Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 3South Africa
S.A.S v J.M.S (2022/32681) [2025] ZAGPPHC 3 (6 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 January 2025
Headnotes
an applicant for an order for costs need only deliver a notice of his intention to do so. No affidavit is required since the relevant material is already before the court.[1] The relevant material was placed before the court and the respondent availed himself of the opportunity to place an affidavit before court dealing with his grounds of opposition.[2]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## S.A.S v J.M.S (2022/32681) [2025] ZAGPPHC 3 (6 January 2025)
S.A.S v J.M.S (2022/32681) [2025] ZAGPPHC 3 (6 January 2025)
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sino date 6 January 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 2022/32681
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED:
NO
6
January 2025
Judge Dippenaar
In
the matter between:
S[...]
A[...] S[...]
APPLICANT
And
J[...]
M[...] S[...]
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ legal representatives by e-mail and uploading it
onto the electronic platform. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 14h00 on the 06
th
of JANUARY 2025.
DIPPENAAR
J
:
[1]
This is an application for costs under r
41(1)(a) and 41(1)(c), pertaining to an appeal which was withdrawn by
the respondent. The
applicant sought a judgment in terms of costs.
[2]
The genesis of the present dispute was an
opposed urgent application in terms of which the applicant sought to
appoint Adv M Snyman
SC as curator to the parties’ two minor
children (the main application). That application culminated in a
judgment and order
granted by Naythi J on 20 September 2022. Adv
Snyman SC was appointed as curator ad litem and was afforded certain
powers. No order
of costs was made.
[3]
Dissatisfied with the result, the
respondent sought leave to appeal. The applicant opposed the
application. Leave to appeal
was granted. Costs were to be costs in
the appeal. The respondent delivered a notice of appeal. Both parties
delivered practice
notes and heads of argument. The appeal was set
down for hearing on 21 August 2024.
[4]
The respondent removed the appeal from the
roll on 18 March 2024. On the same date, he withdrew his appeal. The
notice of withdrawal,
in relevant part, stated: ‘…
and
the costs to be reserved for argument in the main application by
agreement between the parties
’.
[5]
The applicant enrolled the main application
for the determination of costs.
[6]
On 01 October 2024, the respondent
delivered an affidavit on the costs of the appeal, deposed to by his
attorney of record, Ms Muller.
In sum, her version was that she had a
conversation with the applicant’s attorney, Ms Schoeman on 19
February 2024, during
which the applicant requested the appeal to be
withdrawn and Adv Snyman to be appointed to save costs. She told Ms
Schoeman that
she would take an instruction but, if the respondent
agreed thereto, the respondent would only withdraw the appeal if each
party
paid their own costs. On 20 February, a letter was addressed to
Ms Schoeman. In it, Ms Muller confirmed that the respondent was
willing to agree to the appointment of Adv Snyman SC if he would be
willing to act
pro bono
.
She stated: “
I regrettably omitted
to mention in this letter that each party shall pay their own costs”.
Pursuant to Adv Snyman SC agreeing to
act
pro bono
,
Ms Muller wrote a further letter on 8 March 2024. Therein, it was
recorded that the appeal would be withdrawn on condition that
the
costs be reserved for argument in the main application. On 15 March
2024, Ms Schoeman in writing confirmed the applicant’s
consent
to the proposal that costs be argued in the main application at a
later stage.
[7]
In her affidavit, Ms Muller further
contended that the recordal of the cost issue was wrong and a
bona
fide
error which was carried through in
further correspondence as the parties agreed that each would pay his
and her own costs. She
further contended that as the main application
had been finalised and the court did not grant a costs order, the
cost issue was
res judicata
as costs could not be argued in the main application. It was
contended that what the respondent intended was to bring the
appeal
to an end to save costs of both parties, “although the notices
and correspondence did not eloquently set this out”.
If the
costs issue had not been resolved, the appeal would not have been
withdrawn. It was proposed that each party pay their own
costs of the
appeal.
[8]
I argument, the respondent’s counsel
repeated those contentions and further submitted that a compromise
had been reached that
the appeal be withdrawn on condition that each
party pay their own costs. The applicant on the other hand, submitted
that she was
entitled to costs as the respondent was in the position
of an unsuccessful litigant. It was submitted that the correspondence
did
not evidence any compromise on the costs. She did not file any
affidavit responding to Ms Muller’s affidavit.
[9]
I have various difficulties with the
submissions proffered by the respondent. Whatever the respondent and
his attorney may subjectively
have intended, that was not what was
ultimately conveyed to the applicant. In the notice of withdrawal and
all the correspondence
emanating from the respondent, it was
unequivocally conveyed that costs were to be reserved, to be argued
as part of the main application.
From the correspondence and the
version set out in the affidavit, there is no cogent evidence to
suggest that there was a meeting
of the minds between the parties to
compromise the issue of costs or that they had agreed to each pay
their own costs. The parties
both considered the main application as
the appropriate place to have the costs determined at a later stage.
It was common cause
that there was no other “main application”
pending between the parties.
[10]
It does not avail the respondent that in
the initial discussion between the attorneys on 19 February 2024 it
was stated that the
respondent would only withdraw the appeal if each
party paid their own costs. That discussion occurred prior to Ms
Muller taking
instructions from the respondent. The subsequent
discussions overtook that conversation after Ms Muller had taken
instructions
from the respondent. The documentary evidence reflects
the discussions between the parties. Ultimately, on the respondent’s
own version, costs were to be reserved to be determined in the main
application. Both parties were aware of the contents of the
judgment
of Nyathi J and that the costs of the main application had been
determined therein.
[11]
The argument that the costs issue was
res
judicata
as it was determined in the
main application, lacks merit. It conflates the main application
itself, with the appeal process which
followed. The parties
were fully aware that what remained in dispute was the costs of that
appeal process, not the costs
of the main application. They agreed to
determine that issue in the main application. That makes sense, as it
obviated the need
to have three judges being burdened to hear the
parties’ arguments.
[12]
The respondent further submitted that r 41
does not provide for a reservation of costs and that the applicant
should have applied
for costs in an application in terms of r
41(1)(c).
[13]
Rule 41(1) in relevant part provides:’
’
(a)
A person instituting any proceedings may at any time before the
matter has been set down and thereafter by consent of the parties
or
leave of the court withdraw such proceedings, in any of which events
he shall deliver a notice of withdrawal and may embody
in such notice
a consent to pay costs; and the taxing master shall tax such costs on
the request of the other party.
(c) If no such consent
to pay costs is embodied in the notice of withdrawal, the other party
may apply to court on notice for an
order for costs’’.
[14]
Read
in context, r 41(1)(c) does not by necessity envisage the launching
of a substantive application. Our courts have held that
an applicant
for an order for costs need only deliver a notice of his intention to
do so. No affidavit is required since the relevant
material is
already before the court.
[1]
The
relevant material was placed before the court and the respondent
availed himself of the opportunity to place an affidavit before
court
dealing with his grounds of opposition.
[2]
[15]
By agreeing to reserve the costs of the
appeal to be determined in the main application, the respondent
effectively introduced that
as an issue in the main application,
which had not yet been determined. In setting the main application
down for hearing, the applicant
complied that that arrangement.
[16]
A
party which withdraws its case is as a general principle liable for
costs as it is in the same position as an unsuccessful litigant
and
the opposing party is entitled to its costs.
[3]
Where a party withdraws a claim the other is entitled to cost
unless there are good grounds
[4]
or exceptional circumstances
[5]
for depriving him. A court retains a discretion to do so in
appropriate circumstances.
[17]
On a conspectus of all the facts, the
respondent elected not to pursue the appeal and must be treated as an
unsuccessful litigant.
I am not persuaded that there are any
exceptional circumstances present justifying the applicant to be
deprived of her costs. There
are also no good grounds to do so. It
follows that the application succeeds and the applicant is entitled
to judgment in her favour
for the costs relating to the appeal and
the application for leave to appeal. The costs of this application
must follow the result.
[18]
In the proposed draft order provided by the
applicant, the costs of the application were sought on an attorney
and client scale.
That was however not sought in the application, nor
in the heads of argument. I am further not persuaded that such an
order is
warranted. The granting of costs Scale C is justified given
the complexities involved.
[19]
In the result, the following order is
granted:
[1] The respondent is
directed to pay the costs of the appeal, including the application
for leave to appeal, such costs to be on
Scale C;
[2] The respondent is
directed to pay the costs of this application on Scale C.
EF DIPPENAAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
DATE OF HEARING
:
14 NOVEMBER 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT
:
06 JANUARY 2025
APPLICANT’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv.
X Van NIekerk
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
:
ML
Schoeman Attorneys
RESPONDENT’S
COUNSEL
:
Adv.
W.N. Wannenburg
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
:
Esthe
Muller Inc.
[1]
Nel v OVS Staalkonstruksie en Algemene Sweiswerke
1977 (3) SA 993
(O) at 996H; Wildlife and Environmental Society of South Africa v
MEC for Economic Affairs, Environment and Tourism, Eastern
Cape 2005
(6) SA 123 (EDC).
[2]
Nel supra, at 997C; Wildlife and Environmental Society supra at
129A.
[3]
Germishuys
v Douglas Besproeiingsraad
1973 (3) SA 299
(NC).
[4]
Waste
Products Utilisation (Pty) Ltd v Wilkes and another (Biccari as
interested party) 2003 (2) SA 590 (W).
[5]
Absa
Bank Ltd and others v Robb
[2014] 3 All SA 322
(GSJ); Reuben
Rosenblum Family Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v Marsubar (Pty)
Ltd (Forward Enterprises (Pty) Ltd intervening
2003 (3) SA 547
(C).
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