Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 212South Africa
Vetvax (Pty) Ltd and Others v Fertilizers, Farms Feeds, Agricultural Remedies and Stock Remedies and Others (2023/039977) [2025] ZAGPPHC 212 (12 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Vetvax (Pty) Ltd and Others v Fertilizers, Farms Feeds, Agricultural Remedies and Stock Remedies and Others (2023/039977) [2025] ZAGPPHC 212 (12 March 2025)
Vetvax (Pty) Ltd and Others v Fertilizers, Farms Feeds, Agricultural Remedies and Stock Remedies and Others (2023/039977) [2025] ZAGPPHC 212 (12 March 2025)
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sino date 12 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2023/039977
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
(3)
REVIEWED: YES/NO
DATE
12 March 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
VETVAX
(PTY)
LTD
1
st
Applicant
DESIGN
BIOLOGIX
CC
2
nd
Applicant
KAREN
NEL
3
rd
Applicant
and
REGISTRAR:
FERTILIZERS, FARM FEEDS,
AGRICULTURAL
REMEDIES AND STOCK REMEDIES
1
st
Respondent
AGRICULTURAL
RESEARCH COUNCIL
2
nd
Respondent
ONDERSTEPOORT
BIOLOGICAL PRODUCTS SOC LTD
3
rd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
The
Court
(Molopa-Sethosa J, Yacoob J
et
Raubenheimer AJ)
:
Order
[1]
In this matter we make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs on
the scale as between attorney and client.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
The matter was enrolled as a Special Motion
before a full court convened by the Deputy Judge President of this
Dvision on application
by the parties.
[4]
The application has been dragging on since 2023
and entails a number of interlocutory applications. The total volume
of the papers,
excluding authorities, is in excess of 3000 pages.
[5]
The first respondent abides the decision of the
court, and does not participate in these proceedings. Where we refer
to “the
respondents”, this refers to the second and third
respondent. Reference to “the applicants” means all three
applicants.
[6]
The applications before us are the main
application, two applications to strike, three condonation
applications and an application
in terms of rule 30.
[7]
In the week leading up to the week in which the
matter was set down, the court was inundated with correspondence,
eventually seeking
a case-management meeting before the hearing to
determine the order in which these various issues should be dealt
with at the hearing.
The court declined that request, and directed
that, should the parties not agree on how oral argument should
proceed, the parties
will be afforded 45min at the commencement of
the hearing to make submissions on this issue. Parties were also
required the submit
heads of argument on their proposed course of
action.
[8]
In short the respondents contended that the
points
in limine
should
be dealt with first, as it was more efficient, since the success of
the points
in limine
would
mean that the remaining preliminary issues, as well as the main
application, would not have to be dealt with. Only if the
points
in
limine
were found to have no merit, would the
remaining issues have to be dealt with. The preliminary points raised
by the respondent were
that there was no compliance by the applicants
with statutory requirements for possessing the viral strain that is
the subject
of the main application, and that there were disputes of
fact that could not be resolved on the papers. The applicants were
alerted
to the existence of disputes of fact, as well as the need to
show compliance with statutory requirements as far back as 2022. Once
the litigation was well-developed, the respondents invited the
applicants to refer the matter to trial and tender costs. The
applicants
did not avail themselves of this invitation. The
respondents now contend that the application must be dismissed on the
basis of
the two points
in limine
.
[9]
The applicants contend that the interlocutory
applications be dealt with first so that a full and comprehensive set
of “cleaned
up” papers could be before the court in order
to hear the points
in limine
and
the main application. The applicants, in fact, submitted that it
would be appropriate to “clean up” the papers and
then
refer the matter to oral evidence. It was also submitted for the
applicants that the points
in limine
were not points
in limine
but should be dealt with as part of the main argument.
[10]
The interlocutory applications are the following.
An application by the applicants for the striking out of irrelevant,
vexatious
and scandalous allegations of the Answering Affidavit. A
condonation application for the late filing of the Replying
Affidavit.
This application was met with an application to strike
certain paragraphs from the Founding Affidavit in the condonation
application
as being vexatious, irrelevant and scandalous. The
applicants brought a Rule 30 application for the Respondents’
notices
in terms of Rule 35 to be declared irregular and set aside
and ordering the respondents to file their answering affidavit. This
application was met with a counter application to compel the
applicants to comply with the respondents’ Rule 35 notices and
file their answering affidavit after compliance with the Rule 35
notices. The applicants did not comply with a directive of the
Deputy
Judge President for the delivery of a confirmatory affidavit and
launched an application for condoning this non-compliance
as well as
their omission of certain annexures to the Founding Affidavit in the
condonation application for the late filing of
the Replying
Affidavit. The applicants also filed a Rule 30 application after the
respondents filed a fourth set of affidavits.
[11]
After hearing the arguments on the sequence of
the oral arguments the court ruled that it would be appropriate that
the preliminary
points be argued first. The reason is that, if the
points
in limine
dispose of the matter, then time and resources are not wasted dealing
with issues which ultimately become irrelevant. This is obviously
in
the interests of the proper administration of justice.
[12]
The respondents raises three preliminary points
namely:
12.1
If the subject matter of the dispute was a virus
there was no compliance with the Non-Proliferation of Weapons of Mass
Destruction
Act, 87 of 1993 (“The Non-Proliferation Act”),
while
12.2
If the subject matter of the dispute was a
vaccine there was no compliance with the Animal Diseases Act, 35 of
1984 (“The
Animal Diseases Act”);
12.3
There are substantial disputes of fact that the
applicants were alerted to in correspondence in 2022 already. These
disputes of
fact were comprehensively dealt with in correspondence
and was also raised in the answering affidavit to the main
application as
well as other affidavits in the interlocutory
applications.
[13]
The Applicants aver that the disputes of fact
only emerged after the fourth set of affidavits to be admitted. This
is not correct
as the likelihood of the existence of disputes of fact
is evident in the reams of correspondence annexed to the Founding
Affidavit
dating from 2022. In addition the existence of a dispute of
fact is made clear in the Answering Affidavit, which was filed nine
months before the Replying Affidavit.
[14]
It was submitted for the applicants that the
Replying Affidavit comprehensively deals with the disputes of fact
raised in the Answering
Affidavit. In our view this is not the case.
The Replying Affidavit repeats assertions made in the Founding
Affidavit, and engages
in word play, for example conflating a
“vaccine strain” with a “vaccine”. It also
includes new assertions
about how the strain was obtained, which do
not deal with the dispute of fact as they are, again, mere
assertions.
[15]
In the Replying Affidavit, the applicants contend
that they do not have to comply with the Non-Proliferation Act, as
vaccines are
exempted. This allegation ought to have been included in
the Founding Affidavit, as the applicants were alerted to the
possible
need to comply in 2022 in correspondence. Be that as it may,
the applicants annex to their Replying Affidavit the 2019 iteration
of the Declaration of the Minister in terms of the Non-Proliferation
Act, which declares “Certain Biological Goods”
as
“Controlled Goods”.
[16]
In terms of the Declaration, listed “[v]iruses,
whether natural, synthetic, enhanced or modified, either in the form
of isolated
live cultures or as material, including living material
which has been deliberately inoculated or contaminated with such
cultures”
are declared controlled goods. Rift Valley virus is
one of the viruses listed.
[17]
The relevant exception to this is “any
goods in the form of a vaccine or toxoid”. It is impossible for
this court to
determine, as a matter of fact, on the papers, and
taking into account the obfuscatory and conflating language used by
the third
applicant in her Replying Affidavit, and the applicants’
representative in the hearing, whether a “vaccine strain”
falls into the definition of a vaccine. Certainly the evidence
currently before us does not determine the issue. All that has been
established is that a vaccine strain is used to produce a vaccine. In
addition, the evidence regarding what exactly is the substance
at
issue is contained in the Replying Affidavit, and the respondents
were therefore not permitted to properly meet that case, even
if the
fourth affidavit is not excluded.
[18]
The applicants complain the that question of
compliance with the Animal Diseases Act was raised late. The
respondents submitted
that this is because it was for the first time
in reply that the substance was identified (although loosely) as a
vaccine, rather
than a vaccine strain or an element in a vaccine. The
applicants sought in the hearing to demonstrate that the Founding
Affidavit
refers to the substance as a vaccine, but this is not the
case. It refers to the substance as a strain of a virus used in a
vaccine
and variations on that theme.
[19]
For a court to be able to determine such an
issue, proper evidence must be adduced, not just argument which seeks
one interpretation
of the affidavit evidence over another. The
applicant does not make out a case in its Founding Affidavit
regarding what the substance
is and what regulatory framework applies
to it. It is impossible for this court to find in its favour on this
issue.
[20]
Taking into account that the applicants always
knew that the compliance with the Non-Proliferation Act was going to
be an issue,
the first point
in limine
must
succeed. Even if it does not, there is a fundamental dispute of fact
on that issue which cannot be resolved on the papers.
There is in
addition a dispute of fact regarding the manner of acquisition of the
substance by the applicants, and whether the
substance obtained is
proprietary in nature. Neither of these are able to be determined on
the papers.
[21]
It was submitted for the applicants that, rather
than dismissing the application and the applicants then, if they
wish, issuing
summons, the matter should be referred to trial. The
reasons were that, because of the large amount of paper that has been
put
before the court, issues have now been “crystallised”
and, secondly, that the respondents have asked the Registrar (the
first respondent) to cancel all the applicants’ registrations,
and that the Registrar has put that request on hold pending
the
outcome of this application. The dismissal of this application would
then result in the Registrar making a decision.
[22]
The second point does not hold any water. The
applicant cannot require that this court take a course in order to
delay some other
process. The requests to the Registrar and any
resulting decision must be dealt with separately and with the
appropriate legal
processes.
[23]
The first point, similarly, is baseless. The
applicants’ own submission is that the papers need to be
“cleaned up”
before the matter can be referred to trial.
Any crystallisation that has occurred will not be lost, and can be
put to use by whoever
formulates the summons and particulars of
claim. There is absolutely no reason to prolong this application,
which is replete with
repetitive, unnecessary and vague allegations
and submissions (at times on both sides), and which is more likely to
confuse matters
than clarify them.
[24]
In any event, the applicants ought to have known,
and in fact were warned, that a dispute of fact would arise, and
ought at the
outset to have issued summons rather than a notice of
motion. This is also the reason why a punitive costs order is
justified.
Conclusion
[25]
For the reasons mentioned above, we make the
following order:
“
The application is
dismissed with costs on the scale as between attorney and client.”
LM
MOLOPA-SETHOSA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
S
YACOOB
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
E
RAUBENHEIMER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting 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 of
the judgment is deemed to be
12 March 2025
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
A
Liversage SC and K Pretorius
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Prinsloo
Bester Inc
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
L
Van Tonder SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Kisch
Inc
DATE
OF ARGUMENT: 11 March 2025
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 12 March 2025
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