Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 980South Africa
Dragon City Management (Pty) Limited and Another v Anglican Church of Southern Africa: Diocese of Johannesburg (20209/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 980 (12 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dragon City Management (Pty) Limited and Another v Anglican Church of Southern Africa: Diocese of Johannesburg (20209/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 980 (12 December 2022)
Dragon City Management (Pty) Limited and Another v Anglican Church of Southern Africa: Diocese of Johannesburg (20209/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 980 (12 December 2022)
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sino date 12 December 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No:
20209/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
In the
matter between:
DRAGON
CITY MANAGEMENT (PTY) LIMITED
First Applicant
ANCHOR
PROJECTS (PTY)
LIMITED
Second Applicant
And
THE ANGLICAN CHURCH OF
SOUTHERN AFRICA:
DIOCESE
OF JOHANNESBURG
Respondent
In Re:
THE ANGLICAN CHURCH OF
SOUTHERN AFRICA:
DIOCESE
OF JOHANNESBURG
Applicant
And
DRAGON CITY MANAGEMENT
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
REGISTRATION
NUMBER:
2016/351548/07
First Respondent
ANCHOR PROJECTS
PROPRIETARY LIMITED
REGISTRATION
NUMBER:
2016/351555/07
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
Matojane J
Introduction
[1]
This is a condonation application to condone the first and second
applicants' late
filing of the replying affidavit to the applicants'
condonation application for the late filing of the review of
taxation.
[2]
The taxation took place on 7 September 2021, resulting in a taxed
bill of costs in
the amount of R602,694.55. The applicants had 15
days within which they could bring an application for review of the
taxed bill
of costs. The last day being 29 September 2021.
Background
facts relevant to the two applications
[3]
The litigation between the parties has been long and arduous,
spanning over about
two years.
The litigation commenced with
an urgent application on 13 November 2018, which resulted in an order
by the agreement being made
that applicants would stop construction
work on the respondent's property pending mediation. The mediation
effort was unsuccessful.
On 16 May 2020, this Court granted an order
evicting the applicants from the respondent's properties. On 31 June
2020, the applicants
unsuccessfully applied for leave to appeal the
high court order. The application was dismissed with costs.
Thereafter applicants
unsuccessful sought to rescind the judgment and
order of the high Court.
[4]
after that, the applicants petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal for
leave to appeal,
which was also dismissed with costs. The applicants
then brought an application to the Supreme Court of Appeal for
reconsideration,
and the application was also dismissed with costs on
16 December 2020.
[5]
The bill of costs was finally taxed on 7 September 2021, resulting in
a taxed bill
of costs in terms of which applicants are to pay an
amount of R602,694.55. The applicants did not respond to the
defendant's attorney's
letter demanding payment, and on 6 October
2021, another letter was dispatched by the respondent incorporating
the additional taxed
allocator for the failed application for
reconsideration in terms of section 17(2)(f). The letter specifically
stated that should
payment not be forthcoming, a warrant of execution
would be issued.
[6]
The respondent instructed the sheriff to attach all the applicants'
movable goods
that were still being illegally stored on the
respondent's property in contravention of the court order.
[7]
On 18 October 2021, the sheriff attempted to remove the attached
goods. The following
day on 19 October 2021,
a week after the
attachment, the
applicants brought the condonation
application with the review application attached.
After that,
the applicants paid the amount of R602,694.55 to the respondent's
attorneys in terms of the taxed bill of costs dated
7 September 2021.
[8]
According to the sheriff's return of service in respect of the
removal of the attached
goods dated 28 October 2021, the applicants
vacated the respondent's premises and unlawfully removed the goods
that were under
judicial attachment.
[9]
The respondent filed its opposing affidavit to the condonation
application on 29 October
2021. The
dies
for the applicants to
file a replying affidavit lapsed on 15 November 2021 in terms of Rule
6(5)(e), and the applicants' heads of
argument were due on 29
November 2021.
[10]
On 13 December 2021, the respondent placed the applicants on teams to
comply with the practice
directive and file their heads of argument,
failing which an application to compel would be launched. On 15
December 2021, the
applicants sent an email to the respondent
requesting an indulgence to file heads of argument on 14 January 2022
due to the closure
of their offices that day for the festive period.
The applicants were afforded an extension of time until 14 January
2022 to deliver
heads of argument. The applicants filed heads of
argument on 18 January 2022 instead. All along, the applicants gave
the impression
that no replying affidavit would be filed. It is not
explained why the applicants chose to file the replying affidavit on
10 February
2022 and the condonation application only on 24 February
2022. The delivery of the replying affidavit was not only excessively
out of time (72 days late), it was served a month after both parties
had filed their respective heads of argument, which is irregular.
Applicable legal
principles
[11]
The Constitutional Court restated the legal principles applicable to
the granting of condonation
in Steenkamp and Others v Edcon
Limited
[1]
as follows:
[36]
Granting condonation must be in the interest
of justice. This Court in Grootboom set out the factors that must be
considered in
determining whether or not it is in the interests of
justice to grant condonation:
"
[T]he
standard for considering an application for condonation is the
interests of justice. However, the concept of' interests of
justice'
is so elastic that it is not capable of precise definition. As the
two cases demonstrate, it includes the nature of the
relief sought;
the extent and cause of the delay; the effect of the delay on the
administration of justice and other litigants;
the reasonableness of
the explanation for the delay; the importance of the issue to be
raised in the intended appeal; and the prospects
of success. It is
crucial to reiterate that both Brummer and Van Wyk emphasise that the
ultimate determination of what is in the
interests of justice must
reflect due regard to all the relevant factors, but it is not
necessarily limited to those mentioned
above. The particular
circumstances of each case will determine which of these factors are
relevant.
It is now trite that
condonation cannot be had for the mere asking. A party seeking
condonation must make out a case entitling it
to the Court's
indulgence. It must show sufficient cause. This requires a party to
give a full explanation for the non-compliance
with the rules or
Court's directions. Of great significance, the explanation must be
reasonable enough to excuse the default.
The
interests of justice must be determined with reference to all
relevant factors. However, some of the factors may justifiably
be
left out of consideration in certain circumstances. For example,
where the delay is unacceptably excessive and there is no explanation
for the delay, there may be no need to consider the prospects of
success. If the period of delay is short and there is an
unsatisfactory
explanation but there are reasonable prospects of
success, condonation should be granted. However, despite the presence
of reasonable
prospects of success, condonation may be refused where
the delay is excessive, the explanation is non-existent and granting
condonation
would prejudice the other party. As a general proposition
the various factors are not individually decisive but should all be
taken
into account to arrive at a conclusion as to what is in the
interests of justice."
[12]
The explanation provided by the applicants for the delay in filing
the replying affidavit is
unacceptable, unreasonable and
unsatisfactory in a number of respects.
First, the
applicants allege that they had to procure the instructions of their
managing director, Shuk Wa Lam ("Lam"),
who, as of 12
November 2021, was in the process of preparing for a three-month trip
to visit her minor children in Hong Kong on
19 November 2021. It is
alleged that she could not find time during this period to deal with
the replying affidavit as she was
involved in numerous meetings in
which arrangements were made for the running of her extensive
business interests once she was
away.
[13]
The replying affidavit was due on 15 November 2021. There is no
adequate explanation why applicants
could not arrange to obtain
instructions from Lam before her departure on 19 November 2021 when
they knew that Lam would be out
of the country for three months. In
any event, Lam is not the deponent to either the founding affidavit
or the replying affidavit
in the condonation application for the
review of the taxation. She would not have had insight into the
taxation of the bill of
costs. The applicants do not state what
instructions were required from Lam or why these instructions could
not have been obtained
electronically or via email.
[14]
Second, the allegation is made that once Lam arrived in Hong Kong, it
was difficult to obtain
proper instructions from her because of the
time difference between Hong Kong and South Africa. There is no
explanation to show
how the attorneys could not obtain instructions
from Lam based on time differences. There is no explanation for why
the attorneys
could not use accessible electronic means to obtain
instructions.
On the applicants' version, they could not
obtain instructions, yet they delivered the replying affidavit five
days before Lam arrived
back in South Africa.
[15]
Third, the applicants' attorneys state that they closed for the
year-end break on 15 December
2021 and reopened on 10 January 2022
and that the attorney dealing with the matter on behalf of the
applicants was extremely ill
with Covid and only managed to return to
work on 17 January 2022. The further allegation is made that the
other attorney dealing
with the matter was diagnosed with a severe
lung infection and could only commence with work on 24 January 2022.
[16]
The difficulty with these explanations is that the replying affidavit
was due on 15 November
2021, which is a full month before any office
closures. Accordingly, the office closure and the December rush
played no role in
the replying affidavit not been served timeously.
The same applies to the attorneys handling the matter on behalf of
the applicants
being sick; according to the applicants, they were
delivering their heads of argument on 14 January 2022 in the same
matter. There
is no suggestion that the attorneys were sick at the
time the replying affidavit was due. The applicants have thus failed
to provide
an explanation that expounds the full duration of the
period of delay. In Uitenhage Transitional Local Council v South
African
Revenue Service
[2]
2004
(1) 292 (SCA), the Court held that
"...condonation is
not to be had merely for the asking; a full, detailed and accurate
account of the causes of the delay and
their effects must be
furnished so as to enable the Court to understand clearly the reasons
and to assess the responsibility."
[17]
Given the extent of the delay and the poor explanation for the delay,
it is not, in my view,
necessary to consider the applicants' prospect
of success in the main application.
Condonation for late
application for review of the taxed bill of costs
[18]
Just like the explanation for the late serving and filing of the
replying affidavit, the applicants
were required to provide a
reasonable explanation for the delay in serving and filing the review
application.
[19]
The applicants' attorney alleges that the applicants were only made
aware of the taxed bill of
costs on 8 September when the respondent's
attorney sent a communication demanding payment of the taxed amount.
The attorney consulted
with the applicants on 13 September 2021 and
was instructed to file a review application. The two attorneys,
having been present
in the consultation with the applicants, had
mistakenly believed that the other team member would instruct the
cost consultant.
The applicant alleges that the cost consult was
formally instructed on 27 September 2021.
[20]
It bears mentioning that the same expert tax consultant, Mr Fuls, who
was allegedly instructed
on 27 September 2021, attended to and
opposed the taxation on behalf of the applicants for several days,
starting on 23 June 2021
to 7 September 2021. Mr Fuls raised the
disputed points in the bill during the taxation; accordingly, there
was nothing new to
consider for purposes of preparing a review
application. The applicants had failed to explain why it took 13 days
to finalize the
review application when only a portion of the bill of
costs was being disputed.
[21]
It is trite that invariably a litigant cannot be excused if the blame
lies with the attorney.
In Saloojee and Another NNO v Minister of
Community Development
[3]
, the
then AD stated the following about lack of diligence on the part of
an attorney and how a litigant that chose that attorney
as its
representative should not be absolved from the normal consequences of
such a relationship. The Court held:
"
I
should point out, however, that it has not at any time been held that
condonation will not in any circumstances be withheld if
the blame
lies with his attorney. There is a limit beyond which a litigant
cannot escape the results of his attorney's lack of
diligence, or the
insufficiency of the explanation tendered. To hold otherwise might
have a disastrous effect on the observance
of the Rules of this
Court. Considerations ad misericordiam should not be allowed to
become an invitation to laxity. In fact, this
Court has lately been
burdened with an undue increasing number of applications for
condonation in which the failure to comply with
the Rules of this
Court was due to neglect on the part of the attorney. The attorney,
after all, is the representative whom the
litigant has chosen for
himself, and there is little reason why, in regard to condonation of
a failure to comply with a Rule of
Court, the litigant should be
absolved from the normal consequences of such a relationship, no
matter what the consequences of
the failure are."
[22]
The applicants have thus failed to provide a reasonable and
acceptable explanation for the delay
rendering the prospects of
success immaterial. In any event, the prospect of success in a
condonation application is one of the
factors to
be
taken into account when assessing whether it is in the interests of
justice to grant or refuse condonation. The Court must also
weigh the
following other factors against one another, the respondent's
interest in the finality of the judgment, the convenience
of the
Court, and the avoidance of unnecessary delay in the administration
of justice, the list is not exhaustive.
Every step taken by the
applicants has been out of time. The replying affidavit in the
condonation application for the late filing
of an application to
review taxation was filed out of time. The applicants delivered heads
of argument out of time before filing
their replying affidavit. They
unlawfully removed goods that were under judicial attachment in
contempt of the court order. This
flagrant disregard for the rules of
the Court and abuse of the court process is also a factor to be taken
into account in assessing
the interest of justice. In my view, the
cumulative effect of all relevant factors is such that it would not
be in the interest
of justice to grant the condonation applications
sought.
In the result, the
following order is made.
1.
The application for the condonation of the
late serving and filing of the review of taxation application dated
18 October 2021 is
refused.
2.
The application for the late serving and
filing of the replying affidavit dated 10 February 2022 is refused.
3.
The applicants are ordered to pay the costs
jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved.
KE
MATOJANE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
For the Plaintiff:
Advocate J Kaplan
Advocate L de Wet
Instructed by Ian Levitt
Attorneys
For the Defendant:
Advocate S Jackson
Instructed by
Cherry-Singh Inc. Attorneys
[1]
[2019]
11 BLLR 1189
(CC), See also Melane v Santam Insurance Co
.
Ltd
1962 (4) SA 531
at 532.
[2]
2004
(1) 292 (SCA)
[3]
1962
(2) SA 135
(A) at 141 C-E
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