Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 440South Africa
Oates v South African Council For Architectural Professions and Another (A206/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 440 (7 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 May 2025
Headnotes
affidavits could be admitted into evidence where the interests of justice so dictate. After all, as is now trite, the rules are there for the court.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Oates v South African Council For Architectural Professions and Another (A206/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 440 (7 May 2025)
Oates v South African Council For Architectural Professions and Another (A206/22) [2025] ZAGPPHC 440 (7 May 2025)
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sino date 7 May 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number: A206/22
Date of hearing: 30
April 2025
Date delivered: 7 May
2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
In the matter between:
MARK DYLAN
OATES
Applicant
and
SOUTH AFRICAN COUNCIL
FOR THE
ARCHITECTURAL
PROFESSIONS
First Respondent
COUNCIL
FOR THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J
:
[1] The main case
before court is an appeal by the first respondent in terms of section
33 (6) (b) of the Architectural Profession
Act, 2000, (“the
Act”), against a ruling by its Appeal Committee. The details of
those proceedings are not relevant
to this enquiry.
[2] Following on an
adverse finding by the first respondent’s Appeal Committee with
regard to the proceedings before
a Disciplinary Tribunal,
Ndzabandzaba Attorneys delivered a notice of appeal to this court, on
behalf of the first respondent,
on 4 August 2022. On 1 September 2022
the applicant delivered a notice of opposition, and a notice in terms
of rule 7 of the Uniform
Rules, challenging the attorney’s
authority to act for the first respondent.
[3] The first
respondent’s attorneys then delivered a reply to the rule 7
notice, attached to which was a resolution
of the first respondent’s
council, and a special resolution by the first respondent’s
registrar, which confirmed that
Ndzabandzaba Attorneys had been
authorized to act for the first respondent.
[4] Ordinarily, the
filing of a special power of attorney would be the end of the
authorization challenge. That was not the
case in this matter. Some
14 months later the applicant launched this application in which he
seeks a declaratory order that Ndzabandzaba
Attorneys are not
authorized to act for the first respondent, and that the filing of
the notice of appeal is void. The applicant
also seeks costs to be
paid by the first respondent’s registrar and by Ndzabandzaba
attorneys, on a punitive scale.
Application to strike
out
[5] The first issue
for consideration is an application brought by the first respondent
to strike paragraphs 6, 7, 8 and 27
of the replying affidavit, on the
grounds that the averments made therein are irrelevant, scandalous
and vexatious The striking-out
application was abandoned in respect
of paragraphs 34 and 37. On closer scrutiny, it is not the entire
paragraph that is sought
to be struck in each case, but only certain
offensive passages contained therein.
[6]
In paragraph 6 of the replying affidavit the applicant said the
following:
“
My
experience in the proceedings underlying this matter
(which
I feel were baseless and nothing more than a vindictive and
unauthorized vendetta) is that certain of the SACAP hierarchy
use
SACAP for their own ends and purposes.”
[7] In paragraph 7
of the affidavit the applicant said:
“
In
light of the fact that the decision of the appeal committee ordered
an investigation into the conduct of,
inter
alia
, Advocate Fiduli (the Registrar of
the SACAP) – he has an apparent self-interest in his conduct
not being investigated in
accordance with the order of the appeal
committee. There is no other rational justification for the conduct
in the matter, other
than Advocate Fiduli abusing his position to
save his job (which I believe is highly lucrative) and is using SACAP
to do so.”
[8] In paragraph 8
the applicant said:
“
The
obstructive behaviour of the SACAP Registrar (Advocate Fiduli) and
now chairperson, are inexplicable - …. I can conclude
only
that there is something to hide. The answering affidavit confirms my
suspicion for the reasons I detail below.”
[9] Moreover, in
paragraph 27, the applicant attacked the first respondent’s
attorneys, by saying:
“
The
obstructive behaviour of Ndzabandzaba Attorneys is much to blame for
the delay.”
[10] The main slant
of the founding and replying affidavits is to impugn the Registrar’s
honesty. When the chairperson
deposed to an answering affidavit in
which he confirmed that Adv. Fiduli had been authorized to appoint
the first respondent’s
attorneys, his honesty was also
questioned.
[11] The founding
and replying affidavits certainly do not make out a case that the
Registrar has been dishonest at all in
instructing Ndzabandzaba
Attorneys. They are replete with accusations against the Registrar,
and later, also against the Chairperson,
without any substantial
basis in fact.
[12] In argument
the applicant’s counsel pointed me to the ruling of the Appeal
Committee regarding the manner in which
the Disciplinary Tribunal had
been conducted. I read the ruling, and I must say that, although it
contains scathing commentary
as to the manner in which the initial
investigation was conducted, it was not suggestive of dishonesty, and
it certainly did not
suggest that the Registrar was conducting a
vendetta against the applicant.
[12]
Averments made in an affidavit are scandalous if they are worded in
such a manner as to be abusive or defamatory, whether
they are
relevant or not.
[1]
There is, in
this case, no evidence whatsoever that the Registrar has a vendetta
against the applicant, that he dishonestly produced
a resolution
authorizing Ndzabandzaba Attorneys, that the Chairperson was somehow
in cahoots with the Registrar, nor that the conduct
of Ndzabandzaba
Attorneys was in any manner improper.
[13] The problem
here, it seems to me, is that the applicant believes that the
Registrar is moved by improper motives, and
the applicant’s
legal team has bought into this narrative, with little to no evidence
to substantiate their belief. I shall,
accordingly, strike the
offending material from the record. The costs of the striking-out
application will follow the result.
Late
filing of rule 7 notice
[14] The first
respondent has taken the point that rule 7 allows for a challenge
against the authority of an attorney to be
filed within 10 days of
the aggrieved party becoming aware of the attorney so acting. If the
notice is delivered late, the delay
may be condoned on good case
shown.
[15] The rule 7
notice was delivered a month after the notice of appeal was delivered
to the applicant, and so, the first
respondent says, the notice is
out of time. In the absence of an application for condonation, and
having not shown good cause for
the late filing, the first respondent
says, the applicant may not pursue the authorization issue.
[16] Rule 7 (1)
reads as follows:
“
(1)
Subject to the provisions of subrules (2) and (3), a power of
attorney need
not be filed, but the authority of anyone acting on
behalf of a party may, within 10 days after it has come to the notice
of a
party that such person is so acting, or with leave of the court
on good cause shown at any time before judgment, be disputed,
whereafter
such person may no longer act unless he satisfied the
court that he is authorized to so act, and to enable him to do so the
court
may postpone the hearing of the action or application.”
[17] The applicant
does not deny the basic fact that the notice of appeal was sent to
him on 4 August 2022, nor that he delivered
the rule 7 notice out of
time. He rather raises the defence that he had not authorized the
delivery of the notice by email. The
fact of the matter is though,
that it is not disputed that the applicant became aware of the fact
that Ndzabandzaba Attorneys were
acting for the first respondent on 4
August 2022. It is also not disputed that the rule 7 notice was out
of time.
[18]
The first respondent argued that in the absence of a condonation
application, the applicant was out of time, and that
the application
should be dismissed on that ground alone. The applicant argued that
an application for condonation was not required,
and that on the same
basis as in
Pangbourne
Properties Ltd v Pulse Moving CC and Another
[2]
I should simply find that good cause exists for the extension of the
time period.
[19]
Pangbourne
was concerned with an application where both the answering and
replying affidavits had been filed out of time. Neither party sought
condonation for the late filing, and neither exercised their remedies
under rule 30. The court pointed out that in numerous cases
courts
have held that affidavits could be admitted into evidence where the
interests of justice so dictate. After all, as is now
trite, the
rules are there for the court.
[20] Pangbourne is
not authority for the proposition that a party can arrive at court
without applying for, nor making out
a case for condonation, and then
call upon the nebulous “interests of justice” to justify
the delay. A party must provide
cogent reasons why condonation should
be granted in its papers, and it must deal with the entirety of the
delay.
[21] The applicant
merely said the following in reply on this issue:
“
27.
I accept that there has been some delay in bringing the rule 7
application to finality. However, that delay was underpinned
by my
earnest attempt to ascertain the authority that Ndzabandzaba
Attorneys received to institute the proceedings. The letters
written
by my attorneys and the rule 35 request that I have issued
subsequently… have been ignored by Ndzabandzaba Attorneys.
The
obstructive conduct of Ndzabandzaba Attorneys is as much to blame for
the delay.”
[22] The above
passage is mendacious. Firstly, it does not deal at all with the
delay in filing the rule 7 notice, and there
is no indication of what
occurred between 4 August 2022 and 1 September 2022. Secondly, the
delays seem entirely to have been caused
by the applicant. The
timeline is the following:
[22.1] On 9
September 2022, and in answer to the rule 7 notice filed eight
days before, the first respondent’s
attorneys delivered a
resolution by the Council, and a special resolution authorizing
Ndzabandzaba Attorneys to act for the first
respondent.
[22.2] On 9
March 2023, six months later, the applicant’s attorneys
demanded a record of the Council meeting,
either by video or by means
of an audio recording.
[22.3] On 27
March 2023 the first respondent’s attorneys refused the
request.
[22.4] On 24
October 2023, another six months on, the applicant’s attorneys
demanded a resolution signed by all
of the Council members.
[22.5] On 2
November 2023, nine days later, the request was refused.
[22.6] On 23
November 2023 this application was launched.
[22.7] On 13
February 2024 the applicant delivered a rule 35 (12) and (14) notice
seeking recordings, invitations to
the Council meeting and a
resolution signed by all Council members.
[23] There is, as I
have said, no explanation for the delay in delivering the rule 7
notice. The averment that the first respondent
has delayed the case
is false.
[24]
In considering whether to grant condonation a court must exercise its
discretion judiciously. The party seeking condonation
must furnish an
explanation that covers the entire time of the delay, and which
explains the delay sufficiently so as to allow
the court to
understand how the delay came about, and to assess the party’s
motives.
[3]
The extent of the
delay and the possible prejudice to the other parties if the
condonation were to be granted are factors to be
considered.
Furthermore, the prospects of success on the merits must be
considered.
[25] As I have said
above, there is no explanation whatsoever for the delay in filing the
rule 7 notice. The delays thereafter
are entirely the fault of the
applicant. As far as the applicant’s prospects on the merits
are concerned, they seem dismal
at best, as I will demonstrate below.
Consequently, I do not believe that it would be proper to condone the
late filing of the
rule 7 notice.
[26] On the merits
the application must also fail. The applicant alleges that the
registrar has a personal interest in the
appeal being pursued. In the
founding affidavit the applicant suggests that the special resolution
was not authorized by the first
respondent’s council. He points
out that the resolution by the council is unsigned. There are,
moreover, no minutes of the
meeting evidencing that such a decision
was taken. The special resolution was signed by the very person who
is alleged to have
a personal interest in the pursuit of the appeal.
[27] In the
answering affidavit the President and Chairperson of the first
respondent, Mr. Nduku, answered to the applicant’s
allegations.
He says that he personally chaired the meeting of 19 July 2022 at
which the disputed decision was taken to appeal
against the finding.
Mr. Nduku attached a copy of the minutes of the meeting from which it
is evident that the council resolved
to note the appeal.
[28] In reply, the
applicant changed tack. In addition to suggesting that Mr. Nduku was
in cahoots with the registrar in manufacturing
a false resolution,
the applicant raised the new issue that he did not know whether the
meeting of 19 July (if it had at all happened)
had been convened
properly in terms of the first respondent’s rules.
[29] The first
point to make is that the applicant is not entitled to change the
basis for its attack in reply. In the founding
affidavit the attack
was that the meeting had never been held, whilst in reply the
innuendo was that if the meeting had happened,
that it may not have
been properly convened. The applicant says, without any basis in
fact:
“
All
that can be gleaned from any of the documents is that Advocate Fiduli
attended a meeting where he resolved to authorize himself
to appoint
Ndzabandzaba Attorneys.”
[30]
There are no facts to substantiate this contention. I see no basis to
doubt Mr. Nduku’s affidavit. The attack on
his integrity is
baseless. Furthermore, where there is a dispute of fact on the
papers, I am obliged to accept the respondent’s
version unless
it is so untenable that it can be rejected out of hand. That is not
the case in this instance.
[4]
I
have no reason to reject Mr. Nduku’s evidence that the appeal
was properly authorized.
[31] The
applicant’s complaints do not end there. He also says that the
Council resolution (which Adv Fiduli allegedly
forged) authorized the
first respondent’s attorneys to review and set aside the
decision of the CDE Appeal Committee, whilst
the resolution signed by
Adv. Fiduli also authorized the attorneys to appeal against the
ruling. The applicant argues that the
resolution gave specific
authority to the attorneys, which did not include the filing of an
appeal.
[32]
In support of its argument the applicant has referred me to
Eriksson
v Hollard Insurance Company Ltd and Others
[5]
where Strydom J said the following:
“
To
establish the authority to provide a mandate, a court will require
the resolution of the entity, which can either provide the
representative with a general authority or a specific authority to
appoint attorneys to institute proceedings against a defendant
or
defendants. An example of a specific authority would be where an
entity has resolved to appoint a specific attorney to institute
legal
proceedings against a mentioned defendant.”
[33] The
applicant’s argument is that the resolution constitutes a
specific authority to only review and set aside the
ruling of the
Appeal Committee, and not to appeal to the High Court. This argument
misses the point. A general authority is given
where a representative
is authorized to appoint attorneys whenever he or she regards it
necessary to do so, whereas a specific
authority is where a
representative is authorized to instruct attorneys in a particular
instance. The purpose of a resolution is
to authorize the
representative to instruct attorneys to act for the institution,
either generally or in a specific case. It is
not intended to
prescribe to the attorney how to go about prosecuting the matter.
[34] Mr. Nduku’s
evidence is clear: Advocate Fiduli was authorized to appoint
Ndzabandzaba Attorneys to act for it in
proceedings relating to the
Appeal Committee’s ruling, whether that entailed a review of
the proceedings, or an appeal against
the ruling.
[35] In light of
the above, the application must fail and I make the following order:
[35.1]
The following passages are struck from the applicant’s replying
affidavit:
[35.1.1]
Paragraph 6:
“
My
experience in the proceedings underlying this matter
(
which
I feel were baseless and nothing more than a vindictive and
unauthorized vendetta) is that certain of the SACAP hierarchy
use
SACAP for their own ends and purposes.”
[35.1.2]
Paragraph 7:
“
In
light of the fact that the decision of the appeal committee ordered
an investigation into the conduct of,
inter
alia
, Advocate Fiduli (the
Registrar of the SACAP) – he has an apparent self-interest in
his conduct not being investigated in
accordance with the order of
the appeal committee. There is no other rational justification for
the conduct in the matter, other
than Advocate Fiduli abusing his
position to save his job (which I believe is highly lucrative) and is
using SACAP to do so.”
[35.1.3]
Paragraph 8:
“
The
obstructive behaviour of the SACAP Registrar (Advocate Fiduli) and
now chairperson, are inexplicable - …. I can conclude
only
that there is something to hide. The answering affidavit confirms my
suspicion for the reasons I detail below.”
[35.1.4]
Paragraph 27:
“
The
obstructive behaviour of Ndzabandzaba Attorneys is much to blame for
the delay.”
[35.2]
The applicant shall pay the costs of the striking-out application on
Scale B;
[35.3]
The application is dismissed with costs on Scale B.
SWANEPOEL J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
Counsel for the
applicant:
Adv. M Cooke
Instructed
by:
Adams Attorneys
Counsel for the first
respondent: Adv. T Mathopo
Instructed
by:
Ndzabandzaba Attorneys
Heard
on:
30 April 2025
Judgment handed
down:
7 May 2025
[1]
Vaatz
v Law Society of Namibia
1991 (3) SA 563
(NM); See also Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice, 2
nd
Ed. D1-91
[2]
2013
(3) SA 140 (GJ)
[3]
Silber
v Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
1954 (2) SA 345
(A) at 353 A
[4]
See
Plascon Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA
623
(A))
[5]
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 39 (24 January 2023)
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