Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 841South Africa
Thokan v Kriegler and Another (40781/18) [2022] ZAGPJHC 841 (28 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
28 October 2022
Headnotes
and the applicant was directed to pay the first respondent’s
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Thokan v Kriegler and Another (40781/18) [2022] ZAGPJHC 841 (28 October 2022)
Thokan v Kriegler and Another (40781/18) [2022] ZAGPJHC 841 (28 October 2022)
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sino date 28 October 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
40781/18
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
In
the matter between:
RIDWAN
THOKAN
PLAINTIFF
AND
MARTIN
ANDRE KRIEGLER
FIRST DEFENDANT
PAM
GOLDING PROPERTIES (PTY) LTD
SECOND DEFENDANT
LEAVE TO APPEAL
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 10h00 on the 28
th
of October
2022.
DIPPENAAR
J
:
[1]
The parties will be referred to as in the action proceedings. The
plaintiff,
as applicant, applies for leave to appeal against a
portion of the judgment and order granted by me on 13 September 2022
in terms
of which the first defendant’s second special plea was
upheld and the applicant was directed to pay the first respondent’s
costs.
[2]
The second special plea was that the relief sought in prayer A was
incompetent
and/or bad in law as the first defendant is not and has
never been in possession of the deposit nor the interest on the
deposit
and the deed of sale imposes no contractual obligation on the
first defendant to repay the deposit or any interest, or to pay it
or
to repay it or to refund it. It was further pleaded that the first
defendant and the second defendant cannot both pay, repay
or refund
the same deposit with the interest on it. Consequently, any order to
that effect would be bad in law and incapable of
performance. The
application is opposed by the first defendant.
[3]
My judgment is comprehensive and I stand by the reasons set
out therein.
[4]
In his application for leave to appeal, the plaintiff raises
various grounds for leave to appeal in support of the contentions
that
(i) the second special plea should not have been upheld and (ii)
an order should not have been granted directing the plaintiff to
pay
the first defendant’s costs.
[5]
The grounds are predicated on the contentions that this court
“
did not exercise her discretion judicially and/or failed to
consider or adequately consider and/or was influenced by incorrect
principles
and/or [was] affected by a misdirection on the facts, or
reached a decision that could not reasonably have been reached by a
court
properly directing itself to the relevant facts and principles
in the grant of the relief challenged and/or erred in the judgment”.
[6]
The
plaintiff argues that there are reasonable prospects of success that
another court will grant a different costs order as envisaged
by s
17(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act
[1]
and seeks leave to appeal to the Full Court. In the present instance
it was not contended by the plaintiff that there are compelling
reasons to grant leave to appeal as envisaged by s 17(i)(a)(ii) of
the Act.
[7]
Leave
to appeal may only be granted where a court is of the opinion that
the appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success,
which
prospects are not too remote
[2]
.
A sound rational basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of
success must be shown to exist
[3]
.
[8]
The second special plea ultimately devolved into a costs
argument, the plaintiff having conceded that he was not entitled to
an
order in terms of prayer A of his particulars of claim during an
application for separation at the commencement of the trial. As
the
second special plea was upheld, costs followed the result and the
plaintiff was directed to pay the first defendant’s
costs. The
plaintiff argued that such costs order did not take all the relevant
facts into account.
[9]
The applicant argues that the costs order granted departed
from the general rule that the successful party is entitled to its
costs.
It argued that the court
mero motu
modified the relief
sought as the plaintiff’s claim against the first defendant was
dismissed whereas the first defendant
had sought an outright
dismissal of the plaintiff’s claim. The plaintiff had sought an
order for payment against the first
and second respondent’s
jointly. It was argued that plaintiff succeeded in the principal
relief he had claimed, being repayment
of the full deposit.
[10]
It
was argued that the plaintiff had during the separation application
launched by the first defendant at the commencement of the
hearing
abandoned his claim against the first defendant. Reliance was placed
on
Jacobz
NO v De Clerk and Another
[4]
in support of the proposition that he could abandon or adjust the
relief from the bar at trial. In my view,
Jacobz
is
however distinguishable and does not avail the plaintiff, considering
the facts and the context of that judgment.
[11]
The
parties are in agreement that the exercise of a discretion in
relation to costs is a discretion in a strict sense. As held by
the
Constitutional Court in
Giddey
NO v JC Barnard & Partners
[5]
:
“
The
ordinary approach on appeal to the exercise of a discretion in the
strict sense is that the appellate court will not consider
whether
the decision reached by the court at first instance was correct, but
will only interfere in limited circumstances; for
example, if it is
shown that the discretion has not been exercised judicially or has
been exercised based on a wrong appreciation
of the facts or wrong
principles of law”.
[12]
The
first defendant, in opposing the application relies on the principles
enunciated in
Jacob
G Zuma v the Office of the Public Protector and Others
[6]
that in
the absence of an appeal against the merits and factual findings of a
court, a party may not rely on those allegations to
justify an appeal
on considerations of costs only. Such a party faces a formidable
hurdle to illustrate a reasonable prospect of
success as the court
exercises a true discretion. He argues that an appellate court will
not interfere with the exercise of the
discretion pertaining to
costs, unless there was a material misdirection
[7]
and that no material misdirection was illustrated by the plaintiff.
[13]
I have considered the papers filed of record and the grounds
set out in the application for leave to appeal as well as the
parties’
extensive arguments for and against the granting of
leave to appeal. I have further considered the submissions made in
their respective
heads of argument and
the
authorities referred to by the respective parties.
[14]
In applying the relevant principles to the grounds advanced in
the notice of leave to appeal and in argument, I conclude that the
appeal would not have a reasonable prospect of success as
contemplated in s17(1)(a) of the Act.
[15]
It follows that the application must fail. There is no basis
to deviate from the normal principle that costs follow the result.
[16]
The
first defendant seeks costs on an attorney and client scale based on
clause 15.3 of the agreement concluded between the parties.
It was
held in my judgment that the agreement had lapsed and that costs
should be granted on the normal scale as between party
and party.
[8]
I am not persuaded that the costs of this application should be any
different.
[17]
I grant the following order:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
EF
DIPPENAAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE
OF HEARING
: 27 October 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 28 October 2022
PLAINTIFF’S
COUNSEL
: Adv. Y. Alli
PLAINTIFF’S
ATTORNEYS
:
Thokan Attorneys
FIRST
DEFENDANT’S COUNSEL
: Adv. L. Schӓfer
FIRST
DEFENDANT’S ATTORNEYS
: Amod
Van Schalk Attorneys
[1]
10 of 2013
[2]
Ramakatsa and Others v African National Congress and Another
[2021]
JOL 49993
(SCA) para [10]
[3]
Smith v S
[2011] ZASCA 15
; MEC for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
[2016] ZASCA 176
, para [17]
[4]
[2021] ZAWCHC 49
paras [12] and [13]
[5]
Giddey NO v JC Barnard & Partners
[2006] JOL 18229
(CC) para
[19]
[6]
(1447/18)
[2020] ZASCA 138
(30 October 2020) para [18]
[7]
Zuma supra para [19]-[22]
[8]
At para [66]
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