Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 230South Africa
Beamish v Van Der Merwe (17916/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 230 (11 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Beamish v Van Der Merwe (17916/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 230 (11 March 2025)
Beamish v Van Der Merwe (17916/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 230 (11 March 2025)
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
number:
17916/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
11/3/2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter of:
ANTHONY
KILROY BEAMISH
Applicant
and
MS
VAN DER
MERWE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DE
BEER AJ
Introduction
1.
The applicant has approached this court
seeking an order declaring the respondent a vexatious litigant in
terms of the Vexatious
Proceedings Act, 3 of 1956
(“the
Act”).
2.
The respondent opposes this application on
the basis that the applicant has not satisfied the legal requirements
necessary to warrant
such a declaration.
Legal Framework and
Requirements
3.
Section 2(1)(b) of the Act empowers the
court to prohibit a litigant from instituting legal proceedings
without prior leave of the
court if it is satisfied that the
litigant, i.e., the respondent
in
casu
, has
persistently and without reasonable ground instituted legal
proceedings.
4.
The applicant needs to establish the
following elements:
4.1.
That the respondent has instituted legal
proceedings persistently;
4.2.
Such proceedings were instituted without
reasonable grounds; and
4.3.
That the applicant is entitled to final
relief on the papers in front of court.
5.
The applicant must show a pattern of
repeated litigation rather than isolated incidents.
6.
In
Bissett and Others v Boland Bank Ltd and Another,
[1]
the court emphasised that vexatious litigation had to appear as a
certainty, not merely on a preponderance of probabilities.
7.
The fact that a litigant has been
unsuccessful in previous matters does not automatically render their
litigation vexatious.
8.
Abuse
of process has to be determined by the circumstances of each case. In
general terms, an abuse takes place when procedures
permitted to
facilitate the pursuit of the truth are used for purposes extraneous
to that object.
[2]
The Parties’
Respective Contentions
9.
The applicant contends that the respondent
has a history of initiating multiple proceedings on substantially the
same grounds and
that such conduct indicates vexatious litigation in
terms of the Act.
10.
The respondent denies that their litigation
history meets the threshold for being declared vexatious and contends
that the applicant
has failed to show that the respondent’s
proceedings were unreasonable.
Common Cause Facts And
Relevant Chronology
11.
The respondent alleged that the applicant
sexually assaulted her at her mother’s home, where she resided,
on 31 May 2019,
which assault the applicant denies.
12.
The respondent deposed to an affidavit on
16 December 2019 wherein details of the alleged assault were
provided, and on 17 December
2019, the respondent instituted an
application in the Tshwane Central Magistrate’s Court against
the applicant for a protection
order in terms of the Protection from
Harassment Act, 17 of 2011 and thereafter laid a criminal complaint
at Wierda Brug Police
Station on 19 December 2019.
13.
On 28 January 2020, the National
Prosecuting Authority
(“the NPA”)
issued a
nolle prosequi
certificate in respect of the respondent’s criminal complaint.
14.
The
parties concluded a settlement agreement on 14 August 2020.
[3]
One of the terms thereof was that the respondent withdrew the
harassment application. This agreement confirmed that the respondent
“
is
presently residing with her mother”,
as
was the case in 2019.
15.
On 23 June 2021, subsequent to the
certificate
(nolle prosequi)
,
the respondent instituted a private prosecution against the applicant
in respect of the alleged sexual assault. On 28 July 2021,
the
respondent instituted a further application for a protection order
under the Harassment Act. On 21 October 2021, the respondent
withdrew
the harassment application, and on 3 December 2021 withdrew the
private prosecution.
16.
The
erstwhile application for private prosecution was met by the
applicant’s application for security of costs in the amount
of
R2.5 million.
[4]
17.
No further proceedings have been instituted
by the respondent against the applicant
since
the above withdrawals
.
18.
However,
the applicant has instituted a damages action against the respondent
and her legal representatives for damages in the amount
of R3.0
million, which is still pending. Another seemingly related action has
been instituted against “
Brad
Strydom”.
[5]
19.
The applicant also instituted a complaint
against the respondent with the Legal Practice Council
(“LPC”),
a candidate attorney at the time
.
The court was informed from the bar
that the LPC complaint had been dealt with and that the respondent
was admitted as a legal practitioner
on 20 January 2025.
20.
The current application was instituted in
2022 and ultimately served during 2023. Applicant’s counsel
submitted that the delay
was due to the respondent’s attempt to
avoid service. This aspect should be considered in the context of the
factual timeline
and chronology detailed above.
21.
The timeline suggests that a substantial
period has elapsed from the respondent’s withdrawal of
proceedings until the institution
of this application. During this
time, no further proceedings have been instituted.
22.
Prior
to the institution of this application, as detailed in the founding
affidavit, a second settlement was “
offered”
on the same terms as the previous agreement. The applicant was
“
disinclined
to accept the offer”.
The
purpose of the second settlement was to “
withdraw
all litigation and go our separate ways”.
[6]
23.
Further allegations contained in the
respective affidavits of the parties refer to various irrelevant
aspects and individuals. At
best, these unconfirmed allegations are
intended to create atmosphere.
24.
Both parties have elevated their personal
issues onto social media platforms and continued to advance their
campaigns and claims
in various courts, which is regrettable.
25.
The
applicant refers to the respondent’s psychiatric treatment
posted on Twitter under the rubric of being “
public
record.
[7]
26.
On a conspectus of all the evidence and
common cause facts, the applicant must prove its case for final
relief, essentially that
the respondent has persistently, without
reasonable grounds, instituted legal proceedings. As dealt with
above, there are no current
legal proceedings or live controversies
instituted by the respondent against the applicant. Conversely, the
action instituted by
the applicant against the respondent has not
been finalised.
27.
Also,
as to the allegation of sexual assault, the applicant criticises the
respondent’s version based on the timing thereof,
i.e., that it
occurred on 31 May 2019 but was only prosecuted on 17 December 2019
and mentioned for the first time in an affidavit
the previous day.
The second criticism is that the alleged sexual assault was not
detailed at the outset but in later paragraphs.
Save for the
criticism, the applicant seemingly fails to elaborate on aspects
during May/June 2019, leaving “
it
to the reader to infer”
.
[8]
28.
What seems to be common cause is that the
parties shared space and time during 2019. The applicant was involved
in a relationship
with the respondent’s mother, whom he visited
regularly at the residence where the alleged sexual assault occurred;
the respondent
resided with her mother during the period. The
settlement agreement signed by both parties confirms this. The
consequences and
after-effects of what may or may not have occurred
during 2019 culminated in the various actions and processes detailed
in the
papers. Another alleged domestic incident at the same
residence where the alleged sexual assault took place involved the
applicant,
the respondent, the respondent’s mother and the
brother.
29.
The proverbial he said, she said is a
common thread and theme in the papers. What is, however, relevant, if
not inescapable, is
the “
CONCLUSION
AND RECOMMENDATION
” by the
NPA as recorded in the papers and attached by the applicant to the
founding affidavit. For ease of reference, the
following statement by
the NPA is quoted
verbatim
:
“
Her
(the respondent’s)
story
could be true but it is her word against that of the accused and her
mother will not corroborate her story because of all
the conflict
between them.”
30.
The mere fact that the NPA considered that
the respondent’s allegations of sexual assault “
could
be true
” makes inroads into the
applicant’s contention that proceedings subsequent to 2019 were
instituted without reasonable
grounds.
31.
Although the NPA indicated that there is no
reasonable prospect of a successful prosecution based on the
evidence, it referred to
a criminal prosecution, which carries a more
onerous burden of proof than in civil litigation.
32.
Based on the above, it should be assessed
whether the respondent’s conduct pertaining to previously
instituted but withdrawn
processes was instituted without reasonable
grounds.
33.
The
legal position pertaining to the efficient conduct of litigation by
way of affidavits has been established.
[9]
In the Venmop matter, the court enunciated the important principle
that the conduct and finalisation of litigation in a speedy
and
cost-efficient manner should be a collaborative effort and is
essential. The role of witnesses is to testify to relevant facts
of
which they have personal knowledge. The role of legal representatives
has two key aspects. First is the supervision, organisation
and
representation of evidence of the witnesses and secondly, the
formulation and presentation of argument in support of a litigant’s
case. The diligent observation of those roles facilitates the role of
the judicial officer, which is to arrive at the reason for
determining the issues in dispute, in favour of one or the other of
the parties. Where practitioners neglect their roles, it leads
to the
protracted conduct of litigation in an ill-disciplined manner, the
introduction of inadmissible evidence and the confusion
of fact and
argument, with the attendant increase and cost and delay in its
finalisation, inimical to both expedition and economy.
I will return
to this aspect hereunder when the aspect of costs is addressed.
Application Of The Law
To The Facts
34.
The applicant contends that the institution
and withdrawal of processes detailed above occurred without
reasonable grounds. The
respondent contends the converse. Based on
the withdrawals and that no further processes were instituted
thereafter, the court
finds no basis for the persistency argument.
The withdrawals negate a converse inference or finding, considered
together with the
two attempts to settle the matter to end all
litigation.
35.
Applicant’s counsel submitted that
the answering affidavit was void of particularity and did not address
relevant serious
issues and that the contents should be regarded as
avoiding the same, that the court should attach no weight thereto and
due to
the fact that “
positive
evidence
” was not provided or
issues not explained, the court should reject the respondent’s
version.
36.
As
contained in the heads of argument prepared on behalf of the
applicant, the applicant’s counsel further submitted that
the
Mineral Sands Resource matter
[10]
duly applied to the facts
in
casu
,
indicates that the motive of the various proceedings was “
to
punish and silence the press”.
I debated the applicability of the Mineral Sands judgment with the
applicant’s counsel. The Mineral Sands matter does not
find
application
in
casu,
nor
does it support the applicant’s contention. The applicant was
not silenced. The judgment refers to the fact that a party
can use
court processes and associated legal costs as a means to an
impermissible end, likely to cause appreciable damage to fundamental
rights.
[11]
37.
Various
courts have appositely pronounced upon the principle that whatever
may have been the attitude of litigation in former times,
it is not
in keeping with modern ideas to view it as a game. The object should
be just adjudication, achieved as efficiently and
inexpensively as
reasonably possible. Private funds and stretched judicial resources
should only be expended on genuine issues.
[12]
38.
The current application is not an example
of utilising judicial resources for genuine issues or purposes. Both
parties used court
processes as a means to their personal end, which
is regrettable. The papers are littered with such examples and a
clear testament
thereof.
39.
It is not, however, indicative of the fact
that the court should reject the respondent’s version as
untenable or far-fetched.
40.
The
basic principle in motion proceedings is that the affidavits define
the issues between the parties and the affidavits embody
evidence. An
applicant who seeks relief from a court must make out a case in its
notice of motion and founding affidavit.
[13]
41.
In
Betlane v Shelly Court CC,
[14]
the Constitutional Court stated that it is trite that an applicant
ought to stand and fall by its notice of motion and the averments
made in its founding affidavit.
42.
In
National Council of Societies for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals v Open Shore,
[15]
the
SCA referred with approval to Shakot Investments (Pty) Ltd v Town
Council of Borough of Stanger
[16]
where Muller J said: “
In
proceedings by way of motion the party seeking relief ought in his
founding affidavit to disclose such fact as would, if true,
justified
the relief sought …”.
43.
Because
motion proceedings are concerned with the resolution of legal issues
based on common cause facts, where there are disputes
of fact in
proceedings in which final relief is sought, those disputes are to be
determined in accordance with the Plascon Evans
rule.
[17]
44.
The
accepted approach to deciding factual disputes in motion proceedings
requires that subject to “
robust”
elimination of denials and “
fictitious”
disputes,
the court must decide the matter on the facts stated by the
respondent, together with those the applicant avers, and the
respondent does not deny. On the accepted test for fact-finding in
motion proceedings, where disputes of fact arise, it is the
respondent’s version that will prevail.
[18]
45.
For the reasons detailed above, the court
does not reject the respondent’s version. In the premises, the
applicant is not
entitled to final relief sought in the notice of
motion in terms of the Act.
Conclusion and Costs
46.
The
applicant has failed to discharge the onus of proving that the
respondent’s conduct meets the stringent requirements of
the
Act. A declaration under the Act is an extreme measure and should be
used sparingly.
[19]
Accordingly, the application stands to be dismissed with costs.
47.
Both parties sought punitive costs. For the
reasons detailed above, proceedings of this nature and the manner in
which this application
was prosecuted are regrettable. Granting
punitive costs in favour of any of the parties may, in future,
encourage processes of
this nature; these processes and similar
conduct by the parties should be discouraged. The court is not
convinced that any of the
parties made out a case for punitive costs,
and such an order will not follow.
48.
However, not being inclined to grant
punitive costs, there is no reason the court should deviate from the
normal position as to
costs,i.e., costs should follow the event. The
respondent’s counsel submitted that the court should grant
costs occasioned
by the appointment of senior counsel. The respondent
protected her constitutional right of access to court. This right
justifies
the appointment of senior counsel.
49.
The applicable scale of costs to follow in
terms of Uniform Rule 67A, which would adequately compensate the
respondent in all of
the circumstances in the present application,
is, in my view and the exercise of my discretion, Scale C, including
the costs occasioned
by the appointment of senior counsel.
Order
50.
For the reasons detailed above, the court
grants the following order:
50.1.
This application is dismissed with costs on
Scale C in terms of Rule 67A, including the costs of senior counsel.
DE BEER AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division
Date
of hearing:
5
March 2025
Judgment
delivered/Uploaded:
____
March 2025
For
the applicant:
Stephen
G May Attorney
Cell:
072-451-6074
Email:
stephen@sgmlaw.co.za
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv
B Winks
Cell:
083-412-8356
Email:
ben@benwinks.com
For
the respondent:
Ulrich
Roux & Associates
Tel:
011-455-4640
Email:
ulrich@rouxlegal.com
matthew@rouxlegal.com
cameron@rouxlegal.com
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv
Paul Strathern SC
Cell:
083-602-6220
Email:
pauls@law.co.za
[1]
1991
(4) SA 603 (D).
[2]
Beinash
v Wixley 1997 (3) SA 721 (SCA).
[3]
CaseLines
001-48 to 001-49.
[4]
CaseLines
001-80 to 001-81: Notice of motion.
[5]
CaseLines 001-15.
[6]
CaseLines
001-22, founding affidavit, paragraphs 55 and 56.
[7]
CaseLines 001-20 to 001-21 and 001-23.
[8]
CaseLines
001-13.
[9]
Venmop 275 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Cleverland Projects
(Pty) and Another (2014/14286) 2016 (1) SA 78 (GJ).
[10]
Mineral
Sands Resources (Pty) Ltd and Others v Reddell and Others [2022] [2]
ZACC 37.
[11]
Mineral
Sands
supra
at [94].
[12]
Bee
v the Road Accident Fund
2018 (4) SA 366
(SCA) at [67].
[13]
Molusi
and Others v Voges N.O. and Others
2016 (3) SA 370
(CC) at [27].
[14]
2011
(1) SA 388
(CC) at 2; see also Brayton Carlswald (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Brews
2017 (5) SA 498
(SCA) at [29].
[15]
[2008] ZASCA 78
;
2008 (5) SA 339
(SCA) at
[29]
to [30].
[16]
1976
(2) SA 701
(D) at 704F-G.
[17]
National Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
2009 (1) SA 277
(SCA) at [26].
[18]
Plascon
Evans Paints Limited v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at p634E - 635J; Fakie N.O. v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006 (4) SA
326
(SCA) at
[63]
to [64]; Snyders v De Jager and Others
2017 (3) SA
545
(CC) at 565, [71].
[19]
Beinash
v Wixley,
supra.
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