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 150
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Master Runners (Pty) Ltd t/a Beefmasters v Oakley Transport and Another (61235/2011)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 150 (20 February 2024)
Master Runners (Pty) Ltd t/a Beefmasters v Oakley Transport and Another (61235/2011)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 150 (20 February 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_150.html
sino date 20 February 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
61235/2011
In
the matter between:
MASTER
RUNNERS (PTY) LTD T/A
BEEFMASTERS
Applicant/
Plaintiff
And
OAKLEY
TRANSPORT
First
Respondent/ Defendant
MICROMATH
TRADING 561 CC
Second
Respondent/ Defendant
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant, who is the plaintiff in the action proceedings
between
the parties, has brought this latest application in terms of rule
28(4) for leave to amend its particulars of claim and
replication
consequent to the respondents’ objection to the applicant’s
notice of amendment in terms of rule 28(1)
of the Uniform Rules of
the Court. The applicant has also filed applications for the
condonation of the late filing of its
replication to the second
respondent’s answering affidavit (rule 27(3) and of the
amendment thereto as well as an application
in terms of rule 33(4),
being for the separation of the hearing and determination of the
issues of the amendment and, at a later
stage, liability and quantum
of the claim.
[2]
The amendments sought are, first, in respect of the proper
citation
of the first applicant which the applicant seeks to aligned with
citation in the first respondent’s plea and, second,
the
addition of the plea of the joint and several liability of the
respondents, the one paying the other to be absolved, or,
alternatively,
the first respondent being held vicariously liable
with the second respondent.
[3]
The applicant’s applications are opposed by the
respondents on
different grounds which will be considered later herein and the
respondents seek the dismissal of the applications
with costs.
FACTUAL
MATRIX
[4]
Two vehicles owned by the plaintiff were allegedly stationery,
one
behind the other, at a stop-and-go sign on a construction site on 9
June 2009 at or near the N12 between Bloemhof and Wolmaransstad
when
a vehicle with registration W[…] GP collided with rear of the
second vehicle causing it to rear-end or collided with
the vehicle in
front. Both plaintiff’s vehicles were damaged as a result of
the collision. Information provided by driver
of the offending
vehicle at the scene was that he was an employee of the first
respondent, the owner of the offending vehicle and
he (driver) was on
duty when the accident occurred.
[5]
On the basis of the information provided, the applicant
sought to
institute action proceedings against the first respondent and claim
payment of damages to its vehicles on the premise
that the driver of
the offending motor vehicle was the employee of the first respondent
and was acting within the course and scope
of his employment when the
accident occurred or, further alternatively, had been driving the
vehicle in pursuance of the business
interests of his employer, the
first respondent.
[6]
Prior to issuing summons, the plaintiff’s attorneys
had been
communicating with the first respondent about the collision. This led
to the second respondent, through its insurance
brokers, Jacobson &
Mallet, represented by a Mr Dames, informing its insurers, Hollard,
on 15 June 2009 about the plaintiff’s
claim arising from the
accident of 9 June 2009.
[7]
Mr Maluleke of Zurich Insurance Company (‘’Zurich’’),
the insurers of the plaintiff’s vehicles, approached Mr Dames
on 3 August 2010 about the claim Zurich had against Hollard
emanating
from the collision. This resulted in EWS Attorneys coming on record
as legal representatives of the first respondent.
[8]
On 12 August 2010 EWS Attorneys request Zurich to provide
them with
the merits documents of the accident and also enquire on what basis
the applicant sought to hold the first respondent
liable.
[9]
A letter of demand dated 11 November 2010 was sent by
Zurich to AWS
Attorneys. On 7 June 2011 Zurich furnished AWS Attorneys them with
the merits documentation which included,
inter alia
, the
sketch plan and the description of the accident.
[10]
On 11 August 2011 EWS again enquires from Zurich why it sought to
hold
the first respondent liable for the damages. The applicant
responded by issuing the summons against the first respondent on 25
October 2011 and had it served on EWS Attorneys two days later, on 27
October 2011.
[11]
The matter became defended by the first respondent who filed plea on
31 August 2012 denying liability. The applicant’s attorneys
followed up on the plea and, on 10 September 2012, enquired from
the
first respondent’s attorneys what the basis of the denial of
liability was. The response received dated 26 September
2012 was that
the applicant had pleaded an incorrect registration number of the
first respondent’s vehicle and that no vehicle
registered in
the first respondent was involved in an accident on 9 June 2009.
2013
[12]
In a subsequent letter dated 10 June 2013 the first respondent’s
attorneys sent communication to the applicant’s attorneys
revealing the identity of the second respondent as the entity liable
for payment of the applicant’s damages. It is to be noted that
this information was disclosed to the applicant’s attorneys
some four years and one day after the accident had occurred on 09
June 2009.
[13]
Approximately two months later, on 5 August 2013, the insurers of the
plaintiff’s vehicles, Zurich, sent communication to the
plaintiff’s attorneys pertaining to investigations that had
been conducted regarding the alleged identity of the second
respondent as the wrongdoer.
[14]
The information pertaining to the second respondent gathered on 10
June
2013 and 5 August 2013, respectively, informed the applicant’s
attorneys’ decision on 31 October 2013 to notify the
first
respondent’s Attorneys of their intention to launch an
application for the joinder of the second respondent as the
second
defendant in the action proceedings and requesting that the
commencement of the hearing of the matter scheduled for 14 November
2013 be postponed.
2014
[15]
The applicant launched the application for the joinder of the second
respondent on 15 May 2014. The first respondent and the proposed
second respondent, both represented by EWS Attorneys, filed their
opposition to the applicant’s joinder application on 23 June
2014. The respondent’s answering affidavit was signed
by their
attorneys, AWS. The applicant filed its replication on 7 November
2014, having earlier been granted an extension by EWS.
On 30 November
2014.
[16]
EWS Attorneys were substituted by HP Attorneys as the first and
second
respondents’ attorneys of record on 7 April 2016. HP
Attorneys withdrew the respondents’ opposition of the
applicant’s
joinder application resulting in its granting
unopposed on 28 February 2017.
2016
[17]
EWS was substituted by HP Attorneys as the first and second
respondents’
attorneys of record on 7 April 2016. HP Attorneys
withdrew the respondents’ opposition to the applicant’s
joinder application
on 8 February 2017 resulting in the application
being granted unopposed on 28 February 2017.
[18]
Following the granting of the joinder application in the present
matter,
the applicant filed the amended pages of its summons and
particulars of claim on 30 November 2017 which included the citation
of
the second respondent as the second defendant in the action
proceedings and allegations of facts necessary to establish the
premise
of the second defendant’s liability for the applicant’s
claim.
[19]
The first and second respondents filed their respective consequential
amended plea and special plea of prescription, respectively, on 4
September 2017 as follows:
The
FIRST DEFENDANT, inter alia;
19.1
specifically denies the
locus standi
of the plaintiff to
institute these proceedings claiming the alleged damages;
19.2
specifically denies any liability to pay any damages suffered by the
plaintiff as alleged or at all.
The SECOND DEFENDANT
raised the special pleas that:
19.3 the
plaintiff’s cause of action arose on 9 June 2009. The
plaintiff’s claim prescribed three years
later on 8 June 2012,
prior to it
joining the second defendant
to the proceedings, alternatively;
19.4
the plaintiff alleges to have become aware of the identity of the
second respondent on 10 June 2013,
but only brought the application
for joinder of the second respondent on 14 May 2017; a
period of three years
from the date of the plaintiff acquiring
knowledge of the second defendant’s identity having lapsed on 9
June 2016.
THE
PRESENT AMENDMENT APPLICATION
PURPOSE
OF AN AMENDMENT
[20]
The provisions of rule 18 of the Uniform Rules of Court require that
when pleading, a party must plead the facts that establish its case;
the material facts which the court considers, apply the rules
of law
to and draws conclusions from regarding the rights and obligations of
the parties which it pronounces in a judgment that
will follow. A
summons that contains the plaintiff’s opinions and conclusions
instead of material facts is defective and
excipiable for the failure
to establish a cause of action.
[21]
A cause of action was described as:
“
the
factual basis / set of material facts that begets the plaintiff’s
legal right to action…”
[22]
The primary objective of an amendment of pleadings is: “
to
obtain a proper ventilation of the dispute between the parties to
determine the real issues between them, so that justice may
be done.”
CAVEATS
TO AMENDMENTS
[23]
The purpose of the amendment of a pleading is to include therein
relevant
particularities in the facts that establish a cause of
action, without altering the import of the already pleaded facts in a
manner
that may cause prejudice to the other party or parties which
(prejudice) may not be compensated by an order for costs.
[24]
Allowing a justified amendment accords with the objective of the
provisions
of section 34 of the Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa,1996, which espouse the right of access to justice, the right
to be heard and the pursuit of the interests of justice.
[25]
Rule 27(3) provides for the launching of an application for
condonation
of a delayed application in terms of rule 28(4). Set
legal principles require,
inter alia
, that a full disclosure
of the reasons for the delay be set out in the application for
condonation, that the reasons for the delay
be
bona fide
to
warrant the granting the condonation and that it be in the interests
of justice to do so.
FIRST
AND SECOND DEFENDANTS’ PLEAS
[26]
The first respondent, having previously on 31 August 2012 pleaded to
the plaintiff particulars of claim, filed its amended plea,
occasioned by the joinder of the second defendant, on 4 September
2018.
On the same day, the second defendant filed two special pleas
and a plea. The first and second respondents pleaded, respectively,
that;
26.1
The first defendant in effect denied ownership of the vehicle that
caused the accident giving rise to the plaintiff’s
claim, that
the driver of that vehicle had been employed by it or was carrying
out its business interest when the accident occurred
on 9 June 2009.
26.2
The first defendant also alleged that notwithstanding its initial
plea on 31 August 2012, the plaintiff failed
to join the second
respondent as the second defendant in the action proceedings,
and;
26.3
the second defendant pleaded that plaintiff’s claim, which
arose on 9 August 2009, became prescribed, in
terms of
section 11D
of
the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
, three years later on 8 August 2012,
which was prior to the applicant serving the application for joinder
of the second defendant
as a party in the action proceedings.
[27]
The applicant filed its replication to the second respondent’s
special pleas and plea on 11 August 2020, well out of time in terms
of the rules and, in consequence whereof the applicant filed
a
further application for the condonation of the late filing of the
replication on 13 August 2020. The latter date was the date
of the
commencement of the hearing of the matter. The matter was, however,
crowded out and subsequently enrolled for hearing on
18 March 2021.
[28]
The parties subsequently held three pre-trial conferences
consecutively
on 28 February 2019, 6 August 2020 and 15 February
2021.
PAUSE
[29]
I pause to state that the undermentioned new detailed information had
become known to the applicant resulting in it launching the present
two applications for the amendments of its particulars of claim
and
the replication in terms of
rule 28(1)
on 15 February 2021. The new
facts that had emerged were that:
29.1
A Mr Gert Blignaut of the first defendant had attended the accident
scene on 9 June 2009 and
gathered the following information,
including that obtained from the police accident report :
29.1.1
Motor Vehicle Registration :
W[…] GP
Operators
Card
: Micromath Trading 561 CC
29.1.2
Photo of Offending Vehicle : W[…]
GP
bearing
the Transport Logo : Lefofa Trans
29.1.3
Accident Report OAR recording:
Driver
of vehicle W[…] GP : Sibusiso
Ngema
Employer
: Lefofa Trans
Natis
Print of vehicle
W[…]
GP
: Micromath Trading 561 CC
29.1.4
Certificate of Service:
Issued
by
: Lefofa Trans
Issued
to
: Sibusiso Master Ngema
ANALYSIS
OF THE PURPOSE OF THE AMENDMENTS
[30]
The purpose of the applicant’s currently sought amendments of
the
particulars of claim and replication to the second respondent’s
pleas is, as a result of the nature of the intricate ties
between:
30.1
the offending vehicle W[…] GP was registered in the name of
the second respondent;
30.2
it bore the transport logo of a company called Lefofa Trans which was
the employer of the driver of that vehicle
when the collision
occurred. The vehicle appeared in the list of the fleet of vehicles
assigned to the first respondent and was
to be driven by the same
driver who allegedly caused the accident;
30.3
the same driver reported that the first respondent was his employer
and owner of the offending vehicle;
30.4
The second respondents admitted that it traded as Lefofa Trans whose
logo appeared on the offending vehicle;
30.5
The first respondent was initially contacted by or on behalf of the
applicant about the collision and damages sustained
based on the
information that had been obtained from the driver of the offending
vehicle at the scene of the accident. That communication,
unbeknown
to the applicant, mysteriously resulted in the second respondent’s
insurer, Hollard, being informed of the accident
and the applicant’s
claim by the second respondent’s insurance brokers.
30.6
Upon receipt of the application for its joinder, the second
respondent became represented by the same firm of attorneys
representing the first respondent and, later, both respondents
terminated the services of their attorneys and employed the same
substitute attorneys.
[31]
The facts in paras 29 and 30 above, in my view, are an indication
that
the first and second respondents are in an intrinsic web-like
business entanglement, share resources and appear, in my view, to
be
under the control of one mind – what interest, amongst other
things, occasioned Mr Gert Blignaut of the first defendant’s
visitation and gathering the information in para 29, above, at the
scene of the accident on the day the accident had occurred.
[32]
In addition, the first respondent’s initial shielding of the
identity
of the second respondent and its involvement in this case
until, in the mind of the first respondent, the applicant’s
claim
had prescribed begs the question what interest does the first
respondent have in the second respondent to afford it this purported
protection.
THE
AMENDMENT SOUGHT EFFECT THEREOF
[33]
The applicant initial sought payment of its damages against the first
respondent, but successfully joined the second respondent as the
second defendant later. It then amended its particulars of claim
to
reflect the joinder and sought hold each defendant individually
liable, or, alternatively, the first defendant vicariously liable
with the second defendant. In the latest amendment sought in the
present hearing, the applicant seeks to add a further alternative
for
holding the respondents liable by the addition of ‘..
or,
alternatively, the first and the second defendants jointly and
severally liable, the one paying the other to be absolved.’
[34]
It is specifically the sought inclusion of this further alternative
premise
for holding the respondents liable that is at the heart the
present hearing. The objection to this amendment is buttressed on the
respondents’ contention that joint and several liability of the
respondent has not been pleaded and the inclusion thereof
would
constitute the introduction of a new cause of action. This contention
by the respondents could not be more misplaced, in
my view, in that
the facts constituting the cause of action remain the same; relief
has already been sought against each respondent
or against both
respondents on the basis of vicarious liability. Seeking to hold the
respondents jointly and severally liable the
one paying the other to
be absolved, merely adds another alternative premise for liability
and not another (or new) cause of action.
As a matter of fact, the
set of facts on which the potential liability of the respondents
appears to be founded, such as the intrinsic
nature of the business
interaction and the apparent sharing of resources between the
respondents, perfectly accommodate reliance
for the potential
liability the respondents on both principles of joint and several
liability and vicarious liability, inter alia.
I find, consequently,
that the respondents’ grounding for the objection to the
amendment is without merit and ought to be
rejected.
CONDONATION PRINCIPLES
[35]
The applicant was served with the second
respondent’s special pleas and plea on 4 August 2018, but filed
its replication thereto
on 11 August 2020, that is, two years and one
week later. Compliance with time limits indicated in the rules of the
court or a
court directive is mandatory. Any delay places an
obligation on the party concerned to seek the indulgence of the court
as soon
as it becomes aware of the necessity to do so in an
application for condonation.
[36]
For an application for condonation to succeed, the applicant
for condonation must of necessity provide a detailed explanation of
the cause of the delay
[37]
One of the most important considerations for granting
condonation is ensuring that the interests of justice are served.
ANALYSIS
JUSTIFICATION
OF GRANTING THE AMENDMENTS
[38]
The applicant’s election to seek to hold, additionally to
either
of the respondents individually, both the first and the second
respondents jointly and severally liable, the one paying the other
to
be absolved (the all-encompassing approach), is necessary, in my
view, in light of the unlikelihood of a successful disentanglement
of
the web-like business connectivity of the respondents in order
identify each respondent’s scope of activity and liability.
A
further justification for the finding that the amendment is necessary
is the first respondent’s self-asserted exculpation
from
possible liability.
[39]
With regard to the second respondent’s plea of prescription, it
will be amiss to not consider the extent of the calculated delay
caused by the first respondent and that caused by both respondents’
opposition of the applicant’s joinder application. It will not
serve the interests of justice, in my view, to allow the second
respondent and, ultimately both respondents, to benefit from a
technicality that was unjustifiably created and nurtured by the
first
respondent over a period of time solely for potential prejudice to
the applicant.
[40]
It needs be stated that none of the findings in this judgment should
be construed to be a finding on the merits in this case.
CONCLUSION
[41]
In line with the findings above, I conclude that the amendments
sought
by the applicant are justified and necessary to facilitate a
meaningful ventilation of the facts upon which the applicant seeks
to
hold the respondents individually liable or jointly and severally
liable, the one paying the other to be absolved. The respondents’
objections stand to be rejected.
ORDER
[42]
Following the findings in this judgment, an order is made that;
1.
The applicant’s application for condonation is granted.
2.
Leave is granted to the applicant to effect the amendments sought in
these proceedings.
3.
The application for the separation of the determination of the issues
in terms of
rule 33(4)
as stated in the notice of motion is granted.
4.
The respondents are ordered to pay the costs.
__________________________
MPN
MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This
judgment was prepared by Judge Mbongwe. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their legal
representatives
by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
20 February
2024.
HEARD
ON:
16 August 2023
DECIDED
ON:
20 February 2024
Appearances:
For the
Applicant:
Adv FJ Erasmus SC
Instructed
by:
Prinsloo Attorneys
For the Third
Respondent:
Adv PM van Ryneveld
Instructed
by:
Herman Prinsloo Attorneys
Buchner
and Another v Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Co Ltd
1995
(1) SA 215
at 216H-J
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
1980 (2) 814 at 825G
Picardi
Hotels Limited v Thekwini Properties (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 128
;
2009 (1) SA 493
(SCA)
Rennie
v Kamby Farms (Pty) Ltd
1989 (2) SA
124
(A) at 129G;
Napier v Tsaperas
1995 (2) SA 665
(A) at 671 B-D
Foster
v Stewart Scott Inc.
(1997) n18 ILJ 367 (LAC)
Grootboom
v National Prosecution Authority & Another (
CCT 08/13)
[2013] ZACC 37
;
2014 (2) SA 68
(CC);
2014 (1) BCLR 65
(CC);
[2014] 1
BLLR 1
(CC); (2014) 35 ILJ 121 (CC) (21 October 2013)
sino noindex
make_database footer start