that a court hearing an application which has
become moot must determine the issue of costs by considering
the
merits of the application and not simply on the basis that the
application has become moot.
[17]
In my view,
the argument lacks merit for various reasons. First, as the
application has become moot, there is no existing or live
controversy
between the parties.
[4]
[18]
Second, it is not for this court to revisit the decision made by
Wright J on 29 April
2021 to remove the matter from the roll and that
decision is not open to appeal. In the exercise of his discretion,
Wright J decided
not to entertain the merits of the application but
to remove it and to reserve costs.
[19]
Third,
Pretoria
Garrison
is
distinguishable, given that it pertains to the principles which must
be applied in deciding an appeal as to costs and whether
interlocutory orders are appealable. In any event,
Pretoria
Garrison
[5]
does
not avail the applicants in the present context. It was held:
“
It may even be
that no order on the merits was made in the court a quo because by
the time the matter came before that court the
necessity for an order
was gone and the sole question that one of costs. This shows the
merits of the dispute in the court below
must be investigated in
order to decide whether the order as to costs made in that dispute
was properly made or not. In deciding
whether or not the court below
made the correct order as to costs the reasons which prompted that
court to make its order must
be examined that those reasons must be
the actual reasons and no others.”
[20]
Fourth,
Jenkins
does not avail the applicants as it was held that where a disputed
application is settled on a basis which disposes of the merits
except
insofar as the costs are concerned, a court should not have to hear
evidence to decide the disputed facts in order to decide
who is
liable for costs. The court held
[6]
:
“
It seems
to me to be against all principle for the court time to be taken up
for several days in the hearing of a case in respect
of which the
merits have been disposed of by the acceptance of an order in order
to decide questions of cost … I think the
court must to do its
best with the material at its disposal to make a fair allocation of
costs, employing such legal principles
as are applicable to the
situation. This is much to be preferred to laying down a principle
which requires courts to investigate
dead issues to see who would
have won on such issues. In most such cases the litigants would be
required to incur far greater costs
than those at stake. In my view
the costs must be decided on broad general lines and, not on lines
that would necessitate a full
hearing on the merits of a case that
has already been settled.”
[21]
In my view the same principles would apply to the present
circumstances where the
applicants have abandoned the application and
the relief sought has become moot. Costs must thus be decided on
broad general lines.
[22]
Having
considered the available material and the undisputed facts, I
concluded that the applicants did not comply with the requirements
set out by Sutherland J in
South
African Airways SOC v BDFM Publishers (Pty) Ltd
[7]
in launching the application on 21 April 2021, on less than two
hours’ notice. The applicants further did not comply with
the
practice directives pertaining to urgent applications and the
relevant principles explained by Wepener J in
In
re : Several Matters on the urgent Court Roll
[8]
.
[23]
These deficiencies, combined with the lack of proper service on the
liquidators and
the abandonment of the application by the applicants,
justify a conclusion that the application constituted an abuse of
process,
as contended by the sixth respondent.
[24]
Having
abandoned the application, the applicants had a duty to make a
reasonable proposal pertaining to costs
[9]
pursuant to the parties’ duty to contribute to the efficient
use of judicial resources. The applicants failed to do so. To
the
contrary, the applicants sought to place on additional burden on this
court by insisting that the main application, consisting
of a
voluminous record, be considered on its merits in the face of them
abandoning the relief sought therein and the application
having
become moot.
[25]
Had the applicants timeously made a reasonable proposal, substantial
additional time
and costs could have been avoided. Instead,
substantial time and expense was spent on preparing additional
affidavits and heads
of argument in addition to the costs of this
opposed application. The applicants in abandoning the application did
not avail themselves
of the procedure envisaged by rule 41 (1)(c).
Had this remedy been utilised, further costs would have been avoided.
[26]
The first tender of any costs, was made shortly before the hearing on
22 July 2022.
That tender, made by the first and second applicants
under rule 34, was for payment of the costs of the day in respect of
the hearing
before Vally J on Wednesday, 21 April 2021 and Wright J
on Thursday 29 April 2021 only.
[27]
I am not persuaded that this tender was reasonable or that these are
the only costs
the applicants are liable for, given the undisputed
facts. The applicants’ argument that it is logical that the
only costs
in issue relates to the hearings of 21 and 29 April 2021,
lacks merit.
[28]
For the
reasons advanced herein, I am persuaded that a costs order on the
scale as between attorney and client is justified, having
regard to
the applicants’ conduct in relation to the matter. Even if such
a costs order is not granted on a punitive basis,
the circumstances
are such that there are special considerations rendering it just that
the sixth respondent not be left out of
pocket in relation to the
costs of the application.
[10]
[29]
The sixth respondent argued that a
de bonis propriis
costs
order was warranted on the basis that Mr Creswick had instituted the
urgent proceedings in a haphazard manner, wilfully ignored
court
procedures and rules and presented a case that was plainly
misconceived and frivolous.
[30]
A court is
vested with a discretion to award costs on a
de
bonis propriis
basis where a practitioner has acted inappropriately in a reasonably
egregious manner.
[11]
[31]
Although there is merit in the sixth respondent’s criticism
against the way
in the application was launched and the litigation
conducted, it is not clear from the papers whether Mr Creswick had
simply acted
on instructions of his clients or whether his conduct in
relation to the main application was at his own instance. In those
circumstances
I am not persuaded that it would be appropriate to
direct Mr Creswick to pay the costs on a
de bonis propriis
basis.
[32]
I further conclude that the sixth respondent is entitled to an order
dismissing the
main application so that finality can be achieved in
relation thereto. The applicants on their own version abandoned the
relief
sought and concede that the application is moot. The simple
fact of the matter is that wasted costs were incurred by the sixth
respondent in opposing the application, which was thereafter simply
abandoned. There are consequences to the applicants’ election.
[33]
As the sixth respondent is substantially successful in this
application, there is
no reason to deviate from the normal principle
that costs follow the result.
[34]
I grant the following order:
[1]
The sixth respondent is granted leave to file the further
supplementary affidavit of Jennifer
Anne Smit dated 15 February 2022;
[2]
The main application brought by the applicants is dismissed;
[3]
The costs of the main application, including the costs of the
hearings on both 21 April 2021 and
29 April 2021 are to be paid by
the applicants, jointly and severally, on the scale as between
attorney and client;
[4]
The applicants are directed to pay the costs of the sixth respondent
in relation to the hearing
on 28 July 2022, jointly and severally.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
: 28 July 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 14 September 2022
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv Ross Shepstone
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Adam Creswick Attorneys
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL
: Adv Douglas Ainslie
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
: Werksmans Attorneys
[1]
Hano Trading CC v JR 209 Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another
2013 (1)
SA 161
(SCA) para 11; Kings Prop Development (Pty) Ltd v Checkmate
Distribution (Pty) Ltd 2019 JDR 1243 (GJ)
[2]
1948 (1) SA 839
(A) at 863
[3]
1946 WLD 15
[4]
Radio Pretoria v Chairman, Independent Communications Authority of
South Africa and Another
2005 (1) SA 47
(SCA) para 39
[5]
At p868
[6]
At pp17-18
[7]
2016 (2) SA 561
(GJ) paras 24 to 26
[8]
2013 (1) SA 549 (GSJ)
[9]
John Walker Pools v Consolidated Aone Trade & Invest 6 (Pty) Ltd
(in liquidation) and Another
2018 (4) SA 433
(SCA) para 10
[10]
Nel v Waterberg Landbouwers Ko-operativewe Vereeniging
1946 AD 597
at 607
[11]
Stainbank v South African Apartheid Museum at Freedom Park and
Another
[2011] ZACC 20
;
2011 (1) BCLR 1058
(CC) para 52
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