Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 1019South Africa
De Jager v Heyman (12/31738) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1019 (6 December 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## De Jager v Heyman (12/31738) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1019 (6 December 2022)
De Jager v Heyman (12/31738) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1019 (6 December 2022)
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sino date 6 December 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 12/31738
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
06/12/2022
In
the matter between:
DE
JAGER, SANDRA
LILIAN
Plaintiff
and
HEYMAN,
ALAN
CYRIL
Defendant
ORDER
Having:
(a)
Heard counsel for the parties; and
(b)
Considered the matter,
IT
IS ORDERED:
1.
the amended report of the referee, Mr
Henry Robert Walton, dated 28 April 2017 is adopted:
1.1.
wholly;
1.2.
without modification.
as
envisioned in
Section 38(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, No. 10 of
2013
, with specific reference to paragraphs 119 – 122, thereof;
2.
The Defendant is ordered to pay to the
Plaintiff;
2.1.
the sum of R8 348 818.00 (Eight million
three hundred and forty-eight thousand eight hundred and eighteen
Rand) (“the capital
sum”);
2.2.
interest on the capital sum:
2.2.1.
a
tempore
mora
;
2.2.2.
at the prescribed rate of interest of
10.25 % per annum;
2.2.3.
calculated:
2.2.3.1.
from 28 April 2017 being the date of the
initial report of the referee;
2.2.3.2.
to date of final payment;
2.3.
costs of suit, including:
2.3.1.
the costs of the referee;
2.3.2.
the costs of senior counsel;
3.
With reference to claims which were
still pending on 20 February 2017 as envisaged in paragraph 4.2 of
the order in this action
dated 22 November 2016:
3.1.
the net fee after:
(a)
recoupment of disbursements
(b)
accounting for value added tax,
shall
be apportioned between the parties as follows:
3.1.1.
40% to the Plaintiff;
3.1.2.
60% to the Defendant;
3.2.
the overhead costs per annum to be
recouped from the fee as contemplated in paragraph 3.1 (a) and (b)
supra
,
shall:
3.2.1.
be calculated per file:
3.2.1.1.
at the rates reflected below;
3.2.1.2.
employing the base figure of 2016;
escalated
by the average annual inflation rate per annum for the years
following 2016, as reflected in the table hereunder:
Year
Inflation
Amount
2012
5.75%
3124
2013
5.77%
3304
2014
6.12%
3507
2015
4.51%
3665
2016
6.59%
3906
2017
5.18%
4108
2018
4.50%
4293
2019
4.10%
4469
2020
3.20%
4652
2021
4.60%
4801
3.2.2.
be apportioned between the parties as
follows:
3.2.2.1.
40% to the Plaintiff;
3.2.2.2.
60% to the Defendant;
3.2.3.
in order to facilitate ease of
calculation will be:
3.2.3.1.
calculated on the basis that no
adjustments will be made for the month in which the Road Accident
Fund payment was received;
3.2.3.2.
performed on an annual basis;
3.3.
payments thus calculated shall be paid
to the party entitled to such payment within two months of receipt of
the payment from the
Road Accident Fund.
JUDGMENT
MOOSA
AJ
Nature
of the dispute and litigation history
1.
The matter started as an application by
the present Plaintiff as Applicant against the current Defendant as
Respondent to declare
the business relationship between the Plaintiff
who is a duly admitted attorney and the Defendant also a duly
admitted attorney,
from August 2000 to be a partnership and that the
conditions of the verbal agreement between the parties as varied from
time to
time, relating to their partnership be confirmed.
2.
The Plaintiff practises as a sole
practitioner under the name and style of “
De
Jager- Du Plessis”
3.
The Defendant who specializes in Road
Accident Fund, (” RAF”) and personal injury claims has
since March 2012 practised
for his own account under the name and
style of “
Heyman Attorneys”.
4.
During or about August 2000 the parties
entered into an agreement whereby they would run a RAF practice,
which would also include
personal injury claims.
5.
This arrangement was never reduced to
writing, the essence of the arrangement was that the Plaintiff would
supply the infrastructure
and concomitant overhead costs to run the
practise, while the Defendant would contribute his specific skill and
experience to the
practise.
6.
The parties agreed on a split of fees
earned on these matters for their respective contributions to the
practise, this agreement
was varied three times in terms of overhead
responsibility, funding of disbursement and fee split between the
parties, first in
September 2005, then in February 2007 and finally
in March 2010.
7.
The parties are
ad
idem
about the contents of the
variations of the aforementioned fee sharing arrangements albeit that
they were not reduced to writing
8.
The relationship between the parties
having deteriorated, In July 2011 the Defendant informed the
Plaintiff of his intention to
terminate the relationship on 31 March
2012. On 28 February 2012 the Defendant vacated the premises and
transferred a significant
part of the RAF practise to his new
premises.
9.
Between the period 2013 and 2018 the
parties entered into protracted litigation, regarding inter alia,
costs incurred by the joint
practise, the apportionment of payments
received from the RAF since the inception of the arrangement and
apportionment of future
fees to be earned in matters transferred by
the Defendant to his new premises.
10.
In
terms of a court order granted by Francis J, dated 24 October 2014.
[1]
This action therefore
premised on the basis that the notice of motion in the original
application be deemed to be a simple summons,
the Plaintiff having
delivered a declaration to which the Defendant pleaded, raising
several special pleas.
11.
On
19 February 2015, the Plaintiff filed a notice of amendment in terms
of
Rule 28
amending her declaration.
[2]
12.
On
9 October 2015, the Defendant filed his special pleas and plea.
[3]
13.
The
matter was set down for trial in November 2016 and Mojapelo DJP
ordered that by agreement between the parties that a referee
be
appointed in terms of the provisions of
Section 23
of the
Superior
Courts Act of 2013
to compile a report, such order setting out the
specific requirements and terms of the mandate to the referee (“The
appointment
order”).
[4]
14.
The
litigation process continued and despite case management, the parties
were unable to settle the matter. Following a further
interlocutory
application disputing the referees report on 7 August 2018 Wright J,
ordered that the application be dismissed and
specifically that; “the
matter
be continued on the pleading as they are or as it may be amended”
.
[5]
15.
The Defendant raises two issues for the
consideration of this court:
15.1.
That the special pleas of the Defendant
in this action remain alive, notwithstanding the consensual granting
of the appointment
order and that the order of Wright J is suggestive
that the merits of the matter are resurrected and thereby still
require adjudication.
15.2.
That the Defendant resists the adoption
of the court appointed referee’s report on the basis that the
report does not coincide
with the views of the expert of the
Defendant.
Special
Pleas
16.
Merits and quantum in a patrimonial
damages claim are inextricably linked and it is a logistical
nightmare and costly exercise for
a Plaintiff to simultaneously
prepare a matter on the quantum, especially when merits are disputed
or there is a real possibility
that a Plaintiff will not succeed on
the merits. In doing so, a Plaintiff risks putting the cart before
the horse and opens itself
to unnecessary wasted costs.
17.
On
14 November 2016, approximately one week prior to the appointment
order the Defendants attorney Mr Ian Allis transmitted an email
[6]
to the plaintiff, copying all parties and their counsel.
18.
The import of this email was to motivate
for an appointment of a referee to consider if any, the quantum
liability of the Defendant
to the Plaintiff, not for the referee to
consider the merits of the matter.
19.
The
appointment order granted by Mojapelo DJP on 22 November 2016
[7]
therefore resulted from the motivation of Mr Allis for the
appointment of a court appointed referee to consider the quantum of
liability, if any that the Defendant may have to the Plaintiff.
20.
There is not the slightest suggestion
from the wording of the appointment order that merits remain
disputed, in fact the appointment
order clearly confirms that a fee
sharing arrangement existed between the parties and goes on further
to instruct the referee on
the different timelines, fee split
percentages and specific direction of the methodology to be used for
the calculation of any
financial liability that the Defendant may
have to the Plaintiff.
21.
Further the Defendant consented to the
appointment order being granted. The contention that the merits of
the matter are still alive
at this stage are simply opportunistic and
mala fide.
22.
Following the Plaintiff amending her
declaration, the Defendant wished to raise the point that the
Plaintiff had abandoned a part
of her claim viz; that a partnership
existed between the parties.
23.
That in amending her claim to that of a
fee sharing arrangement, read with the Defendant’s
understanding of the import of
the Wright J order the matter would
then be
res judicata.
24.
The
Defendant had almost four years from the date of the appointment
order to raise such a plea of estoppel and did not do so,
In
Body Corporate of 22 West Road South v Ergold Property Number 8
CC
[8]
,
Burochowitz J correctly held;
“
The
act of abandonment is of a unilateral nature and operates ex nunc and
not ex tunc. It precludes the party who has abandoned
its rights
under the judgement from enforcing the judgement but the judgement
still remains in existence with all its intended
legal consequences.
The
opposite party need not accept such abandonment. It was open to the
defendant to accept the abandonment, which it did do in
the present
case. Had the defendant accepted the abandonment it would have been
precluded from raising a plea of res judicata”.
25.
The merits having already being conceded
at the time of the appointment order and the specials pleas
accordingly having no moment.
Referee’s
report/s
26.
On the question of the evaluation of the
quantum of damages in this matter two reports were filed;
26.1.
The
amended report of the court appointed referee, Mr Henry Robert
Walton, dated 28 April 2017. (“The Referee’s report”)
[9]
26.2.
The
Defendant filed a notice in terms of
rule 36(9)(b)
dated 15 July 2020
attaching the report of his expert Mr Shalom Golovey (“The
Golovey report”).
[10]
27.
Mr Walton has emigrated to The Republic
of Cyprus and accordingly testified via video link. He testified at
length and took the
court through the report and confirmed that his
report was based and formulated on the directions of the appointment
order, save
for one aspect, Viz the application of the Referee’s
discretion in relation to the apportionment of overheads during the
period that the Defendant practised as Heyman attorneys from the
period 2012, this is discussed more fully hereunder.
28.
The
Defendants did not call Mr Golovey to testify and criticised the
Referees report on three core bases, deriving these conclusions
from
the Golovey report;
(a)
That the report was based on an
accrual basis vs a cash basis.
29.
Save for this assertion, the Defendant
lead no evidence that the Referees report was based on an accrual
basis as alleged.
30.
The
Referee confirmed that his calculations were based strictly on a cash
received basis as per the instructions of the appointment
order.
31.
The
Referee testified that he downloaded every single transaction in the
respective attorney’s Trust account and books, whereafter
he
was able to identify:
31.1.
Cash transactions
31.2.
Payments received from the RAF
31.3.
All payments made to the Defendant and
by the Defendant
31.4.
Lastly, he looked at the overheads.
32.
That he was able to determine a cash
movement from the parties respective Trust accounts and this allowed
the Referee to determine
that he was working with cash and only cash.
33.
This criticism therefore being devoid of
any merit.
(b)
That the apportionment of overheads
was incorrect.
34.
The
Defendant criticised the Referees report for the fact that the
Referee apportioned overheads amongst the all then current files
(paragraph 74 the Referees report).
[11]
35.
The Referee testified that after 2012 he
had no real numbers to work with and he had to be fair, his approach
was that the Plaintiff
should not be entitled to income without
carrying her share of the expenses.
36.
He then applied a cost accounting
principle, whereby he would allocate a cost per file in respect of
both parties.
37.
That he considered that a file stopped
carrying costs when the matter ended, gets paid up or is withdrawn,
essentially when there
is no possibility of that file earning an
income.
38.
Between the period 2012 to the time that
the Referee’s report was generated the Defendants practise
generated Twenty-three
million Rand and therefore an asset was
created.
39.
The Referee testified that he had no
discretion as to how the population and allocation of fees was made,
no discretion as to what
to recognize what happens in the Trust
accounts or how the overheads up to 2012 were calculated.
40.
In the allocation of overheads post the
2012 period the Referee applied his discretion and the concept of
natural justice and applied
something that was fair and equitable,
thereby decreasing what would be owing to the Plaintiff.
41.
The
Defendants contended that the overheads of the Defendant post the
2012 period in fact extinguished the Plaintiffs entire claim,
this
allegation was not substantiated with an objection to the Referees
methodology used or with a calculation to dispute this.
42.
In the absence of any reasonable
explanation and computation to support the Defendants above
contention, this criticism must also
fail
(c)
That the Plaintiff was not entitled to fees after the termination
43.
Paragraphs 3.4 and 4 of the appointment
order makes specific provision for the Plaintiffs entitlement to fees
with reference to
the post – termination period, the Plaintiff:
43.1.
was entitled to share in the fees;
43.2.
would receive 40% of the fees;
43.3.
was
liable to suffer a deduction of 40 % of the overheads of the
Defendant’s practice.
[12]
44.
The Referee’s calculations
therefore accord with the instruction emanating from the appointment
letter.
45.
The Golovey report makes the assertion
that the Plaintiff is not entitled to share in the fees earned after
the termination of the
common practice, on the basis that she did not
share in the overheads of the Defendants practice.
46.
Save for this criticism, the Golovey
report completely ignores the appointment order, does not
substantiate that the Referees report
is unreasonable, irregular,
wrong or inequitable, this criticism therefore also devoid of merit.
Section
38
1cm; line-height: 150%">
47.
Section 38(1)
provides:
“
38
Reference of particular matters for investigation by referee
(1)
The
constitutional court and, in any civil proceedings, any Division may,
with the consent of the parties, refer-
(a)
Any
matter which requires extensive examination of documents or a
scientific technical or local investigation which in the opinion
of
the court cannot be conveniently conducted by it; or
(b)
Any matter which relates wholly
or in part to accounts; or
(c)
Any other matter arising in such
proceedings,
for
enquiry and report to a referee appointed by the parties, and the
court may adopt the report of any referee, either wholly or
in part,
and may remit such report for further enquiry or report or
consideration by such referee, or make such other order in
regard
thereto as may be necessary or desirable”
48.
In the matter of Wright vs Wright and
Another, Kathree-Setiloane J held:
1.1
“
[16]
The test applied for rectification of an expert valuator’s
report which is akin to that of a referee’s report,
accords
with the test applied in Estate Young and Chaffer, albeit that the
jury system has been discontinued in South Africa. A
referee’s
report as contemplated in
s19bis
of the Act, is a finding of an
expert appointed by the court, to investigate and provide a report of
his or her findings to the
court on questions of fact. A court should
therefore, be “extremely slow” to interfere with these
findings, unless
it can be shown that the findings are so
unreasonable, irregular or wrong, so as to lead to a patently
inequitable result.
[13]
49.
In this matter, the Golovey report which
was procured by the Defendant to bolster the defendants claim of no
liability served only
to level criticisms which were unmotivated and
unsubstantiated.
50.
By contrast the Referee’s report,
was initiated at the instance of the Defendant and by agreement
between the parties in terms
of a court order and the Referee was
independently appointed by SAICA an independent accounting body and
accordingly no bias could
be attributed to the Referee’s
findings.
51.
The Referee’s report was well
motivated, structured, logical and in compliance with the appointment
order. In so far as the
Referee applied his discretion, the Defendant
placed no evidence before this court to gainsay this discretion. I
found the discretion
applied to be fair, equitable and persuasive.
52.
Judgement is therefore granted in favour
of the plaintiff in terms of the order enumerated above.
T.
MOOSA AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 06 December 2022
For
the Plaintiff:
Plaintiff’s
Counsel:
H B
Marais SC
Email:
Cell:
083 441 5429
For
the Defendant:
I
Allis
Email:
Cell:
082 776 6554
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
06
December 2022
[1]
CaseLines 074-4 -12
[2]
CaseLines 034-1-7
[3]
CaseLines 030-1 - 22
[4]
CaseLines 074-14
[5]
CaseLines 074-21
[6]
CaseLines 078-16, item 2 of the schedule to the Plaintiff’s
supplementary discovery affidavit, CaseLines 028-328
[7]
CaseLines 074- 14 -17
[8]
Body Corporate of 22 West Road South v Ergold Property Number 8 CC
2014 JDR 2258 (GJ) pg. 6
[9]
CaseLines 033 -45 – The Referee’s Report
[10]
CaseLines 033-272-283 – The Golovey Report
[11]
CaseLines 033-15, paragraph 74
[12]
CaseLines 074-15-16
[13]
Paragraph 16 of the judgement in Wright vs Wright and Another
2013
(3) SA 360
(GSJ), confirmed on appeal in Wright v Wright and Another
2015 (1) SA 260
(SCA) (“the SCA judgement”).
Section 19
bis referred to therein is the predecessor of
Section 38
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