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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## East and West Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Marsh (Pty) Ltd (7246/2022)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 147 (12 February 2025)
East and West Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Marsh (Pty) Ltd (7246/2022)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 147 (12 February 2025)
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sino date 12 February 2025
SAFLII
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Certain
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 7246/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
DATE
12/02/25
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
EAST
AND WEST INVESTMENTS (PTY)
LTD
Applicants
AND
SIXTY OTHERS
and
MARSH
(PTY)
LTD
Respondent
In
re:
EAST
AND WEST INVESTMENTS (PTY)
LTD
Plaintiffs
AND
SIXTY OTHERS
and
AIG
SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
First Defendant
OLD
MUTUAL INSURE LIMITED
Second Defendant
CENTRIQ
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Third Defendant
GUARD
RISK INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Fourth Defendant
MARSH
(PTY)
LTD
Fifth Defendant
JUDGMENT
Joyini
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an application by the applicants for leave to amend the
particulars of claim in the main
proceedings.
[2]
The application for leave to amend is aimed at correcting the
pleading in the following respects:
[2.1]
The applicants seek to introduce the averment that, in the stead of
Fortress, it is Capital Propfund (Pty) Ltd,
a private company with
registration number 2014/013211/07 that holds the proportionate
interest of 50% in Polokwane Building at
Cnr Hospital & Market
St, Polokwane Central, Polokwane, together with the first plaintiff.
[2.2]
The applicants seek to introduce the averment that, in the stead of
Group 44, it is Mark Batchelor Investments
CC, a close corporation
with registration number C[...] that holds the proportionate interest
of 20% in Polokwane Building at Cnr
Hospital & Market St,
Polokwane Central, Polokwane, together with the first plaintiff.
[2.3]
The applicants seek only to amend the parties that are no longer
forming part of consortium and the joint venture
in order to
correctly cite the actual entities, namely, Capital Propfund (Pty)
Ltd and Mark Batchelor Investments CC.
[2.4]
Counsel for the applicants argued that the debt that would be claimed
in the intended amendment is the same debt
claimed in the existing
particulars of claim and that the institution of the main proceedings
had interrupted the running of the
prescription when the summons was
served.
[3]
The 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th defendants [the insurers] do not oppose
the application.
[4]
It is only the respondent (the 5th defendant in the main proccedings)
who opposes the application
on the ground that the intended amendment
would allegedly introduce claims by Capital Propfund (Pty) Ltd and
Mark Batchelor Investments
CC that have prescribed.
[5]
Counsel for the respondent argues that the claims now sought to be
introdiced have thus prescribed
and the amendment should therefore be
refused. The court was referred to
Section
15(1)
of
the
Prescription
Act 68 of 1969
which
provides:
'The
running of prescription shall, subject to the provisions of ss (2),
be interrupted by the service on the debtor of any process
whereby
the creditor claims payment of the debt.'
[6]
Counsel for the respondent submits that for prescription therefore to
be interrupted by service
of process on the debtor, the summons has
to be one in which “
the creditor claims payment of the
debt.”
[7]
Counsel for the respondent further argues that the authorities on the
correct interplay between
an application for leave to amend and
section 15(1)
of the
Prescription Act are
the Supreme Court of Appeal
judgments in
Associated
Paint & Chemical Industries (Pty) Ltd t/a Albestra Paint
and
Lacquers
v Smit
[1]
and
Blaauwberg
Meat Wholesalers CC v Anglo Dutch Meats (Exports) Ltd
[2]
.
LEGAL
PRINCIPLES
[8]
When adjudicating the dispute between the parties, the court should
be guided by the following
legal principles, set out in the ancient
Moolman
v Estate Moolman:
[3]
[8.1]
it is trite that a litigant may amend his or her pleadings at any
stage of the proceedings before judgment;
[8.2]
a court hearing an application for an amendment has a discretion to
grant it. Such discretion must be exercised
judiciously.
[8.3]
the general approach to amendments is that they should be allowed,
unless the amendment application is made in
bad faith and would cause
an injustice which cannot be compensated with a costs order;
[8.4]
an amendment that would render the particulars of claim excipiable is
impermissible.
[4]
ANALYSIS
AND DISCUSSION
[9]
The court has the discretion to
grant or refuse the amendment, which must be exercised judiciously.
For the court to exercise its
discretion in favour of granting an
amendment, the seeker must demonstrate a measure of good faith and
must offer a reasonable
explanation for why the amendment is
required. The court must then weigh the reasons or explanation given
by the applicant for
the amendment against objections raised by the
opponent, and where the proposed amendment will prejudice the
opponent or would
be excipiable, the amendment should be refused.
[10]
In
Trans-Drakensburg
Bank v Combined Engineering (Pty) Ltd
,
[5]
the
court said:
"Having
already made his case in his pleadings, if he wishes to change or add
to this he must explain the reason and show prima
facie that he has
something deserving of consideration, a triable issue, he cannot be
allowed to harass his opponent by an amendment
which has no
foundation. He cannot place on record an issue of which he has no
supporting evidence where evidence requires or save
perhaps in
exceptional circumstances, introduce an amendment which would make
the pleading excipiable."
[11]
In
Union
Finance Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Bonugli and Another NNO
[6]
the
court held the following:
“
[6]
The core issue raised by the plaintiffs is that the conditional
counterclaims have become prescribed. Before I deal with it
any
further, it is necessary to decide whether prescription can be raised
in these proceedings, being interlocutory in nature.
The defendant,
with reliance on the judgment of Viljoen J (as he then was)
in Rand Staple-Machine Leasing (Pty) Ltd v
ICI (SA) Ltd
1977
(3) SA 199
(W),
submitted that the defence of prescription can only be raised by way
of a special plea in the main action and therefore not
in an
interlocutory application as the plaintiffs have done. In Rand
Staple-Machine the learned judge, in dealing with
an application
for an amendment with reference to the proceedings envisaged in s
17(2) of the Prescription Act 68 of 1969 (the
Prescription
Act), held
that
prescription could only be raised in main proceedings, such as trial
proceedings, and not in intermediate or interlocutory
proceedings.
The judgment has not been referred to in subsequent cases dealing
with this aspect. The opposite view was expressed
by Foxcroft J
in Grindrod (Pty) Ltd v Seaman
1998
(2) SA 347
(C),
where in regard to an application for amendment the learned judge
held that prescription could be raised either if it were
common cause
or in situations where the claim or right to claim were 'known to
have prescribed'. The last-mentioned phrase is a
quotation from the
judgment of Fleming DJP in Stroud v Steel Engineering Co
Ltd and Another
1996
(4) SA 1139
(W) at
1142, where the leaned judge, in regard to an application to amend by
substituting the existing cause of action with
a new cause of action,
held that 'it would make no sense to permit a claim which is known to
have prescribed'. I prefer, and agree
with, the approach adopted
in Grindrod which, as correctly pointed out by counsel for
the plaintiffs, is in line
with the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Appeal in Associated Paint & Chemical Industries (Pty) Ltd
t/a Albestra Paint
and Lacquers v Smit
2000
(2) SA 789
(SCA) para
9 where Grosskopf JA, in regard to an opposed application for
amendment, remarked: 'By raising the question of prescription
in his
opposing affidavit the defendant, in my view, complied with the
provisions of
s
17(2)
of
the
Prescription
Act 68 of 1969
.'
[12]
I
n
Stroud
v Steel Engineering Co Ltd and Another
[7]
the
court held: “
There
remains the contention that because the claim is prescribed, it
should not be allowed. I accept that the Court normally would
not
permit an allegation which has no possibility of advancing the
situation of a litigant and can at best serve as basis for the
need
to hear evidence which leads nowhere. Accordingly, it would make no
sense to permit a claim which is known to have prescribed.
But
if the supervening of prescription is not common cause, the
application for amendment is normally not the proper place to attempt
to have that issue decided.”
[13]
It is quite interesting to note that a judgment by a full bench of
the Kwazulu-Natal High Court has revitalized
the debate whether an
amendment to a pleading should be allowed if the claim, as amended,
has prescribed. In
Heramoney
Salligram and Others v Nalin Salligram and Other
s,
[8]
the court was presented with a case where the first appellant sought
to amend its particulars of claim by replacing an alleged
oral
agreement involving a debt payable by the first respondent with a
cession agreement.
[14]
By way of summary, the respondents opposed the amendment, and argued
that, by referring to a new cession
agreement, the claim in question
was based on a different and separate agreement, and therefore a
different debt was now being
claimed. Since this debt had prescribed,
they argued that the amendment ought not be allowed.
[15]
The KZN High Court framed the question in the following terms: was
the appellant claiming payment of the
same debt or a different debt
in its amended particulars? To answer this question, the court
stressed that the term “debt”
referred to in the
Prescription Act of 1969
is not the same as the cause of action upon
which the debt is based. A cause of action refers to the factual
basis, the set of
material facts that forms the basis of the
plaintiff’s legal right of action. That can be amended.
However, the debt which
forms the basis of the plaintiff’s
right of action needs to remain the same if an amendment is to be
allowed.
[16]
The court explained that, even an original summons which fails to
disclose a cause of action may interrupt
the running of prescription
provided that the right of action in the amended summons is
recognizable as the same or substantially
the same right of action as
that disclosed in the original summons.
[17]
In conclusion, the court held that the application for an amendment
is not normally the proper forum to decide
the issue of prescription.
Once prescription is not common cause, the plaintiff should not be
deprived of his chance to put his
claim before the court. The
defendant will have the opportunity to raise the defence of
prescription in its plea in the same way
that it would raise any
other defence once the amendment has been granted.
CONCLUSION
[18]
In determining this matter, I must be guided by the well-established
principles referred to above applicable
to applications to amend
particulars of claim. In this regard, I need to draw certain
inferences and weigh probabilities as they
emerge from the parties’
respective submissions, affidavits, heads of argument and oral
submissions by parties’ counsel.
[19]
There is a view that
the issue of prescription is best left to the pleadings and ultimate
resolution at trial. I align myself with
this view.
[20]
I also align myself with the view that the respondents in
Salligram
supra
may have made a decision that is not one of the best by
opposing the amendment on the basis that the claim had prescribed.
The
same goes for the respondent in
casu.
Even if an amendment
incorporates a fresh cause of action, our courts are usually inclined
to allow it as long as no prejudice
results that cannot be cured by
an order of costs.
[21]
In
Mabaso
v Minister of Police,
[9]
Goldstone AJ (as he then was) said that ‘
even
in a gross case’
the court should grant an amendment unless there is a likelihood of
prejudice which cannot be cured by a suitable order for costs.
[22]
In
Myers
v Abramson,
[10]
it was held that even though the amendment has the effect of changing
the character of the action and will necessitate fresh evidence
to be
led, our courts will still allow it if it is necessary to determine
the real issues between the parties.
[23]
In
Cordier
v Cordier,
[11]
the court, in an application for an amendment, found that the
plaintiff’s claim had actually prescribed, both in its original
form and in its amended form. The court, however, granted the
amendment, taking the view that the plaintiff might be able to
counter
the defence of prescription by proving an acknowledgement of
liability by the defendant, a waiver of the defence of prescription,
or some other argument. The grant of the amendment would leave it
open to the plaintiff to raise these arguments, whereas refusal
of
the amendment would leave the plaintiff no option but to appeal.
[24]
It is trite that the
court
has the discretion to grant or refuse the amendment, which must be
exercised judiciously. For the court to exercise its discretion
in
favour of granting an amendment, the seeker must demonstrate a
measure of good faith and must offer a reasonable explanation
for why
the amendment is required. The applicants have done this to the
court’s satisfaction. The court must then weigh the
reasons or
explanation given by the applicant for the amendment against
objections raised by the opponent, and where the proposed
amendment
will prejudice the opponent or would be excipiable, the amendment
should be refused. Having weighed the reasons and explanation
given
by the applicants against objections raised by the respondent, I am
of the considered view that the proposed amendments are
not
excipiable and as such, the respondent will not be significantly
prejudiced if the application is granted.
[25]
In considering
the matter, and taking into account all the additional facts,
circumstances
together
with submissions and authorities referred to by counsel,
I
am of the considered view that the applicant has made out a case for
the relief sought. I am of the view that the a
pplicant
has satisfied all the legal principles referred to above.
It is therefore reasonable and fair that I should grant the
applicant’s application for the amendment of particulars of
claim.
COSTS
[26]
I am entitled to consider all the relevant circumstances surrounding
this matter. In substance, the applicants
have been successful
against the respondent. The rule that costs should follow the event
is still applicable in these circumstances.
The respondent has not
shown any good reason why this rule should not be applied.
[27]
I have considered both parties’ argument relating to the costs
of this application. I am accordingly
inclined to grant costs in
applicants’ favour. The respondent/fifth defendant shall pay
the costs of the application, including
costs of two counsel, where
so employed, both counsel on scale C.
ORDER
[28]
In the circumstances, I make the following order:
[28.1]
The applicants are granted leave to amend their particulars of claim
as per the notice of intention to amend dated
10 November 2023, by:
[28.1.1]
replacing the description of the twenty-seventh plaintiff on page 2
of
the combined summons to reflect the following: “
Capital
PropFund (Pty) Ltd REG NO 2014/013211/07;”
[28.1.2]
replacing the description of the twenty-seventh plaintiff on page 13
of
the combined summons to reflect the following description:
“
Capital PropFund (Pty) Ltd, a private company with
registration number 2014/013211/07 and registered address situated at
C[...]
P[...], B[...] [...], C[...] C[...], Morning Side, Gauteng,
2196, dully registered and incorporated with the company laws of the
Republic of South Africa;”
[28.1.3]
replacing paragraph 27 of the particulars of claim with the following
paragraph:
“
The twenty-seventh plaintiff is Capital PropFund
(Pty) Ltd, a private company with registration number 2014/013211/07
and registered
address situated at C[...] P[...], B[...] [...],
C[...] C[...], Morning Side, Gauteng, 2196, duly registered and
incorporated with
the company laws of the Republic of South Africa;”
[28.1.4]
replacing the description of the twenty-seventh plaintiff on page 2
of
the combined summons to reflect the following: “
Mark
Batchelor Investments CC REG NO C[...];”
[28.1.5]
replacing the citation of the thirty-second plaintiff on page 14 of
the
combined summons to reflect the following description: “
Mark
Batchelor Investments CC, a closed corporation with limited liability
and situated at 6[...] H[...] Road Bryanston 2191,
duly
registered and incorporated with the company laws of the Republic of
South Africa with registration number C[...];”
[28.1.6]
replacing paragraph 32 of the particulars of claim with the following
paragraph:
“
The thirty-second plaintiff is Mark Batchelor
Investments CC, a closed corporation with limited liability and
situated at 6[...]
H[...] Road, Bryanston, 2191, duly
registered and incorporated with the company laws of the Republic of
South Africa with
registration number C[...];”
[28.1.7]
inserting, a new row at the end of the table at paragraph 120 to
reflect
the following:
Lynnwood
Erf 3[...]
Second
Plaintiff
R247,984.75
[28.2]
The respondent/fifth defendant shall pay the costs of the
application, including costs of two counsel, where so employed,
both
counsel on scale C.
T
E JOYINI
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the applicants
:
Adv
PG Cilliers SC and Adv C Richard
Instructed
by
:
Weavind
and Weavind Attorneys
Email:
nic@weavind.co.za
/
pgcilliers@rsabar.com
/ conrad@clubadvocates.co.za
For
the respondent
:
Adv
A Franklin SC and Adv S Quin
Instructed
by
:
Cox
Yeats Attorneys
Email:
rhoal@coxyeats.co.za
/
revans@coxyeats.co.za
/
aefranklin@group621.co.za
/ quin@group621.co.za
Date
of Hearing:
24
January 2025
Date
of Judgment:
12
February 2025
This
Judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the Court online
digital data base of the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
e-mail to
the Attorneys of record of the parties. The deemed date and time for
the delivery is 12 February 2025 at 10h00.
[1]
2000
(2) SA 789 (SCA).
[2]
[2004]
1 SA 129 (SCA).
[3]
1927
CPD 27
at 29.
[4]
Krischke
v Road Accident Fund
2004 (4) SA 358
(W) at 363B; Bowring Barclays &
Genote (Edms) Bpk v De Kock
[1991] 3 All SA 42
(SWA).
[5]
1967
(3) SA 632(D)
at
640H. See also
Krogman
v Van Reenen
1926
OPD 191
at
194 -195
[6]
2013
(2) SA 449
.
[7]
1996
(4) SA 1139
(W)
.
[8]
[2019]
ZAKZPHC 63 (20 September 2019).
[9]
SA
319 (W) at 323D1980 (4).
[10]
1951
(3) SA 438 (C).
[11]
1984
(4) 524 (CPD).
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