Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 387South Africa
D.T.M and Another v M.C Van Der Berg Attorneys and Others (2025/028096) [2025] ZAGPPHC 387 (4 April 2025)
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## D.T.M and Another v M.C Van Der Berg Attorneys and Others (2025/028096) [2025] ZAGPPHC 387 (4 April 2025)
D.T.M and Another v M.C Van Der Berg Attorneys and Others (2025/028096) [2025] ZAGPPHC 387 (4 April 2025)
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sino date 4 April 2025
SAFLII
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Policy
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
2025-028096
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
04 APRIL 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
D[...]
T[...]
M[...]
First Applicant
J[...]
N[...]
M
[...]
Second Applicant
and
M.C
VAN DER BERG
ATTORNEYS
First Respondent
M[...]
P[...] (FORMALY
M[...])
Second Respondent
P[...]
L[...] M[...]
M[...]
Third Respondent
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
04 April 2025.
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI,
J
Introduction
[1]
The First Applicant and the Second Applicant (“the Applicants”)
launched
an urgent application seeking an order in the following
terms:
1.
Condoning the failure by the Applicants to comply with the ordinary
rules relating to enrolling, timeframes and sittings of this
Honourable Court, on the basis that the application is urgent as
envisaged by Uniform Rule 6(12);
2.
That the First Respondent is interdicted and restrained from
releasing and/or dispersing an amount of R304 619.20 from the Second
Respondent's 50% share of the sale proceeds in respect of
the sale of
the immovable property, fully described as, ERF 9[…] Clubview
Extension 63 Township, to the Second Respondent;
3.
That, pending the final determination of the legal proceedings
instituted by the Applicants against the Second Respondent under case
number: 2025-027728, the Second Respondent's portion of the
50% share
of the sale proceeds, in the amount of R304 619.20 still in the
possession of the First Respondent, be retained in the
First
Respondent's Attorneys Trust Account and invested accordingly;
4.
In the event that the First Respondent has already dispersed
R304
619.20 of the sale proceeds to the Second Respondent:
4.1
That the Second Respondent is hereby interdicted and restrained from
utilising the amount of R304 619.20
from the 50% sale proceeds
received from the Third Respondent in respect of the sale of the
immovable property, ERF 9[…]
Clubview Extension 63 Township,
pending the final determination of the legal proceedings under case
number: 2025-027728;
5.
Costs of the Application in the event of opposition; and
6.
Granting the Applicants such further and/or alternative relief
as
this Honourable Court may deem justified by the facts set out in the
Founding Affidavit.
[2]
Essentially, the Applicants seek the preservation of the amount of
R304 619.20
pending the final determination of the legal
proceedings instituted by the Applicants against the Second
Respondent under case
number: 2025-027728. The said amount is a
portion of the Second Respondent’s 50% share of the sale
proceeds of the property
ERF 9[…] Clubview Extension 63
Township.
[3]
The First Respondent has, together with a submission affidavit, filed
a notice to
abide by the decision of the court, subject to the
relevant statement it addressed in the submission affidavit. In
the submission
affidavit, the First Respondent alleges that it was
instructed to attend to the transfer of the immovable property
previously owned
by the Second Respondent and Third Respondent. The
transfer was duly registered in the name of the purchasers on 19
February 2025.
The net proceeds from the sale were to be shared
equally between the Second Respondent and the Third Respondent.
According to the
First Respondent, an amount of R304 619.20 was
erroneously paid into the Third Respondent’s bank account,
instead of being
split in accordance with the agreed terms of the
divorce settlement between the Second Respondent and the Third
Respondent. Despite
numerous demands, the amount remains with the
Third Respondent. This is not denied by the Third Respondent, and as
such, at the
time of the hearing of this application, the Third
Respondent had still not paid over the money to the First
Respondent.
This is the money that the Applicants seek to have
preserved pending the finalisation of the legal proceedings
instituted against
the Second Respondent by the Applicants.
[4]
The application is opposed only by the Second Respondent. Her
answering affidavit
was filed late, with an application for
condonation. The condonation application is unopposed, as such,
I am of the view
that it ought to be granted.
[5]
The Third Respondent appeared personally in court without legal
representation. He
confirmed that he does not require legal
representation and will abide by the decision of the court. It is
worth noting that, although
the Third Respondent is cited as a party
to the proceedings, no relief is specifically sought against him.
[6]
The Third Respondent is the son of the Applicants. He was married to
the Second Respondent.
During the subsistence of the marriage, they
purchased property, the proceeds of which are the subject matter of
these proceedings.
When their marriage fell apart, they entered
into a settlement agreement which was made an order of court. In
terms of the settlement
agreement, they were to share the marital
property in equal shares.
[7]
This application revolves around the proceeds of the property. It is
alleged that
part of the funds used to purchase the property were,
according to an oral agreement, loaned to the Second Respondent and
the Third
Respondents by the Applicants. Now that the property
has been sold, the Applicants want the proceeds of the sale to be
used
to refund that loan. According to the Applicants, this was also
agreed upon between the parties. The Second Respondent disputes
the
existence of both the oral loan agreement as well as an agreement
that such a loan, if it existed, would be paid out of the
proceeds of
the sale of the property. As such, the Second Respondent wants
her share of the proceeds of the sale to be paid
directly to her as
per
the divorce settlement, which was made an order of court.
In the meantime, the Applicants are alleged to have instituted a
civil
claim against the Second Respondent for the refund of a portion
of her share of the alleged debt (the loan), which civil claim is
still ongoing.
Urgency
[8]
As earlier stated, the Applicants seek the relief set out in the
notice of motion
in the urgent court. They want the application to be
heard on an urgent basis, claiming that the funds they seek to
preserve will
be dissipated before the civil claim litigation is
finalised.
[9]
Urgency is regulated in terms of rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of
Court. The rule
provides that:
(a) In urgent
applications the court or a judge may dispense with the forms and
service provided for in these rules and may
dispose of such matter at
such time and place and is such manner and in accordance with such
procedure (which shall as far as reasonably
practicable be in terms
of these rules) as it deems fit.
(b) In every
affidavit or petition filed in support of any application under
paragraph
(a)
of this subrule, the applicant must set forth
explicitly the circumstances which is averred render the matter
urgent and the reasons
why the applicant claims that applicant could
not be afforded substantial redress in due course.
[10]
In
M M v
N M and Others
,
[1]
the court, dealing with the rule 6(12) procedure, had this to say:
“
[6]
Notshe AJ in
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
,
[2]
stated:
‘
The import thereof
is that the procedure set out in rule 6(12) is not there for the
taking. An applicant has to set forth explicitly
the circumstances
which he avers render the matter urgent. More importantly, the
Applicant must state the reasons why he claims
that he cannot be
afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course. The question
of whether a matter is sufficiently urgent
to be enrolled and heard
as an urgent application is underpinned by the issue of absence of
substantial redress in an application
in due course. The rules allow
the court to come to the assistance of a litigant because if the
latter were to wait for the normal
course laid down by the rules it
will not obtain substantial redress.’
[7]
The import of this is that the test for urgency begins and ends with
whether the applicant
can obtain substantial redress in due course.
It means that a matter will be urgent if the applicant can
demonstrate, with facts,
that the applicant requires immediate
assistance from the court, and that if his application is not heard
on an urgent basis that
any order that he might later be granted will
by then no longer be capable of providing him with the legal
protection he requires.”
[11]
For the Applicants to succeed in this application, they must show why
this application should
be heard in the urgent court. In doing so,
they must also show that any delay in launching this application was
not due to self-created
urgency. In addition, they must demonstrate
why they claim that they could not be afforded substantial redress in
due course.
[12]
In deciding on the issue of urgency, sight should not be lost that
the relief sought by the Applicants
in this matter is for the
preservation of the money in question, and not payment thereof, which
will be decided in the action proceedings
that the Applicants allege
they have instituted against the Second Respondent.
[13]
The urgency, therefore, in my view, was triggered when, by email on
19 February 2025, the First
Respondent informed the Applicants that
the Second Respondent had instructed it to pay her portion of the
proceeds directly to
her. The application became more urgent when the
First Respondent responded to the email sent by the Applicant’s
attorneys,
requesting the First Respondent to hold on to the
disbursement of the money, by stating that, absent a court order, it
would disburse
the money to the Second Respondent on 20 February
2025.
[14]
Was the urgency self-created? No. In my view, the urgency is
not self-created as it could
not have been triggered at any time
before 19 February 2025. It could only have been triggered as
already alluded above.
The Second Respondent’s suggestion
that the urgency is self-created because the Applicants could have
instituted proceedings
against the Second Respondent, for the payment
of the alleged debt, at the time of the institution of the divorce
proceedings or
upon dissolution of the marriage through the divorce
settlement and subsequent court order, is without merit.
[15]
The question that follows is whether the Applicants would be afforded
substantial redress in
due course. The court in
E.M.W
v S. W,
[3]
stated the following:
“
[11] It
is trite that the correct and the crucial test to be applied in
urgent applications and confirmed that it is
the true test is whether
or not an applicant will be afforded substantial redress in due
course. (See the matter of E
ast Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and
Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd and Others
(11/33767)
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September 2011). This in a nutshell means, if
the matter were to follow its normal course as laid
down by the
rules, an Applicant will be afforded substantial redress. If he
cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing
in due course,
then the matter qualifies to be enrolled and heard as an urgent
application. It means that if there is some delay
in instituting the
proceedings, an applicant has to explain the reasons for the delay
and why despite the delay he claims that
he cannot be afforded
substantial redress at a hearing in due course.”
[16]
The Second Respondent contends that the Applicants will be afforded
substantial redress in due
course because they have issued summons
against her, and she is employed.
[17]
The Applicants’ contention is that if the money is used, there
will be no substantial redress
in due course for them. They
have brought this case on the basis that there is fear of the funds
dissipating if not preserved.
They argue that the funds should be
preserved so that their victory should not be hollow. To support the
allegation of dissipation
of the funds, they aver that the Second
Respondent does not have assets that can be used as security for the
payment of the debt
in due course. They also mention the previous
financial difficulties the Second Respondent endured together with
the Third Respondent,
during their marriage, which led to them taking
a loan from the Applicants.
[18]
The Second Respondent does not address these issues in her answering
affidavit. Save for the
denial of the loan agreement, she does not
state whether she has the necessary funds or assets to secure the
amount of money the
Applicants are claiming against her, should she
be found liable. However, she indicates that she is in desperate need
of money,
as she is currently staying with a friend. She requires the
money to enable her to move out of her friend’s home.
This,
in my view, is enough to indicate that the Second Respondent’s
financial position is such that the Applicants may not be afforded
substantial redress in due course. Consequently, the matter
ought to be dealt with on an urgent basis.
[19]
It is also worth noting that there were two applications launched.
The first application was
for interdictory relief to stop the First
Respondent from paying out the money to the Second Respondent.
This application
was filed prior to the payment being made. The
application could not proceed because, in the meantime, the First
Respondent had
already paid out the money. However, fortunately (or
unfortunately), the money was erroneously paid to the Third
Respondent instead
of the Second Respondent. Based on a letter of
demand written by the First Respondent to the Third Respondent,
demanding that the
money be paid back into its banking account, the
Applicants launched the present application seeking to interdict the
First Respondent
and the Second Respondent from dealing with the
money.
Mootness
of the relief sought
[20]
First and foremost, from the papers as they stand, the relief sought
by the Applicants is improper.
They seek an order to preserve funds
which are neither in the possession of the First Respondent nor the
Second Respondent. The
funds, it appears, are in the possession of
the Third Respondent, but no relief is sought against him. The
Applicants knew, at
the time of drafting their founding papers, that
the money they seek to preserve is with the Third Respondent. This is
clearly
stated in paragraph 48 of the founding affidavit, which reads
as follows:
“
48.
I was informed by the Third Respondent that he was erroneously paid
an amount of R331 522.19, which
seemingly/presumably is Second
Respondent's 50% proceeds of the sale of the immovable property.”
[21]
The Applicants’ excuse for not seeking any relief against the
Third Respondent is their
understanding that the Third Respondent was
to pay that money back to the First Respondent. However, by the time
the matter appeared
before me, the money had not been paid over to
the First Respondent and there was still no relief sought against the
Third Respondent.
Hence, the relief sought by the Applicants is
improper.
[22]
At the commencement of the hearing, it was conceded on behalf of the
Applicants that the money
was still with the Third Respondent, who
was not in court. The matter was stood down twice to grant the
Applicants’ counsel
an opportunity to rectify the Applicants’
papers and to await the appearance of the Third Respondent.
[23]
When court resumed, the Applicants, through their counsel, and
without having amended their papers,
sought to rectify the situation
by invoking Prayer 6 of the notice of motion, which reads as follows:
“
6.
Granting the Applicants such further and/or alternative relief as
this Honourable Court
may deem justified by the facts set out in the
Founding Affidavit.”
[24]
The Applicants sought to make use of the prayer for further and/or
alternative relief, by proposing
to abandon Prayers 1 and 2 of the
notice of motion and substitute them with a prayer reading as
follows:
“
That
pending the final determination of the legal proceedings instituted
by the Applicants against the Second Respondent for the
recovery of
the loan advanced by the Applicants to the Second and Third
Respondents for the initial acquisition of the immovable
property ERF
9[…] Clubview Extension 63 Township by the First and Second
Respondent, under case number 2025-027726, Second
Respondent's 50%
share of the sale proceeds still in the possession of the Third
Respondent be deposited in the Trust Account of
Ezra Matlala
Attorneys and invested accordingly;”
[25]
To fortify this argument, the Applicant’s counsel referred to
an old judgment of 1946 in
Queensland
Insurance Co Ltd v Banque Commerciale Africaine
(“Queensland
Insurance”)
,
[4]
which was applied with approval in
Hirschowitz
v Hirschowitz
.
[5]
The
submission is that even though
Queensland
Insurance
was decided in 1946, the principles enunciated therein, still apply
today.
[26]
It was brought to the attention of the Applicants’ counsel
that, without an amendment of
the notice of motion, the proposal she
seeks under the rubric of further and/or alternative relief will not
pass muster. Counsel
then moved an application from the bar for the
amendment of the notice of motion to read that ‘
the Third
Respondent is the one interdicted from spending the money
’.
This, however, was not a well thought out amendment because it now
differed materially from the Applicants’ initial
proposition,
which sought to include the payment of the money into the trust
account of the Applicants’ attorneys.
[27]
If an order is made that the Third Respondent should not spend the
money, it means that the money
remains with him until the
finalisation of the main action. He should simply not spend it. This
contrasts with the initial proposition
which was for the Third
Respondent to pay the money in the trust account of the Applicants’
attorneys.
[28]
The law regarding the necessity for an appropriate amendment of a
claim and the limits of a prayer
for alternative relief, is contained
in the judgment of Tindall JA in
Queensland Insurance.
From my
own research, I could not locate any judgment from the Supreme Court
of Appeal that was decided in the constitutional dispensation,
nor
could I find any judgment from the Constitutional Court on this
point. None was also referred to by any of the counsel in this
matter. Therefore, although old,
Queensland Insurance
appears
to be the only authority from the Supreme Court of Appeal (then the
Appellate Division) that must be followed by all courts,
on the issue
under discussion.
[29]
The following passages in
Queensland Insurance
have relevance
at 286:
‘
In
regard to the judgment for £2 450, in my opinion, the plaintiff
was not entitled to claim it on the action as framed. The
action is
based on the policy; the claim for £2 450 is based on the
compromise arising from the acceptance of the tender
in the
alternative pleas. The prayer for alternative relief does not help
the plaintiff over the difficulty. It is unnecessary
to consider
whether the practice of including such a prayer is derived from the
Roman-Dutch or the English practice. In the Roman-Dutch
practice
according to Van Leeuwen RDL5.15.8, this prayer (the so-called
clausule salutaire
asking for such other relief as the court may deem best for the
plaintiff) is of such effect that every right to which the plaintiff
may in any way be entitled upon the allegations in his claim, is
thereby considered to be included in the prayer. See also Voet
2.13.13 and Van der Linden Jud Pract 2.3.7 vol 1 at 147. The effect
of the prayer for 'such further or other relief as the nature
of the
case might require' in the English practice seems to be the same. See
Cargill v Bower 10 ChD502 at 508, in which Fry LJ
pointed out that
the prayer for alternative relief is limited by the statement of fact
in the declaration and by the terms of the
express claim, and that a
plaintiff cannot get, under the prayer for alternative relief,
anything that is inconsistent with those
two things.
The
fact, however, that the plaintiff could not properly get judgment for
£2 450 on his action as framed does not necessarily
entitle the defendant to have the judgment set aside. Mr Horwitz
contended that if an application for an amendment of the declaration
had been made at the trial, the learned Judge should have and would
have granted it, and he asked that, if this court upheld the
defendant's point based on the form of the action, it should now
allow the necessary amendment. The terms of the reasons of Blackwell
J in addition to what I have stated above, also lead one to infer
that the point that the form of the action disentitled the plaintiff
from getting judgment for £2 450 was not taken before him. Be
that as it may, I can find nothing in his reasons which bears
out the
argument on behalf of the defendant that, if an amendment had been
applied for, the learned Judge would have refused it.
And I think
that in the interests of justice this court should now allow the
necessary amendment, which would take the form of
an alternative
claim alleging that, if the chemicals in question were not harmless,
but dangerous and liable to catch fire spontaneously,
and in
consequence the policy was voidable and the defendant elected to
avoid it, any concealment or misrepresentation by the plaintiff
as to
the nature of the goods insured was innocent and the plaintiff is
entitled to a refund of the premium paid; and a prayer
for judgment
for £2 450. It seems to me that such an alternative claim would
validly have been included in the original declaration.’
[30]
In
Johannesburg City Council
, the court, relying on
Queensland
Insurance
, overturned the judgment of the court
a quo
where the Applicant relying on the prayer for further and/or
alternative relief, did not amend the notice of motion. In that
judgment,
the Applicant’s counsel conceded at the hearing that
the interim relief had been sought on an incorrect cause of action,
in that, the Applicant should instead have attacked the respondent’s
decision, and that the interim interdict should have
been based on
that cause of action. Counsel argued, however, that because the
Applicant has justified this decision in the replying
affidavit, the
Applicant could change its cause of action and substitute it with the
one stated in the replying affidavit. Without
an amendment to the
notice of motion, the court could, under the cloak of the prayer for
alternative relief, issue a temporary
interdict to remain in force
pending the determination of the review proceedings. The court
a
quo
upheld this argument. This was, however, overturned on
appeal. The appeal court held that:
“
I think that the
learned Judge misdirected himself in the following respects:
1. It
was not appreciated that this was not a case of merely "new
matter" appearing in the replying affidavit.
It amounted to an
abandonment of the existing claim together with its cause of action
and the substitution of a fresh and
completely different claim
based on a different cause of action.
2. Once
this new course of action is the basis of a new claim the original
notice of motion, without suitable amendment
was inadequate to
sustain a claim for a temporary interdict as the original
temporary interdict was being claimed on the basis
of a
completely different alleged right. The prayer for alternative relief
then became a rather torn "cloak" which could
not provide
any refuge for the applicant.”
[31]
In
Chao
v Gomes
(“
Chao
”),
[6]
the court had an opportunity to deal with a matter where the
defendant sought relief in terms of the further and/or alternative
prayer in the notice of motion in which condonation was sought. The
defendant in that case argued for entitlement to seek an extension
of
the time period contained within Rule 18(11) of the Uniform Rules of
Court, using the prayer for further and/or alternative
relief.
Originally, the Defendant, like in this case, sought relief without
any amendment to the notice of motion, relying on the
further relief
prayer alone. Later, it presumably recognising the difficulty it
faced, sought an appropriate amendment to the notice
of motion. The
court, when declining to grant the amendment, remarked as follows:
“
[17]
The amendment is sought at an extremely late stage with
very little notice to the plaintiff. The plaintiff has
not been
afforded an opportunity of filing an appropriate answer to the
affidavit filed by the defendant dealing with the position
on the
basis of an amended notice of motion. The relief claimed in the
notice of motion as amended is completely at variance with
the relief
currently claimed and is dependent upon a different cause of action.
Two courses are available for me to follow. I could
allow the
amendment, grant a postponement and afford the plaintiff an
opportunity of dealing with the application on the basis
of the
amended notice of motion. I could refuse the amendment, and the
defendant would then be free to take whatever further steps
it
wishes. The prejudice the plaintiff suffers if the latter course is
followed is that the proceedings are not finalised. The
prejudice the
defendant suffers if I follow the first course is that it must bring
a fresh application. It appears to me that the
interests of justice
dictate that the prejudice which the plaintiff suffers in the event
of a postponement should not be permitted.
There is no effect on
costs as the defendant will have been substantially unsuccessful in
all the matters before me and will have
to pay costs. I accordingly
decline to amend the notice of motion as sought by the defendant.”
[32]
As already mentioned, in this instance, it is not clear whether the
Applicants seek an amendment
to stop the Third Respondent from using
the money or whether they want the Third Respondent to be ordered to
pay the money into
the trust account of Ezra Matlala Attorneys.
Fundamentally, the Applicants have not withdrawn the application
against the First
Respondent and the Second Respondent, who, it has
been conceded, have been wrongfully cited in the papers, as suggested
by the
court to their counsel. The Second Respondent, as a party to
the proceedings and having an interest in the money sought to be
preserved,
has objected to the amendment, citing that she was not
provided time to file an appropriate answer to the amendment.
[33]
Like in
Chao
, two courses are available for me to follow. I
could allow the amendment, grant a postponement and afford the Second
Respondent
an opportunity of dealing with the application on the
basis of the amended notice of motion. I could refuse the amendment
and dismiss
the application.
[34]
I can accept, without concluding, that a case has been made out for
the preservation of the money
in question. What, however,
remains a challenge for the Applicants is that the cause of action
canvassed in the papers is
to interdict the First Respondent and/or
the Second Respondent. Nothing is said about interdicting the Third
Respondent, whereas
the amendment they seek to make in the notice of
motion is a prayer for an order interdicting the Third Respondent.
As
such, the amendment and/or the proposal to substitute Prayers 1 and 2
sought by the Applicants
are not justified by the facts
set out in the Founding Affidavit
.
As is
pointed
out in
Queensland
Insurance
,
‘
the
prayer for alternative relief is limited by the statement of fact in
the declaration and by the terms of the express claim,
and that a
plaintiff cannot get, under the prayer for alternative relief,
anything that is inconsistent with those two things.’
[35]
The argument by the Applicants’ counsel that since a case has
been made out for the preservation
of the money, an interdict should
be granted against whoever is found to be in possession of that
money, is not sustainable.
As already mentioned, much as it can
be accepted that a case has been made out for the preservation of the
money, an incorrect
cause of action is cited in the founding papers,
which renders the amendment and/or the substitute of Prayers 1 and 2
sought by
the Applicants
not to be justified by the
facts set out in the Founding Affidavit.
[36]
Furthermore, if
Chao
is to be followed, it is obvious that the
amendment is sought at an extremely late stage with very little or no
notice at all to
the Respondents. The Respondents have not been
afforded an opportunity of preparing an appropriate answer to the
amendment of the
notice of motion sought by the Applicants. The
relief claimed in the notice of motion as sought to be amended is
completely at
variance with the relief currently claimed and is
dependent upon a different cause of action, which is not even
traversed in the
Applicants’ papers. This is litigation by
ambush at its best and is not permissible.
Costs
[37]
It is trite that costs are always within the discretion of the court.
In the exercise of my discretion,
it is my view that no party should
be awarded costs in this matter since none is substantially
successful.
Order
[38]
Therefore, I make the following order:
1.
Condonation
for the late filing of the answering affidavit is granted.
2.
The
application is dismissed.
3.
No order as to
costs is made.
E.M KUBUSHI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants:
First
Applicants:
Adv L Maite
Instructed
by:
Ezra Matlala Attorneys
Tel: 081 790 9078
First Respondent’s
Attorney:
DU PLESISS
INC.
Tel: 012 664 6767
Second Respondent’s
Attorney: MAILULA
SEFOKA ATTORNEYS
Tel: 011568 1993
Date
of the hearing:
12 March 2025
Date
of judgment:
04 April 2025
[1]
(15133/23P) [2023] ZAKZPHC 117 (18 October 2023).
[2]
(11/33767)
[2011]
ZAGPJHC 196
(23 September 2011), para 6 and 7.
[3]
(26912/2017) [2023] ZAGPJHC 710 (15 June 2023).
l[4]
1946
AD 272.
[5]
1965
(3) Sa 407
(W).
[6]
(2010/16410)
[2012] ZAGPJHC 103 (21 May 2012).
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