Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 708South Africa
National Pride (PTY) Ltd v Boss Foods CC (28717/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 708 (19 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 December 2021
Headnotes
of the issues 2. The proceedings were instituted by way of summons in June 2021. The defendant delivered a plea and counterclaim on 26 August 2021. 3. The plaintiff raised certain objections to the plea and counterclaim, contending that they were irregular in respects it described in a notice delivered in terms of Rule 30(2)(b) on 6 September 2021.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## National Pride (PTY) Ltd v Boss Foods CC (28717/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 708 (19 September 2022)
National Pride (PTY) Ltd v Boss Foods CC (28717/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 708 (19 September 2022)
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sino date 19 September 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No:
28717/2021
REPORTABLE: NO.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO.
REVISED.
19/09/2022
In the matter between:
NATIONAL
PRIDE (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
And
BOSS
FOODS
CC
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Todd AJ
Introduction
1.
This matter came before me as an
interlocutory application brought by the defendant under the
provisions of Rule 30 and Rule 30A
of the Uniform Rules. I will refer
to the parties as in the main action proceedings.
Background and summary
of the issues
2.
The proceedings were instituted by way of
summons in June 2021. The defendant delivered a plea and counterclaim
on 26 August 2021.
3.
The plaintiff raised certain objections to
the plea and counterclaim, contending that they were irregular in
respects it described
in a notice delivered in terms of Rule 30(2)(b)
on 6 September 2021.
4.
The defendant regarded the objections as
trivial and obstructive, and in a letter dated 7 September 2021
invited the plaintiff to
withdraw its Rule 30 notice. The plaintiff
responded that it intended to persist with its objections under Rule
30, and the defendant
asserted that it would oppose any application
brought under the provisions of that rule. This was in September
2021.
5.
The plaintiff did not, however, take any
further steps consequent upon that Rule 30 notice. The time period
for bringing an application
contemplated in Rule 30(2) came and went.
6.
In November 2021 the plaintiff delivered a
notice in terms of Rule 23(1) in which it raised a number of
exceptions to the plea and
counterclaim, including on grounds that
those pleadings were vague and embarrassing. The plaintiff purported
to give notice under
Rule 23(1)(a), but this was, of course, long
after expiry of the 10 day period after receipt of the pleading
within which it was
entitled to give such notice.
7.
This led to the defendant raising
objections under Rule 30 and 30A, which it did by way of a notice
dated 29 November 2021. In essence,
the defendant raised two main
objections. First, it contended that the plaintiff’s notice had
been given out of time. Second,
it contended that the notice had been
given in circumstances in which the plaintiff’s previous
objections under Rule 30 were
still “pending”. The
defendant described this conduct by the plaintiff as “dilatory
and vexatious”.
8.
The plaintiff did not agree with the
defendant’s objections under Rule 30 and 30A and it duly
delivered its notice of exception,
dated 8 December 2021.
9.
This resulted in further notices from the
defendant, again under Rule 30 and 30A. In these notices, which were
delivered on 15 December
2021, the defendant objected to the delivery
of the notice of exception in circumstances in which the notice on
which the exception
was founded, in part at least, had been given
outside the permissible time period. It also objected to the
exception being delivered
in circumstances in which its previous
objections to the underlying notice had not been resolved.
10.
In addition, the defendant persisted with
its complaint that the plaintiff had not either pursued or withdrawn
its own previous
Rule 30 notice, dated 6 September 2021. It contended
that the plaintiff was seeking “to protract this matter, on
trifling
grounds”.
11.
The plaintiff again took no heed of these
objections under Rules 30 and 30A. It did, however, give notice of
its intention to amend
its exception with a view to removing its
reliance on the allegation that the impugned pleading was vague and
embarrassing. In
this way the plaintiff sought to remove its reliance
on any part of the exception that required prior notice to have been
given
within the period prescribed by Rule 23(1)(a).
12.
The plaintiff delivered its notice of
intention to amend its exception on 20 December 2021, and duly gave
effect to that amendment
on 18 January 2022.
13.
This led to the defendant, on 27 January
2022, delivering the application that came before me on 9 September
2022.
14.
In pursuing its application the defendant
relies on the Rule 30 and 30A notices that it delivered on 29
November 2021 and it seeks
to set aside the plaintiff’s notice
in terms of Rule 23(1)(a) dated 11 November 2021 – the notice
that preceded the
exception itself.
The parties’
submissions
15.
Mr Alli, who appeared for the defendant,
submitted in the first instance that the plaintiff’s objections
under Rule 30 communicated
in its notice of 6 September 2021 remained
an obstacle to the further conduct of the proceedings. He submitted
that no further
steps could be taken until those objections had been
resolved, notwithstanding the expiry of the time period within which
the plaintiff
was permitted to bring an application under Rule 30(2).
Since the plaintiff could have sought an extension of time or
condonation
under the provisions of Rule 27, he submitted, in the
absence of a formal withdrawal of the objections they continued to
inhibit
further steps in the proceedings.
16.
Ms Lombard, who appeared for the plaintiff,
submitted that this was not so and that on expiry of the time period
for bringing an
application in terms of Rule 30(2) those particular
objections no longer had any effect and could be ignored.
17.
Second, Mr Alli submitted that although in
the application before me the defendant attacks the notice that
preceded the plaintiff’s
exception, it had always been the
defendant’s intention to deal with all of the pending
interlocutory matters together, and
he submitted that he was entitled
to do this, without having brought a further separate application
pursuant to the notices of
15 December 2021. If the attack on the
notice that preceded the exception was good, then it followed that
the exception could and
should be set aside as well.
18.
Ms Lombard, on the other hand, submitted
that since the only application before me was based on the earlier
Rule 30 and 30A notices
the defendant was not permitted to seek
relief that attacked the exception itself, as subsequently amended.
The defendant had not
brought an application on the strength of its
subsequent notices given on 15 December 2021, and the amendment to
the exception
had rendered the impugned notice in terms of Rule
23(1)(a) irrelevant.
19.
Ms Lombard also submitted that the
application before me had in any event not been properly brought
because it was not supported
by affidavit. Since proof of prejudice
was a prerequisite for success in an application under the provisions
of Rule 30, she submitted,
an application under the Rule must
necessarily be supported by affidavit. She referred me in this regard
to the commentary in Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice Volume II
D1-354 at footnote 3, and the cases referred to there.
20.
Insofar as the defendant relied on the
provisions of Rule 30A, Ms Lombard submitted that reliance on that
rule was misplaced in
the circumstances. She further submitted, in
relation to the merits of the interlocutory applications before me,
that following
the amendment to the exception effected on 18 January
2022 the only subject matter of the exception concerned the
defendant’s
conditional counterclaim. Since what remained of
the exception was solely directed at the contention that the
counterclaim does
not disclose a cause of action, the exception was
now a “stand alone” exception in respect of which no
prior Rule 23(1)
notice was required.
21.
As a result, and since the defendant was
entitled to take an exception and had not been barred from pleading
to the counterclaim,
Ms Lombard submitted that it should have been
apparent to the defendant, before it launched the present application
on 24 January
2022, that the plaintiff no longer relied on the out of
time Rule 23(1)(a) notice. Consequently, there was no purpose in
bringing
the present interlocutory application, the question of the
validity or effect of the Rule 23(1)(a) notice having being rendered
“moot”. This, Ms Lombard submitted, meant that the
present interlocutory application before me was an abuse of process
and she submitted that it warranted a punitive costs order.
22.
In reply, Mr Alli again pressed me to
accept that it was impermissible for the plaintiff to have taken any
steps towards amending
its exception in circumstances in which the
defendant’s objections under Rule 30 were pending and where the
plaintiff had
itself failed to withdraw or proceed with its own
earlier Rule 30 objections, which preceded the exception procedure
that it had
followed. The Plaintiff, he submitted, had left its own
Rule 30 objections “hanging in the air” and was not
entitled
to ignore the objections taken to its Rule 23(1)(a) notice
and to proceed with bringing an exception and subsequently amending
it.
Evaluation
23.
The parties have become embroiled in a
convoluted procedural tangle. Each blames the other, and each submits
that the other is abusing
this court’s process and should be
mulcted with punitive costs.
24.
In these circumstances it was somewhat
surprising to hear both parties submit that they were anxious to get
the proceedings on track
and moving in the direction of a trial as
expeditiously as possible.
25.
It seems to me that both parties must bear
some responsibility for the tangle. Both appear to have lost sight of
the fact that a
litigant has a duty to take the most expeditious
course to bring litigation to a conclusion: see Wallis JA in
Moila
v City of Tshwane
[2017] ZASCA
15
at paragraph
[9]
.
A sensible case management
meeting between them would have been a good way to cut through a
number of misperceptions that appear
to have contaminated the conduct
of the matter.
26.
Ultimately what the defendant seeks to do
is to attack the exception, so that the plaintiff is precluded from
taking it.
27.
I am satisfied that it the defendant is
entitled to pursue the present application on notice and without an
affidavit. It seems
to me that prejudice in the conduct of a case can
be established in a case such as the present one, where the issues
are primarily
about the procedure adopted, without an affidavit. It
would be of little assistance to the court to be presented in an
affidavit
with what are essentially legal submissions about prejudice
in the conduct of the case.
28.
Broadening its attack on the exception, the
defendant seeks to characterize the exception as dilatory and
meritless. In that regard,
I agree with Ms Lombard that the merits of
the exception are not before me. I also accept that the plaintiff is
entitled to bring
an exception, good or bad, in relation to the
counterclaim in circumstances in which it has not been barred from
pleading to the
counterclaim.
29.
More importantly, I agree with Ms Lombard
that the notice that preceded the exception, which is the focal point
of the defendant’s
attack on the exception, has been rendered
irrelevant by the subsequent amendment to the exception. By excluding
any assertion
that the counterclaim is vague and embarrassing, the
amendment brings the exception within more limited grounds that do
not require
any prior notice.
30.
For that reason, the defendant’s
attack on the exception by attacking the validity of the prior notice
cannot succeed.
31.
It does not follow, however, that the
defendant’s attack on the exception constitutes an abuse of
process. It is true that
the defendant has to some extent tripped
itself up in multiple interlocutory notices. On the other hand the
plaintiff has itself
raised various technical objections in different
ways, first under Rule 30, not pursued, then by way of a Rule
23(1)(a) notice
that was long out of time. It ignored objections to
this, and delivered an exception that was in part dependent on the
validity
of the out of time notice. Although it has now corrected
this by amending the exception, whittling it down to something which
I
am satisfied it is entitled to proceed with, its approach is hardly
a model of the effective use of this court’s rules. I
would,
however, stop short of characterizing its conduct as an abuse of
process either.
32.
Both parties have been clumsy in their
efforts to progress the matter, if that is indeed what they have
attempted to do.
33.
The path ahead is, now, clear. The
plaintiff’s exception must be determined. Depending on that
outcome, the plaintiff must
plead to the counterclaim and the matter
must proceed to trial. The parties would be well advised, once
pleadings have closed,
to make good use of Rule 37 whose purpose is
to promote the effective disposal of the litigation.
Order
34.
In the circumstances I make the following
order –
The defendant’s
application is dismissed with costs.
C Todd
Acting Judge of the
High Court of South Africa.
REFERENCES
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv. Y Alli
Instructed
by:
Wadee Attorneys
For
Defendant:
Ms. N Lombard
Instructed
by:
Cox Yeats Attorneys
Hearing
date:
09 September 2022
Judgment
delivered:
19 September 2022
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