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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Malas (Pty) Ltd v Mossie and Others (15196/21)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 570 (5 June 2025)
Malas (Pty) Ltd v Mossie and Others (15196/21)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 570 (5 June 2025)
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sino date 5 June 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 15196/21
(1)
REPORTABLE: No
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
(3)
REVISED
5
June 2025
WRIGHT
J
In
the matter between:
MALAS
(PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
and
FUNDISWA
ETHEL MOSSIE
FIRST RESPONDENT
NPB
SECURITY SERVICES
SECOND
RESPONDENT
PHOLOGO
TERENCE RASAKANYA
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
WRIGHT J
1.
The present first respondent, Ms Mossie was
bitten by a dog. Summons was issued on her behalf. The first
defendant is NPB Security
Services, the present second respondent.
The second defendant is Malas Tyres (Pty) Ltd, a company and the
present applicant. Malas
deals in tyres.
2.
The third defendant is Mr Rasakanye, the
present third respondent. Allegedly, Mr Rasakanye was the guard in
control of the dog at
the relevant time.
3.
Summons was served on Malas on 17 December
2021.
4.
A Rule 28(1) notice of intention to amend
the Particulars of Claim was served on NPB on 1 March 2022. This
amendment had direct
bearing on the allegations against Malas. It
included new allegations against Malas. This Rule 28 notice was not
served on Malas.
Nor were the amended pages served on Malas.
5.
The application for default judgment is
dated 14 March 2022. In it, Ms Mossie sought an order that the merits
be decided 100% in
her favour. It was sought that a decision relating
to quantum be postponed. This application for default judgment was
not served
on Malas.
6.
Two attempts to set the matter down for
hearing appear to have been abandoned. A third notice of set down,
for 11 October 2022,
is dated 9 September 2022. It was not served on
Malas.
7.
Default judgment, regarding the merits of
the claim, was obtained against Malas on 11 October 2022.
8.
Malas now seeks to rescind that order,
relying on Rule 31(2)(b), Rule 42 and the common law.
9.
In short, Malas says that it received the
summons and gave it to a manager of NPB Security who promised to deal
with it. Malas had
a long-standing arrangement with NPB for NPB to
provide security services to Malas. The agreement between Malas and
NPB included
an indemnity by NPB in favour of Malas which protects
Malas against claims such as that in issue here. In my view, there is
nothing
unreasonable or implausible in this explanation.
10.
Malas says that it found out about the
judgment on 3 October 2024. It did so when a taxed bill of costs was
served on Malas. Apparently,
the bill of costs originated out of the
costs award which was part of the order of 11 October 2022.
11.
Malas launched the present rescission
application on 17 October 2024. It had attempted to get Ms Mossie to
agree to stand back from
the order but she refused.
12.
There is on file a return of service in
which the sheriff says that he served a notice of intended taxation
of costs on an employee
of Malas on 10 November 2022 and that the
employee, a store manager, apparently older than sixteen years of
age, refused to give
his or her name. No court order appears to have
been attached to the notice of taxation. The sheriff’s return
does not say
that a court order or a copy thereof was served.
13.
On file is a return of service, headed “
Return: Service of notice of set down
.
“ The sheriff says that on 27 June 2024 he served on Mr Yadesh
Rampersadh, the HR Manager of Malas a “
Notice
of set down (Taxation) - 30 September 2024
“
and notices under Rule 36(9)(a) and (b). There is no attempt by the
sheriff in the return to reconcile the apparent contradiction
between
the heading of the return and its further contents.
14.
Ms Mossie relies on these two returns of service to show that in
fact, Malas knew of the court order long before it admits that
it had
such knowledge.
15.
In a replying affidavit, Mr Bayat, the financial manager of Malas
says, regarding service on 10 November 2022, that he has made
enquiries of all staff members and none has any knowledge of the
service.
16.
A legal practitioner might readily be expected to join the dots, but
in my view, it cannot, on present facts, be held that an
unknown
store manager deduced, or should have been able to deduce, from a
notice of taxation, that a judgment had been taken against
Malas. No
court order is shown to have accompanied the notice of taxation. In
the circumstances, I cannot hold that Malas had knowledge
of the
court order on 10 November 2022.
17.
Regarding service on Mr Rampersadh, there is a confirmatory affidavit
on file by him. He confirms that in fact he was undergoing
training
in June 2024 when the sheriff served documents on him. He did not
know what they meant and he did not know what to do
with the
documents and he says that he did not tell any person about them. In
these circumstances, I cannot impute knowledge of
the court order to
Malas via service of the abovementioned documents on Mr Rampersadh.
18.
The question here is not the validity or otherwise of the service of
the documents. It is whether or not certain knowledge,
held by
relatively junior lay persons can be imputed to the company, Malas.
In my view, on the facts, it cannot be held that Malas
knew of the
judgment before 3 October 2024.
19.
In summary, what is clear is that four documents
were not served on Malas between the time that summons was served on
it and the
granting of the court order by default. These documents
are the Rule 28(1) notice under which Ms Mossie sought an amendment
to
her particulars of claim, the amended pages relating thereto, the
application for default judgment and the notice of set down.
20.
Mr Mvubu, counsel for Ms Mossie conceded
that the documents had not been served on Malas. He submitted that
they need not have been.
Mr Mvubu submitted that the Uniform Rules do
not require such service.
21.
Mr Mvubu pointed to Rule 31(5)(a) which
reads “
Whenever a defendant is in
default of delivery of notice of intention to defend or of a plea,
the plaintiff, who wishes to obtain
judgment by default, shall where
each of the claims is for a debt or liquidated demand, file with the
registrar a written application
for judgment against such defendant:
Provided that when a defendant is in default of delivery of a plea,
the plaintiff shall give
such defendant not less than five days’
notice of the intention to apply for default judgment.
“
Mr Mvubu submitted that there was no obligation to serve the
application for default judgment as there had been no
notice of
intention to defend.
22.
Under Rule 4(10) “
Whenever
the court is not satisfied as to the effectiveness of the service, it
may order such further steps to be taken as it deems
fit
.”
23.
Between service of summons in December 2021
and the date of the set down in October 2022, some ten months
elapsed. It has long been
the practice in the Gauteng Division that
an application for default judgment such as in the present case has
to be on notice.
This practice requires notice where there is a six
month time lapse, or longer, between service of the summons and the
date of
the set down.
24.
Mr Maliwa, the attorney for Ms Mossie,
seems to recognize this long-standing practice in that he attempted
to serve the application
for default judgment and the notice of set
down on Malas, as set out below.
25.
In an affidavit, dated 22 September 2022 by
Mr Maliwa he says that on 1 September 2022, that is about six weeks
before the order
was sought and granted, he attended to the premises
of Malas to serve the application for default judgment and the notice
of set
down but that the Malas personnel present refused to accept
service. The affidavit states “
I
then left the premises without effecting the service
.
“
26.
It is not clear from the papers whether or
not this affidavit by Mr Maliwa was before the court when the order
was sought or granted.
27.
The application before the court was
erroneously sought and granted. Had my learned brother been aware of
the above facts he would
not have granted the order. He would have
invoked Rule 4(10) and the long standing practice referred to above
and declined the
order sought pending proper service of the necessary
documents on Malas.
28.
Malas denies that it was the owner of the
dog or in control of it and it denies negligence in relation to the
biting of Ms Mossie.
It says that the dog was owned and controlled by
NPB.
29.
In these circumstances rescission is
warranted.
ORDER
1.
The order of 11 October 2022 is rescinded.
2.
The first respondent is to pay the
applicant’s costs on scale A.
GC Wright
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
HEARD
:
4 June 2025
DELIVERED
: 5 June 2025
APPEARANCES :
Applicant
Adv
J Mouton
Instructed by
Sharief and Associates Inc
moshin@sharieflaw.co.za
legal@sharieflaw.co.za
First
Respondent
Adv
K Mvubu
Adv
S Rubela
Instructed
by
T
Matu Attorneys
matuthabisa@gmail.com
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