Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 304South Africa
Seponye v Department of Home Affairs and Others (Leave to Appeal) (6035/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 304 (17 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Seponye v Department of Home Affairs and Others (Leave to Appeal) (6035/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 304 (17 March 2025)
Seponye v Department of Home Affairs and Others (Leave to Appeal) (6035/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 304 (17 March 2025)
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sino date 17 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 6035/22
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
17
March 2025
In
the matter between: -
KGALEMA
RICKY SEPONYE
Applicant
and
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
THE
DIRECTOR GENERAL: HOME AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
CAROLINE
LEBEA
Third Respondent
OFFICE
OF THE FAMILY ADVOCATE
Fourth Respondent
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives via email and by uploading it
to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines. The date of judgment is
deemed to be 17 March 2025.
JUDGMENT:
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL AND CROSS APPEAL
MOGAGABE
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant herein seeks leave to appeal only the costs order I
made in terms of which I made
no order as to costs, as per my
judgment delivered on 25 October 2024, based on the grounds set out
in the application for leave
to appeal.
[1]
Leave to appeal is sought to the Full Court of this Division. The
third respondent (Mrs Lebea) has filed an application to cross-appeal
my judgment and order in terms of which I granted an order in favour
of the applicant on the merits of the matter, and made the
order
foreshadowed in para 58 of the judgment. The application to
cross-appeal is directed at my factual findings to the effect
that a
valid customary marriage was concluded between the applicant and the
deceased, with specific reference to the evidentiary
material
presented by the applicant establishing the successful conclusion of
lobola negotiations at the family home of the deceased,
the lobola
letter signed by emissaries of the Kgalema family and the father of
the third respondent representing the deceased family
(the Maboyane
family) and the subsequent events that transpired at the Kgalema
family home relating to inter alia the traditional
handover of the
deceased as the wife of the applicant and the ngwetsi/makoti
(daughter-in-law) of the Kgalema family, the slaughtering
of a goat
symbolising the acceptance and welcoming of the deceased as the
ngwetsi/makoti of the Kgalema family and introduction
to the Kgalema
ancestors, followed by the traditional marriage celebrations that
ensued welcoming the new ngwetsi/makoti and her
family by the Kgalema
family. The main thrust of such application to cross-appeal is that
due to the dispute of facts surrounding
such important events, I
ought to have referred the matter for the hearing of oral evidence to
resolve such dispute of facts.
[2]
Applications for leave to appeal are regulated by s 17(1) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
(the Act). In terms of s 17(1)(a) of
the Act,an application·for leave to appeal will only be
granted, when the Judge or
Judges concerned is/are of the opinion
that the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success or there exists some other
compelling reason(s) why the appeal should be heard by an appellate
court.
[2]
This entails
that in terms of s17(1)(a) the test in determining a reasonable
prospect of success postulates a dispassionate
decision based on the
facts and the law that a court of appeal could reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different from that of the
court a quo.
[3]
In other words, leave to appeal should be granted only where an
applicant has demonstrated and the court is convinced that a sound
and rational basis exists for the conclusion that there are prospects
of success on appeal.
[4]
[3]
The provisions of s 16(2)(a)(i) of the Act stipulate that an appeal
may be dismissed, if at the
hearing thereof, the issues are of such a
nature that the decision sought will have no practical effect or
result, whereas s 16(2)(a)(ii)
provides that, save under exceptional
circumstances, the question as to whether the decision would have any
practical effect or
result, is to be determined without reference to
any consideration as to costs. In
Tebeila
[5]
,
the Constitutional Court held that the practical impact of s 16(2)(a)
is that "appeals on costs alone are allowed very rarely
indeed".
At the risk of repetition, the applicant's appeal is directed solely
at the issue of costs.
[4]
It is settled law that the fact that the order on the merits is not
attacked or challenged, does
not preclude the determination of an
appeal against a costs order alone. In cases where the only issue on
appeal is the costs order,
leave to appeal is only granted in the
"rarest of cases". This was confirmed by the Constitutional
Court in
Tebeila
to the effect that
"few
appellate courts countenance appeals on costs alone.”
[6]
[5]
It is trite that a court is endowed with a wide discretion in
determining an award of costs. It
is also trite that in granting a
costs order a lower court exercises a true discretion, which exists
where a lower court has a
number of equally permissible options
available to it, and that interference by an appellate court will
only be warranted on the
basis of exceptional circumstances as
outlined in para 6 below. An appeal court should be slow to
substitute its own decision simply
because it does not agree with the
permissible option chosen by a lower court.
[7]
[6]
In cases where the sole issue in the appeal is the award of costs, as
is in casu, leave to appeal
will only be granted where an applicant
can demonstrate or establish "exceptional circumstances".
In other words, a court
will not grant an application for leave to
appeal against an award of costs only, provided the applicant
satisfies the court that
"exceptional circumstances" exist
warranting interference by an appeal court with the exercise of the
lower court's discretion
in this regard. In the absence of such
exceptional circumstances, the appeal will be devoid of any
reasonable prospects of success,
entailing that the application for
leave to appeal falls to be dismissed.
[8]
This is a formidable hurdle that the applicant in casu will have to
overcome to be granted leave to appeal herein. In this regard,
I note
that the applicant's counsel neither in his heads of argument nor
during the hearing hereof, never addressed, referred to
or alluded to
this requirement of exceptional circumstances.
[7]
I have given due and proper consideration to all the arguments and
submissions made by the applicant's
counsel. However, I remain
unpersuaded that the issues raised by the applicant show or
demonstrate that exceptional circumstances
exist or that an appeal
court would find that exceptional circumstances exist, warranting
interference with the costs order I made.
Absent such exceptional
circumstances, the applicant's appeal would not have any reasonable
prospect of success.
[8]
Furthermore, the applicant's counsel submitted that as the third
respondent misled the court in
resisting this application, such
conduct warranted a punitive costs order against her. This submission
is misplaced if not devoid
of any merit simply because, I made no
such finding on the part of the third respondent, nor could counsel
point out such finding
in the judgment. In any event, the fact that I
found that the third respondent acted in a misguided but bona belief
that she was
protecting the interest of her deceased daughter and
grandchildren, in opposing this application, does not per se
constitute a
ground to mulct her with costs, let alone a punitive
costs order.
[9]
As such, the applicant's application for leave to appeal the award of
costs only falls to be dismissed.
[10]
Same applies to the argument and submissions made by the third
respondent's counsel, regarding the application to cross-appeal
only
my factual findings that the applicant has established or proved the
conclusion or existence of a valid customary marriage
between himself
and the deceased, on the basis of the evidentiary material outlined
in para 1 above and as per my factual findings
foreshadowed in paras
42 to 46 of my judgment, which facts and events on a balance of
probabilities established or proved that
a valid customary marriage
existed or was concluded between the applicant and the deceased, in
fulfillment or compliance with the
requirements prescribed in s 3(1)
of the Customary Marriages Act. The nub of the third respondent's
argument in this regard is
that based on the bare and general denials
by her of such facts and events, there existed a factual dispute on
such material issues,
entailing that I should have referred the
matter to the hearing of oral evidence for resolution.
[11]
In developing this argument, counsel for the third respondent
contended that
"is rather it asking for too much to expect
her to delve too deep into allegations of the ceremony, celebrations
and/or handover
of the deceased ... when the lobola negotiations did
not happen. It is asking her to deal with that which does not exist
and punish
her for not dealing with that which does not exist."
Such assertions do not constitute or establish any dispute of fact
and are in the circumstances, misconceived, ill-founded and
devoid of
any substance for the reasons outlined in the judgment and the
following reasons.
[12]
First, besides such submissions being incomprehensible, the approach
of a court in dealing with bare, general
or ambiguous denials by a
litigant when faced with serious material facts and evidence, is set
out by the Supreme Court of Appeal
in the case of
Wightman
as
outlined in para 41 of my judgment. It is not about asking a litigant
to "delve too deep" into such material facts
and
circumstances. Second, no authority was advanced by her counsel
overruling the
Wightman
line of cases on this score, as
referenced in footnote 16 of my judgment.
[13]
Third, it is not about
''punishing her for not dealing with that
which does not exist"
. It is about what the law requires and
expects from a litigant in motion proceedings in grappling seriously
with material factual
allegations. This is so, in that the third
respondent has failed to produce material evidence, factual,
documentary or otherwise,
refuting inter alia, the successful
conclusion of lobola negotiations for the marriage of her deceased
daughter; the payment of
lobola in the sum of R25000.00; the signing
by her father of the lobola letter, constituting material documentary
evidence corroborating
the successful conclusion of the lobola
negotiations at the Maboyane family home on the day in question and
the traditional handover
of the deceased as the wife of the applicant
and ngwetsi/makoti of the Kgalema family and being given a name by
the Kgalema family,
in accordance with African customs and traditions
and in particular of the Bapedi people.
[14]
Fourth, and more importantly, her failure to produce evidence
refuting that her father was not only present
during such lobola
negotiations but was also the emissary and signatory of the lobola
letter on behalf of the Maboyane family.
Unsurprisingly, no
confirmatory affidavit by her father to this effect was filed. At the
risk of repetition bare, general and ambiguous
denials do not in law
constitute a dispute of facts.
[15]
Accordingly, I am of the considered view that there exists no
reasonable prospect of success or other compelling
reasons, why the
third respondent should be granted leave to appeal. Overall, the
third respondent has failed to show that there
exists a sound and
rational basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of success
on appeal.
[9]
ORDER
[16]
In the result, the following order is made:
16.1.
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs on Scale
B.
16.2.
The application to cross-appeal is also dismissed with costs on Scale
B.
S
J R MOGAGABE
Acting
Judge of the High Court Gauteng Division
Pretoria
APPEARANCES:
Counsel for the
applicant:
Adv Ntjana
Instructed by
LMK Attorneys,
Pretoria
Counsel for the
third respondent:
Adv A Maluleka
Instructed by
Savage Joose &
Adams Inc, Pretoria
Date of Judgment:
17 March 2025
[1]
Caselines 0-71-1 to 0-71-10 application for leave to appeal.
[2]
As per s17(1){a)(i) and (ii) of the Act, regulating applications for
leave to appeal;
Mont
Cheveaux Trust v Goosen
2014 JDR 2325 (LCC) para 6;
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
[2016] ZASCA 176
para 17;
State
v Smith
2012 (10 SA CR 597
(SCA) para 7;
Fusion
Properties 233 CC v Stellenbosch Municipality
[2021] ZASCA 10
(29 January 2021) para [18].
[3]
Ramakatsa
v African National Congress
[2021] ZASCA (31 March 2021) para [10].
[4]
Secona
Freight Logistics CC v Samie & Others
[2023] 183 (22 December 2023) para [28].
[5]
See fn 6 below.
[6]
Tebeila
Institute Leadership, Education, Governance and Training v Limpopo
College of Nursing
2015 (4) BCLR 396
(CC) para 13.
[7]
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC) paras
[144] - [145]; Florence v Govt of the RSA
2014 (6) SA 456
(CC) para
13; Zuma v Office of the Public Protector and Others
[2020] ZASCA
138
(30 October 2020) paras [19]- [20]
[8]
Mukanda
v South African Legal Practice Council
2021 (4) SA 292
(GP) para
[9].
[9]
See
Secona
Freight Logistics supra fn 4.
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