Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 296South Africa
Mtech Constructions (Pty) Ltd v Goosen Mega Enterprise (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (024968/24) [2025] ZAGPPHC 296 (18 March 2025)
Headnotes
R75, 686.56in Trust and again offered (with prejudice0 that if an invoice fir R75, 686.56 was issued then payment would be made and that both parties would pay own costs. Therefore, the court a quo misdirected itself.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mtech Constructions (Pty) Ltd v Goosen Mega Enterprise (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (024968/24) [2025] ZAGPPHC 296 (18 March 2025)
Mtech Constructions (Pty) Ltd v Goosen Mega Enterprise (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (024968/24) [2025] ZAGPPHC 296 (18 March 2025)
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sino date 18 March 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 115832/23
(1) REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
(3) REVISED: YES/NO
DATE 19-03-2025
SIGNATURE
In matter between
MTECH
CONSTRUCTIONS
(PTY)LTD
Applicant
and
GOOSEN
MEGA ENTERPRISE (PTY)LTD
Respondent
REGISTRATION NUMBER:
2018/100674/07
Delivered: This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
parties/their legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on Caselines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 19 March 2025
JUDGEMENT IN THE
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL LESUFI AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal
against the cost order of the judgment I granted on the 24 January
2025. The leave to
appeal is brought in terms of Rule
49
of
the
Uniform
Rules
read
with
section
17
of
the
Superior
Act.
The
application is opposed by the Respondent.
[2]
The parties will be referred as the
Applicant and the Respondent. The Applicant was the Respondent in the
main application.
Background
facts
[3]
The facts pertinent to this appeal are
based on
the dispute
that arose between the Applicant and the Respondent, regarding an
unpaid amount of money relating to a construction
project. The
initial contract was worth R 2,704,235.65, and R 2,627,969.84 has
already been paid without any issues. However according
to the
Respondent there was an amount still due. Upon the Applicant’s
failure to pay the amount due, the Respondent,
the
Respondent issued a Notice in terms of section 345 with the intention
to liquidate as per their letter dated 28
th
September
2023.
[4]
The Respondent
claimed the Applicant owes R 76,265.81, but the Applicant disputed
this amount and said the correct amount is R 75,686.56.
The Applicant
offered to pay the disputed amount into their attorney's trust
account pending the outcome of the litigation, but
the Respondent
didn't accept this offer.
[5]
The main issue
was a disagreement over R 579.25, which stems from the quantity of
building materials used during the construction
project. This issue
was never referred to a construction expert for resolution.
Applicant’s
grounds of Appeal
[6]
The Applicant contents that the court erred
in making no order as to costs in the following circumstances:
6.1
It is trite that the general rule is that
costs follow the result.
6.2
that the Respondents initiated the
liquidation application on an urgent basis whereas the application
was not urgent.
6.3
the Applicant had at all times contended
that the correct amount was
R75
,686.56 and not R76,265.81 as claimed by the Respondent.
6.4
As
early
as
28
September
2023
the
Applicant’s
Representative
had requested an invoice from the
Respondent in the correct amount.
6.5
the Applicant only requested the invoice
only to correct the amount.
6.6
the Respondent declined to do so and
initiated liquidation application.
6.7
the Respondent’s papers contain
scurrilous and unfounded accusations of fraud against the Director of
the Applicant and the
and Applicant itself.
6.9
On the 12 December 2023 the Applicant again
tendered payment of R 75,686.56 against production of a corrected
invoice, pointed out
that the difference between amount claimed by
the Respondent said was due amounted to R 579.25 and offered (with
prejudice) that
both parties paid their own costs upon withdrawal of
the liquidation application. This offer was never accepted.
6.10
On
the
24
April
2024
Applicant
confirmed
that
its
attorneys
held
R75,
686.56in Trust and again offered (with prejudice0 that if an invoice
fir R75, 686.56 was issued then payment would be made
and that both
parties would pay own costs. Therefore, the court a quo misdirected
itself.
Respondent’s
opposition to the Application for leave to appeal
[7]
The application for leave to appeal is
vehemently and vigorously opposed the application. The basis for
opposing being that it is
clear that there was no misdirection by the
court
a quo
.
The Respondent is of the view that there is no misdirection on the
following grounds:
7.
1
Even
though it is common in law that cost follow the result, the court
a
quo
clearly stated in the judgement the
reasoning why the court diverted from the norm.
7.2
The court
a
quo
exercised its discretion as far as
costs are concerned.
7.3
The amount to date is still outstanding
despite a demand for payment being made by the Respondent to the
Applicant.
7.4
The
Respondent
resorted
to
the
liquidations
proceedings
out
of frustration.
7.5
That most of the issues raised were
ventilated in the motion proceedings and were dealt with.
7.6
The amount owed is still kept by the
Applicant in the Trust account.
7.7
It was further submitted that the matter
was never brought to court on an urgent basis as alleged.
7.8
The court
a
quo
balanced the scales of justice by
not awarding costs.
Issues for
determination
[8]
Whether this appeal has prospects of
success.
Applicable
principles/tests to the adjudication of an application for leave to
appeal and analysis of the ground of appeal
[9]
Rule
49 of the Uniform Rules of Court dictates the form and process of an
application for leave to appeal and the substantive law
pertaining
thereto is to be found in
section 17
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
The latter Act raised the threshold for the granting of leave to
appeal, so that leave may now only be granted if there is a
reasonable prospect that the appeal will succeed. The possibility of
another court holding a different view no longer forms part
of the
test. There must be a sound, rational basis for the conclusion that
there are prospects of success on appeal. The interpretation
of the
Rules and the Law has evolved in case law since 2013. In numerous
cases, the view is held that the threshold for the granting
of leave
to appeal was raised with the inauguration of the 2013 legislation
(
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
).
The former assessment that authorization for appeal should be granted
if “
there
is a reasonable prospect that another court might come to a different
conclusion”
is
no longer applicable
.
[9]
The
words in
section
17(1)
that: “Leave to appeal may only be given…” and
section
17(1)(a)(i)
that: “The appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success”
are peremptory. “If there is a reasonable prospect
of success”
is now that: “May only be given if there would be a reasonable
prospect of success
.”
A
possibility
and
discretion
were
therefore,
in
the
words
of
the
legislation
and
consciously so, amended to a mandatory obligatory requirement that
leave may not be granted if there is no reasonable prospect
that the
appeal will succeed. It must be a reasonable prospect of success; not
that another Court may hold another view.
[10]
The
court
a
quo
may
not allow for one party to be unnecessarily put through the trauma
and costs and delay of an appeal. In
Four
Wheel Drive v Rattan N.O.
[1]
the
following was ruled by Schippers JA (Lewis JA, Zondi JA, Molemela JA
and Mokgohloa AJA concurring):
“
[34]
There is a further principle that the court a quo seems to have
overlooked — leave to appeal should be granted only when
there
is 'a sound, rational basis for the conclusion that there are
prospects of success on appeal'. In the light of its findings
that
the Plaintiff failed to prove locus standi or the conclusion of the
agreement, I do not think that there was a reasonable
prospect of an
appeal to this court succeeding that there was a compelling reason to
hear an appeal. In the result, the parties
were put through the
inconvenience and expense of an appeal without any merit.”
[2]
Application
[11]
It is indeed so that costs follow the
successful party however this norm is not binding on courts as costs
are discretionary. I
am alive to the fact that if I have to exercise
my discretion, I have to do so judiciously.
[12]
The
basic rule of costs overrides the general rule that costs should
follow suit. This is aptly explained in
Graphic
Laminates CC v Albar Distributors CC
,
[3]
the
court held that:
“
It
is trite that liability for costs in civil proceedings is a separate
issue that is governed by its own criteria. The fundamental
principle
is that liability for costs is in the discretion of the court that is
called upon to adjudicate the merits of the issues
between the
parties (See: Kruger Bros & Wasserman v Ruskin
1918
AD 63
at
69) on the basis of the facts and circumstances of each individual
case (See: Cronje v Pelser 1967(2) SA 589 (A) at 593). In
the absence
of express statutory provisions to the contrary, the general rule
that
costs
follow the result is subservient to that fundamental principle (See
eg: Unimark Distribution (Pty) Ltd v Erf 94 Silvertondale
(Pty) Ltd
2003(1) SA 204 (T) at 215 E – F). It appears to me to be
axiomatic that, if the question of costs has been fully
ventilated,
and a court does not say anything about liability for costs or
specifically states that there will
be
no
order
as
to
costs,
each
party
is
liable
for
the
payment
of
its
own
costs
(See: G.B. van Zyl: The Judicial Practice of South Africa (Volume II)
894).”
[4]
[13]
This
position was confirmed in
Ferreira
v Levin
.
[5]
in
a judgment on costs given separately from the judgment on the merits,
the Court pointed out that the courts have over the years,
developed
a flexible approach to costs which proceeds from two basic
principles, the first being that the award of costs, unless
otherwise
enacted, is in the discretion of the presiding judicial officer, and
the second that the successful party should, as
a general principle,
have his or her costs.
[14]
In
Fighters
v Speaker of the National Assembly
[6]
the
discretion was described as follows:
“
Further,
an analysis of some of the decided authorities in dealing with
proceedings of this nature demonstrates that the more prevalent
approach is that the successful party is entitled to its costs, with
the court always retaining the discretion to make an order
that seems
just and equitable, considering the position of the party against
whom any such costs order is levied.
At
the end of the day, several factors must be considered when a cost
award is issued in such circumstances.”
[15]
Based
on the authority above, the instances in which leave to appeal is
granted against costs orders only are rare.
[7]
[16]
The threshold
that the Applicant faces does not end here.
Section 16(2)(a)
of the
Act requires that “exceptional circumstances” must be
established for the Applicant to succeed in an application
for leave
to appeal on the issue of costs. There are no exceptional
circumstances that were raised by the Applicant in this matter.
[17]
Lastly, I extensively considered the Heads
of Arguments by the Applicant and reply by the Respondent, I am of
the view that both
parties are at fault considering the circumstances
of this case. The Respondent instituted liquidation proceedings
without any
merit. The applicant also prompted the Respondent to
institute the liquidation proceedings. The Applicant had an
opportunity to
at the very least pay the undisputed amount.
[18]
I am of the view that the application for
leave to appeal does not carry any weight as I exercised my
discretion judiciously.
[19]
I therefor make the following order:
19.1
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed.
19.2
The Applicant to pay costs on party and
party scale
B LESUFI
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
Mark Meyerrowitz
Instructed
by:
Mr
Greg Harrison of Harrisons Inc
For
the Respondent:
Advocate
W Venter
Instructed
by:
Uys
Inc
Date
of Hearing
14
March 2025
Date
of Judgment
19
March 2025
[1]
2019
(3) SA 451
(SCA).
[2]
Id
at para 34.
[3]
2005
(5) SA 409 (C).
[4]
Id
at para 11.
[5]
[1995]
ZACC 2;
1996
(4) BCLR 441
(CC);
1996
(2) SA 621
(CC).
[6]
[2024]
ZAWCHC 160
[7]
Tebeila
Institute of Leadership, Education, Governance and Training v
Limpopo College of Nursing and Another
2015
(4) BCLR 396
(CC) at para 13.
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