begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 20
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Van Wyk and Others - Application for Leave to Appeal (29038/19)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 20 (3 January 2024)
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Van Wyk and Others - Application for Leave to Appeal (29038/19)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 20 (3 January 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_20.html
sino date 3 January 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 29038/19
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
03 January 2024
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
FIRST
APPLICANT
MINISTER
OF PUBLIC SERVICES AND
ADMINISTRATION
SECOND
APPLICANT
GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES’ PENSIONS FUND
THIRD
APPLICANT
And
J
K VAN WYK AND 51 OTHERS BEING THE
1
st
TO 52
nd
RESPONDENTS
G
P BARNARD AND 94 OTHERS BEING THE
53
rd
TO 148
th
RESPONDENTS
JUDGEMENT
– APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
Barit,
AJ
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The applicants in this application for
leave to appeal were the unsuccessful parties in the Court
a
quo,
where they then appeared as the
defendants. The applicants are making application for leave to appeal
against the whole judgment
and the order handed down on 15 March
2023.
[2]
The applicants, are asking the Court to
grant leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal, alternatively
to the Full Court of
Gauteng Division of the High Court of South
Africa,
[3]
The application has been opposed by all the
respondents (who in the Court a quo were the plaintiffs).
[4]
In
the Court
a
quo
,
the relief claimed by the respondents was in the form of a
declaratory order that either the first Collective Agreement
[1]
,
or the second Collective Agreement applies to them. And further that
the Department of Correctional Services (“DCS”)
should
act in accordance with their obligation (to the applicable
agreement).
[5]
The Order in the Court a quo reads as
follows:
5.1
The plaintiffs’ prayer for a declaratory order that the 2009
Collective Agreement, unamended,
applies to them is granted.
5.2
The first defendant is ordered to implement
the provisions of clause 11.1 of the 2009 Collective Agreement to all
the plaintiffs’
salary back pay.
5.3
The first defendant is ordered to
recalculate monies due and owing to all the plaintiffs’ and
apply the rectification of any
payment, deductions, and/or amounts
owing including in respect to pension contributions and the
recalculation of such pension benefits
as the rules of the third
defendant may provide for and applicable to the third defendant, or
any other applicable rule may provide
for.
5.4
The first defendant is ordered to pay the
costs on a party and party scale with respect to these proceedings,
including the costs
consequent upon the employment of two counsel.
# The Parties
The Parties
[6]
In this application the parties are as
follows:
6.1.
The first applicant is the Minister of
Justice in Correctional Service cited in his capacity as the
Executive Authority of the Department
of Correctional Services
(“DCS”) in terms of the provisions of the
State Liability
Act, 1957
.
6.2.
The second applicant is the Minister of
Public Service and Administration (“PSA”) cited herein in
the capacity as Executive
Authority of Public Service and
Administration in terms of the requirements of the
State Liability
Act, 1957
.
6.3.
The third applicant is the Government
Employees Pension Fund duly established in terms of
Section 2
of the
Government Employment Pension Law 1996.
6.4.
The first (1
st
)
to fifty second (52
nd
)
respondents are all former employees at the Department of
Correctional Services (DCS) who resigned from the service of the
first
applicant, in the period 1 April 2010 to 21 November 2016, and
were the plaintiffs in the Court
a quo
.
6.5 The fifty third
(53
rd
) to the one hundred and forty eighth (148
th
)
respondents are all former employees of the Department of
Correctional Services (DCS) who had retired from the service of the
first applicant in the period 1 April 2010 to 21 November 2016, and
were the plaintiffs in the Court
a quo
.
# Ground of Appeal
Ground of Appeal
[7]
The applicants, in this application for
leave to appeal, raise and rely on the following grounds.
7.1.
The Court
a
quo
lacked the requisite jurisdiction
to entertain the dispute.
7.2.
The matter is res judicata.
7.3.
The respondents’ role in the second
collective agreement is such that the applicants are entitled to
invoke the principle
of estoppel.
[8]
Other grounds and certain additional
factors, in the application, were taken into consideration but
nothing turned on them, or alternatively
were part of, or associated
with one of the above-mentioned grounds.
#
# Nature of Claim
Nature of Claim
[9]
The respondents, all of whom left the
service of the applicants prior to 2016, claimed declaratory orders
together with orders for
payment. The question the Court had to
decide was:
a)
Whether in 2009, the Occupations Specific
Dispensation (“OSD”) for Correctional Service Officials,
Resolution 2 of 2009,
and in particular clause 11.1 thereof should be
applied to the respondent with a resulting order in favour of the
respondent; or
b)
The terms and in particular the amended
clause 11.1 of the 2016 Departmental Bargaining Chamber (“DBC”)
Settlement Agreement
of 2016 applies to the respondents with a
resulting order in favour of the applicants.
[10]
The respondents’ claim supports the
contention that the 2009 resolution (agreement) applies to them,
while the alternative
claim supports the contention that the 2016
agreement should be applied to the respondents.
[11]
The applicants contend, for various
reasons, which are of a legal nature that the 2016 agreement applies
to the respondents.
# The Dispute
The Dispute
[12]
A summation of what the
crisp
issue
for determination is as follows:
Whether the first
collective agreement, which remained extant until 21 November 2016 in
terms of which the respondents would be
entitled to a 100% of the
salary back pay applied to the respondents, or whether the Second
Collective Agreement which only came
into effect after 21 November
2016, in terms of which they would be entitled to 30% of the salary
back pay, applied to them.
# The legal implication -
Rule 17(1)
The legal implication -
Rule 17(1)
[13]
The applicants, in their Heads of Argument,
have made reference to 17(1) of the Superior Court Act.
[14]
Section 17 (1) (a) of the Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013 (“the Act”) states that:
“
Leave
to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are
of the opinion that - the appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of
success (Section 17 (1) (a) (i)) or; there is some other compelling
reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting
judgments on the matter under consideration.
(Section 17 (1) (a) (ii))”.
[15]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal has held in the matter of
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Ongezwa Mkhitha & The Road Accident
Fund,
[2]
that
the test for granting Leave to Appeal is as follows (para 16-17):
“
Once
again it is necessary to say that Leave to Appeal, especially to this
Court, must not be granted unless there
truly
is a reasonable prospect of success
.
Section 17
(1) (a) of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
makes it
clear
that
Leave
to
Appeal
may
only
be
granted
where
the
Judge
concerned
is
of
the
opinion
that
the
Appeal
would
have
a
reasonable prospect
of
success
,
or
there
is
some
other
compelling
reason
why
it should be heard”. (My
underlining)
“
An
application
for
leave
to
appeal
must
convince
the
court
on
proper grounds that the applicant
would have a reasonable prospect
or realistic chance of success on appeal
.
A mere possibility of success, an
arguable case or one that is not hopeless, is not enough.
There must be a sound rational basis
to conclude that there “
would
be a reasonable prospect of success on appeal”
.
(My underlining)
.
[16]
This
is apparently in contrast to a test under the previous Supreme Court
Act, 1959 that Leave to Appeal is to be granted where
a reasonable
prospect was that another court might come to a different conclusion.
(Commissioner
of Inland Revenue v Tuck).
[3]
[17]
In
the matter of
Fusion
Properties 233 CC v Stellenbosch Municipality
,
[4]
it
was stated:
“
Since
the coming into operation of the
Superior Courts Act there
have been
a number of decisions in our courts which dealt with the requirements
that an applicant for leave to appeal in terms
of
Section 17
(1) (a)
(i) and
17
(1) (a) (ii) must satisfy in order for leave to be
granted.
The applicable
principles have over time crystallised and are now well established.
Section 17
(1) provides, in material part, that leave to appeal may
be granted where the judge or judges concerned are of the opinion
that:
(a)(i) the
appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling
reason why the appeal should be heard….
Accordingly, if
neither of these discrete requirements is met, there would be no
basis to grant leave”.
[18]
In
Chithi and Others; in re:
Luhlwini
Mchunu Community v Hancock and Others,
[5]
it
was held:
“
[10]
The threshold for an application for leave to appeal is set out in
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, which
provides that leave
to appeal may only be given if the judge or judges are of the opinion
that the appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success……”
[19]
In
S
v Smith
,
[6]
the
court stated that:
“
Where
the test of reasonable prospects of success postulates is a
dispassionate decision, based on the facts and the law that a
court
of appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that
of the trial court. In order to succeed therefore the
applicant must
convince this court on proper grounds that the prospects of success
of appeal and that those prospects are not remote
but have a
realistic chance of succeeding.
More
is required to be established then that there is a mere possibility
of success, that the case is arguable on appeal or that
the case
cannot be categorised as hopeless.
There must, in other words, be a
sound rational basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of
success on appeal.”
[20]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal in the matter of
Notshokovu
v S,
[7]
held
that an applicant “
faces
a higher and stringent threshold
,
in terms of the Act compared to the provisions of the repealed
Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959 (para 2)”.
(My
underlining).
[21]
Reading
Section
17
(1)
(a)
of
the
Act
one
sees
that
the
words
are:
“
Leave
to Appeal
may
only
be
given
where
the
Judge
or
Judges
concerned
are
of
the opinion
that
-
the
appeal
would
have
a
reasonable
prospect
of
success”.
(My underlining)
[22]
Bertlesmann
J,
in
the
Mont
Chevaux
Trust
v
Goosen
and
Eighteen
Others,
[8]
stated
the following:
“
It
is clear that the threshold for granting leave to appeal against the
judgment of a High Court has been raised by the new Act.
The former test whether leave to
appeal should be granted was a reasonable prospect that another court
may come to a different conclusion,
see Van Heerden v Cromwright and
Others
(1985) (2) SA 342
(T) at 343 H”.
[23]
In
a recent case, in this division, Mlambo JP, Molefe J, Basson J,
cautioned that the higher threshold should be maintained when
considering applications for leave to appeal.
Fairtrade
Tobacco Association v President of the Republic of South Africa,
[9]
the
court stated:
“
As
such, in considering the application for leave to appeal, it is
crucial for this Court to remain cognizant of the higher threshold
that needs to be met before leave to appeal may be granted.
There must exist more than just a
mere
possibility
that
another
court,
the
SCA
in
this
instance,
will,
not might, find differently on both
facts and law.
It
is against this background that we consider the most pivotal ground
of appeal”.
[24]
From
the above, and in considering this Application for Leave to Appeal,
the Court is aware that the bar has been raised.
Hence,
this higher threshold needs to be met before leave to appeal may be
granted
.
[10]
#
# Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction
[25]
In the first ground of appeal, the
applicants contend that the Court
a quo
lacked
the
requisite jurisdiction to entertain the dispute, that the Labour
Court has exclusive jurisdiction, and that the action should
have
been brought before the Labour Court.
[26]
Section 157(2) of the LRA in relation to
the jurisdiction of the Labour Court reads as follows:
“
(2)
The Labour Court has concurrent
jurisdiction with the High Court in respect of any alleged or
threatened violation of any fundamental
right entrenched in Chapter 2
of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, and
arising from-
(a)
employment and from labour
relations;
(b)
any dispute over the
constitutionality of any executive or administrative act or conduct,
or any threatened executive or administrative
act or conduct, by the
State in its capacity as an employer; and
(c)
the application of any law for the
administration of which the Minister is responsible.”
[27]
Section 157(2) of the LRA confers on the
Labour and High Court concurrent jurisdiction to determine disputes
over the constitutionality
of any contract or act committed by the
state in its capacity as employer giving the High Court concurrent
jurisdiction to hear
and decide a dispute based on breach of
agreement with employees.
[28]
In
the matter of
Makhanya
v University of Zululand,
[11]
it
was stated:
“…
in
respect of the enforcement of both contractual and constitutional
rights the high courts retain their original jurisdiction assigned
to
them by the Constitution. In both cases equivalent jurisdiction has
been conferred upon the Labour Court to be exercised concurrently
with the high courts”.
[29]
O’
Regan J in
Fredericks
and Others v MEC for Education and Training Eastern Cape &
Others
[12]
stated:
“
As
there is no general jurisdiction afforded to the Labour Court in
employment matters the jurisdiction of the High Court is not
ousted
by section 157(2) simply because
a
dispute
is
one
that
falls
within
the
overall
sphere
of
employment relations …
section
157(2) cannot be interpreted as ousting the jurisdiction of the High
Court, since it
expressly
provides for a concurrent jurisdiction”.
[30]
It cannot be denied that the respondents
constitutional rights as enshrined in section 27(1)(c), 33 and 34 of
the Constitution are
violated,
alternatively
threatened to be violated by the
unilateral conduct of the first applicant.
[31]
On this ground alone the Labour and High
Court had concurrent jurisdiction to determine the dispute between
the parties.
[32]
In
Fedlife
Assurance Ltd v Wolfaardt
,
[13]
Nugent
JA held that:
“
Section
157(1) does not purport to confer
exclusive
jurisdiction
upon the Labour
Court generally in relation to matters concerning the relationship
between employer and employee”.
[33]
In view of the provisions of
section 157
of
the
Labour Relations Act, 66 of 1995
, the
court has concurrent jurisdiction to
adjudicate the dispute between the parties as the unilateral
application of the DBC Settlement
Agreement 1 of 2016 to the
respondents by the applicants in circumstances where the respondents
constitutional rights as enshrined
in section 27(1)(c), 33 and 34 of
the Constitution is violated, alternatively threatened to be violated
by the unilateral conduct
of the applicants.
[34]
For these reasons, as well as due to the
fact that the dispute founds a contractual claim for enforcement of a
right that does not
emanate from the LRA and has expressly disavowed
reliance on the provisions of the LRA.
[35]
In
the
Baloyi
v Public Protector and others
[14]
matter,
the Constitutional Court considered concurrent jurisdiction of the
High Court in relation to contractual disputes stemming
from
employment relationships, deciding as follows:
“
[47]
Matters concerning a contract of employment, irrespective of whether
any basic condition of employment constitutes a term of
that
contract, are expressly noted in section 77(3) of the Employment Act
as falling within the concurrent jurisdiction of the
High Court and
the Labour Court. The question whether contractual claims arising
from employment contracts fall within the concurrent
jurisdiction of
the High Court and the Labour Court has not explicitly arisen before
this Court. However, as noted above, the Supreme
Court of Appeal has
explained on numerous occasions, with reference to the reasoning of
this Court regarding jurisdiction over
claims based on administrative
action in the labour sphere, that
the
High Court retains its jurisdiction in respect of claims arising from
the enforcement of contractual rights in the employment
context
.”
[15]
And
“
[48]
The LRA does
not extinguish contractual remedies available to employees following
a breach of their contract of employment, or unlawful
termination
thereof… Nothing in the LRA or the Employment Act, required
Mrs Baloyi to advance that claim in the Labour Court”.
[36]
Another factor brought in by the applicants
is
Section 24
of the
Labour Relations Act. Two
factors emerge:
Firstly
,
in this instance, the dispute concerns payment and does not fall
under the edifice of collateral bargaining. Hence, the word ‘dispute’
as set out in
Section 24
is not applicable as the ‘2009
Collective Agreement’ is the source of the settlement.
Therefore the payment aspect
is what the ‘dispute’
concerns.
Secondly
,
whichever it is looked at, nothing would turn on
Section 24
, in light
of the wording and case law on
Section 157.
Any reliance placed on
Section 24
of the
Labour Relations Act is
hence misplaced.
[37]
The contention that the Labour Court has
exclusive jurisdiction, and the matter should have been brought
before the Labour Court,
can be seen to have no merit whatsoever.
# Res Judicata
Res Judicata
[38]
The
applicants’
second
ground
in
their
application
for
leave
to
appeal
is
with
respect to
res
judicata.
[16]
The
applicants state that the Court’s finding on that issue was
incorrect.
[39]
The applicants contend that the Second
Collective Agreement (2016) brought an end to the dispute regarding
the interpretation of
the First Collective Agreement, thereby
rendering it ‘res judicata’. Hence the applicants stating
that my finding on
the issue of res judicata was incorrect.
[40]
The respondents opposes this ‘ground
of appeal’. They state:
“…
the
Court was correct in its findings that res judicata does not arise
nor apply in the current setting”.
[41]
In
the case of
The
Trustees for the Time Being of the Burmilla Trust vs The President of
the Republic of South Africa
[17]
it
was stated:
“
The
trite requirements of res judicata are that the same relief on the
same cause of action must have been finally decided in proceedings
between the same parties”.
[42]
Various
elements,
in
terms
of
the
law
must
be
present
for
Res
judicata
to
succeed. See for example
Lowrey
v Steedman;
[18]
Le Roux en Ander v Le Roux;
[19]
African Wanders Football Club (Pty) Ltd. v Wanders Football Club;
[20]
Lily
v Johannesburg Turf Club.
[21]
These
are elements:
42.1
It must be part of the defendants’
plea.
42.2
The judgement relied upon must be between
the same parties.
42.3
The cause of action must have been the
same.
42.4
The party who raised res judicata must
prove all the elements underlying the defence.
42.5
The judgement must be of a competent court.
42.6
The judgement must have been a final
judgment and a definitive order on the merits of the matter.
In the instance before
this Court, inter alia, res judicata was never pleaded by the
applicants, nor was the matter previously decided
by a competent
court.
[43]
In
addition, the
res
judicata
principle
cannot apply in this matter as it was not pleaded by the Applicants
and there is no prior final judgement. In any event:
As detailed in
the Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal,
[22]
the Constitutional Court, in the matter of
Thembekile
Molaudzi v The State,
[23]
created
a new common law precedent with respect to
res
judicata
and
the interest-of-justice exception, and quoted as follows:
“
In
Molaudzi v S the Constitutional Court developed the common law by
creating an interest-of-justice exception to the principle
of res
judicata and - for the first time in the Constitutional Court's
history - overturned one of its own judgements.”
[44]
In the Court
a
quo,
I found that
res
judicata
does not arise nor apply in
this matter.
The applicants’
contention with respect to
res judicata
can be seen to be without merit.
# Estoppel
Estoppel
[45]
The applicants, as a
third
ground
in their application for leave
to appeal, have, at
this stage, brought in
the matter of estoppel. This being based on the respondents’
role in the Second Collective Agreement
being grounds to invoke
estoppel.
[46]
The applicants claim that the respondents
had a duty to speak and inform the applicants that they were no
longer represented by
the Trade Union. The DCS hence relied on the
silence of the respondents and should be estopped.
[47]
Estoppel was never pleaded by the
applicants in the Court
a quo
and
now seek to raise estoppel for the first time in the application for
leave to appeal.
[48]
The
applicants had a fair hearing before the court
a
quo
,
where they were able to present all the arguments they wished. The
arguments the applicants then sought to advance were fully
ventilated, properly considered and comprehensively determined. For
estoppel to be of any use in this matter same would have had
to be
pleaded in the applicants’ original plea. Further, silence does
not constitute a representation which is a requirement
for estoppel,
in the absence of a duty to speak.
[24]
[49]
The applicants attempt to invoke estoppel
has no merit.
# Summing-up
Summing-up
[50]
I am satisfied that the application for
leave to appeal, brought by the applicants, on the grounds that it
has, has no merit.
# Judgement
Judgement
[51]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal’s guidance for granting leave to appeal
is stated in 2016 in
MEC
For Health, Eastern Cape v Ongezwa Mkhitha and The Road Accident
Fund
,
[25]
as Leave to Appeal “
must
not be granted unless there (is) truly a reasonable prospect of
success.”
Further
this application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal
or to a Full Bench of this division, has not passed
the bar which has
been raised in terms of Section 17 of the Superior Court Act of
2013.
[26]
Hence,
this application leads me to believe that any appeal would have no
truly reasonable prospect of success.
In
addition, there are no compelling reasons as envisaged in the
legislation why the appeal should be heard, including conflicting
judgments on the matter under consideration.
# Order
Order
[52]
I therefore issue the following order:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
L
BARIT
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
Heard: 7 July 2023
Date
Judgment Delivered: 03 January 2024
# Appearances
Appearances
For
the Plaintiff
Advocate
L Kellerman S.C.
Advocate
S J Coetzee S.C.
Instructed
by Geyser Coetzee Attorneys
# For the Defendant
For the Defendant
Advocate
H Gerber S.C.
Instructed
by the State Attorney, Pretoria
[1]
Section
213
of the
Labour Relations Act No. 66 of 1995
, as amended:
Definitions - "Collective Agreement" means a written
agreement concerning terms and conditions of employment
or any other
matter of mutual interest concluded by one or more registered trade
unions, on the one hand and, on the other hand-
(a)
one or more employers;
(b)
one or more registered employers'
organisations; or
(c)
one
or
more
employers
and
one
or
more
registered
employers'
organisations;
"
council"
includes
a
bargaining council and a statutory council.
[2]
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Ongezwa Mkhitha and The Road Accident
Fund
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25 November 2016).
[3]
Commissioner
of Inland Revenue v Tuck;
1989 (4) SA 888
(T) at 890 B/C.
[4]
Fusion
Properties 233 CC v Stellenbosch Municipality
[2021] ZASCA 10
(29
January 2021) (para 18).
[5]
Chithi
and Others; in re: Luhlwini Mchunu Community v Hancock and Others
[2021] ZASCA 123
(23 September 2021) (“para 18”).
[6]
S
v Smith
2012 (1) SALR 567
(SCA) [para 7].
[7]
See
also the Supreme Court of Appeal in the matter of Notshokovu v S
[2016] ZASCA 112
, where it was held that an Appellant “faces a
higher and stringent threshold, in terms of the Act compared to the
provisions
of the repealed Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959 (para 2)”.
[8]
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Goosen and Eighteen Others (2014 JDR) 2325 (LCC) at
para 6.
[9]
Fairtrade
Tobacco Association v President of the Republic of South Africa
(21686/2020)
[2020] ZAGPPHC 311
[10]
In
the Annual Survey of South African Law (2016) (Juta, Cape Town
p706), the following is stated in a discussion on the case of
Seathlolo v Chemical Energy Paper Printing Wood and Allied Workers
Union (2016) 37 ILJ 1485 (LC).
The
court noted that Section 17 of the Act sets out the test for
determining whether leave should be granted: “Leave to
appeal
may only be granted if the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success. According to the court the
“would” in Section 17 (1) (a) (i) raised the threshold.
The
traditional formulation of the test only required Applicants for
leave to appeal to prove that a reasonable prospect existed
that
another court might come to a different conclusion. That test was
also not applied lightly
.
The
court noted that the Labour Appeal Court had recently observed that
the Labour Court must not readily grant leave to appeal
or give
permission for petitions. It goes against the statutory imperative
of expeditious resolution of labour disputes to allow
appeals where
there is no reasonable prospect that a different court would come to
a different conclusion”. (My underlining).
[11]
[2009]
ZASCA 69
at para 26.
[12]
[2001] ZACC 6
;
2002
(2) BCLR 113
at paras 40-41.
[13]
Fedlife
Assurance Ltd v Wolfaardt
[2000] ZASCA 91
;
2002 (1) SA 49
(SCA) at
para 25
[14]
Baloyi
v Public Protector and others
[2020] ZACC 27
at paras 47-48.
[15]
See,
for example, Makhanya v University of Zululand (218/08)
[2009] ZASCA
69
(29 May 2009).
[16]
Res
Judicata
is
the Latin term for “a matter already judged” and in the
broad sense it is generally a plea or defence raised by
a respondent
in a civil trial.
[17]
The
Trustees for the Time Being of the Burmilla Trust vs The
President
of the Republic of South Africa
2022
(5) SA 78
(SCA) at para 43.
[18]
Lowrey
v Steedman, 1914 AD 532.
[19]
Le
Roux en Ander v Le Roux,
1967 (1) SA 446
A
[20]
African
Wanders Football Club (Pty) Ltd. v Wanders Football Club
1977 (2) SA
38
A.
[21]
Lily
v Johannesburg Turf Club
1983 (4) SA 548
W.
[22]
The
Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal (PELJ), online version ISSN
1727-3781, PER vol.19
n.1 Potchefstroom 2016,
http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2016/v19n0a1282.
[23]
Molaudzi
v The State 2015 2 SACR 341 (CC)
[24]
Axiam
Holdings Ltd. v Deloitte and Touche
2006 (1) SA 237
(SCA) para
21-24.
[25]
MEC
For Health, Eastern Cape v Ongezwa Mkhitha and the Road Accident
Fund
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25 November 2016) in para 14 above.
[26]
Section
17
(1) (a) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
states that: “
Leave
to Appeal may
only
be given where the judge or judges concerned are of the opinion that
the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success
(Section 17
(1) (a) (I))”.
sino noindex
make_database footer start