Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 139South Africa
Oostendorp v Oakley Transport and Others (23266/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 139 (21 February 2024)
Headnotes
the identities of the second and the third respondents as the liable parties and thus enabling the claims against them to possibly prescribe. To this end, the applicant intends to hold the first respondent liable on the principle of estoppel.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Oostendorp v Oakley Transport and Others (23266/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 139 (21 February 2024)
Oostendorp v Oakley Transport and Others (23266/2012) [2024] ZAGPPHC 139 (21 February 2024)
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:
23266/2012
In
the matter between:
V
A OOSTENDORP
Applicant
And
OAKLEY
TRANSPORT
First
Respondent
FALCON
REMOVALS
Second
Respondent
COMAKO
TRANS CC
Third
Respondent
In
re:
V
A OOSTENDORP
Plaintiff
And
OAKLEY
TRANSPORT
First
Defendant
FALCON
REMOVALS
Second
Defendant
COMAKO
TRANS CC
Third
Defendant
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an interlocutory application brought by
the plaintiff in action proceedings and applicant herein for leave to
amend its
particulars of claim in terms of rule 28(4) of the Uniform
Rules of the Court. The application stems from the action proceedings
the applicant instituted against the first respondent for damages
arising from a motor vehicle collision involving the applicant’s
vehicle and a vehicle allegedly belonging to the first respondent and
driven, at the time of the collision, by an alleged employee
of the
first respondent whose negligent driving the applicant alleges was
the cause of the collision. A period of over three years
had lapsed
since the cause of action had arisen when the first respondent filed
its plea denying liability. The identities of the
second respondent
as the owner of the offending vehicle, followed by that of the third
respondent, as the employer of the allegedly
negligent driver of that
vehicle, were revealed to the applicant. Upon their joinder as
co-defendants, the second and third respondents
raised pleas of
prescription against the applicant’s claim.
[2]
The applicant, having sought relief / payment
against the first respondent, then or, alternative against the second
respondent or,
alternative against both the first and second
respondents jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved, seeks,
in the present amendment application, the addition
of further alternatives which create three scenarios – either
of the respondents
being the owner of the offending vehicle,
alternatively, the employer of the driver thereof, or, alternatively,
being the party
whose business interest was being pursued at the time
the accident occurred. To this end, the applicant seeks to amend its
particulars
of claim to include a claim based on joint and several
liability of the respondents, the one paying, the others to be
absolved.
[3]
In addition, through the amendment of its
replication, the applicant seeks to hold the first respondent liable
on the ground of
misrepresentation that it had until the filing of
its plea more than three years after the accident had occurred, gave
the impression
that it was entertaining the applicant’s claim
and withheld the identities of the second and the third respondents
as the
liable parties and thus enabling the claims against them to
possibly prescribe. To this end, the applicant intends to hold the
first respondent liable on the principle of estoppel.
THE
FACTS
[4]
The applicant instituted an action for damages
against the first respondent arising from a motor vehicle accident
which occurred
on 10 December 2009 involving a vehicle owned by or in
the lawful possession of the applicant and a vehicle with
registration VJJ
187 GP allegedly owned by the first respondent and
driven at the time by Mr M. Dlamini, an alleged employee of the first
respondent
acting in the cause and scope of his employment with the
first respondent at the time the accident occurred or was driving in
pursuance
of the business interests of the first respondent.
[5]
The accident occurred along the R300 near Paarl
in the Western Cape when vehicle V[…] GP allegedly intruded
onto the lane
for opposite bound traffic where it collided with and
caused damage to the applicant’s vehicle amounting to the sum
of R176 885,00.
[6]
On 9 April 2010, Ms Kuhn, a representative of the
applicant’s insurer, Zurich, made contact with a Ms Vos of the
first respondent
in connection with the accident. That
communication resulted in the first respondent, through its brokers,
notifying its
insurer about the accident. This was followed by EWS
Attorneys coming on record as legal representatives of the first
respondent.
EWS Attorneys requested Zurich to provide them with
documents relating to the accident, which were duly provided.
[7]
On 7 September 2010, in an ostensible response to
Zurich, EWS Attorneys informed Zurich that their client, the first
respondent,
had not yet consulted with ‘
their
driver
’.
[8]
The applicant issued summons which was served on
the first respondent on 10 May 2012 and in which the applicant sought
payment from
the first respondent on the basis that it was
vicariously liable for the wrongful actions of its employee, Mr
Dlamini. The claim
was for the amount of R176, 885.00. The first
respondent filed its plea on 10 August 2012
admitting
that Mr Dlamini was its employee and the
driver of the vehicle V[…] GP at the time of the
accident
, but denied
that it was liable for payment of the applicant’s damages
claimed. Following the denial of liability, the applicant
requested
further particulars, specifically the basis for the first
respondent’s denial of liability premised on vicarious
liability.
[9]
In a reply dated 6 June 2013, EWS Attorneys
attached a registration document of vehicle V[…] GP which
revealed the identity
of its owner, the second respondent.
[10]
On 9 August 2013 EWS Attorneys sent a letter to
the applicant’s attorneys advising that they earlier erroneous
advised that
the driver of vehicle V[…] GP at the time of the
accident was an employee of the first respondent and revealed the
identity
of the third respondent as the employer of that driver. On
12 December 2013 the applicant’s attorneys responded indicating
that they will bring an application for the joinder of the second and
the third respondents.
[11]
It is to be noted that the revelation of the
identities of the second and the third respondents came three and
half years after
the accident had occurred, that is, approximately
six months after the applicant’s claim would ordinarily have
become prescribed
in terms of the
Prescription Act of 1969
.
[12]
The applicant brought the application for the
joinder of the second and the third respondent on 15 May 2014. The
application was
opposed by the respondents who filed their answering
affidavit on 23 June 2014. The applicant filed its replying affidavit
on 7
November 2014 having earlier been granted an extension. The
joinder application was, in any event, granted on 28 February 2017
following the withdrawal of the opposition by the respondents’
new attorneys of record in a letter dated 8 February 2017.
[13]
On 12 June 2018 the applicant filed its amended
particulars of claim citing the second defendant and setting out the
cause of action
against it. The first respondent filed its
consequential amended plea and the second and the third respondents
their plea and two
special pleas of prescription on 4 September 2018
as follows:
13.1
The first respondent denied that it employed the
driver of the offending vehicle or owned the vehicle or that the
vehicle was driven
in pursuance of the first respondent’s
business, thus, denying liability.
13.2
Second and third respondents’ denial of
liability is premised on the contention that the plaintiff’s
claim against them,
if any, had become prescribed when they were
joined in the proceedings.
[14]
The applicant filed it replication on 11 August
2020, that is, two days before the matter was to be heard in court.
The respondents
took issue with the applicant’s late filing and
alleged prejudice to them. The matter was, however, crowded out and
that
alleviated the prejudice the respondents had alleged.
[15]
The parties held another pre-trial conference on
15 February 2021. On the same day the applicant filed a
rule 28(1)
notice of amendment of its particulars of claim. On 26 February 2021
the respondents filed their
rule 28(3)
notice of objection to the
intended amendments causing the applicant to launch the
rule 28(4)
application for leave to amend its particulars of claim and also file
an application for the separation of the determination of
the issues
in terms of
rule 33(4).
[16]
Both applicant’s applications are opposed
by the respondents who filed their answering affidavit. The applicant
filed its
replying affidavit on 17 March 2021. The applicant seeks to
effect amendments to its particulars of claim as follows:
16.1
The deletion of para 2 of the particulars of
claim and the insertion of the following;
1.
“
The
First Defendant is Oakley Trans (Pty) Ltd, a company with limited
liability, duly registered in terms of the Company Laws of
the
Republic of South Africa with registered address at 100 Diamant
Street, Klerksoord, Pretoria, Gauteng.”
16.2
By the insertion of the following at the end of
paragraph 5 of the particulars of claim:
2.
“…
.
alternatively the first-, second- and the
Third Defendants are herein cited jointly and severally, the one
paying, the others to
be absolved.”
16.3
By the insertion of paragraph 7.4 as follows:
3.
“
7.4
In the alternative to the above the First Defendant accepted the risk
pertaining to vehicle with registration number
and letters V[…]GP
and liability arising from such risk (including the use of the
vehicle and the conduct of the driver
thereof in the furthering of
its interests) and transferred the risk to its insurer.”
RESPONDENTS’
OBJECTIONS
[17]
The grounding for the respondents’
objection to the applicant’s proposed amendments is that;
17.1
it is contended that the applicant initially
sought relief against the first or the second respondent, or,
alternatively, the first
and the second respondents, jointly and
severally. These scenarios are premised on alleged employment of the
driver of the offending
vehicle by the first respondent and the
ownership of the vehicle by the second respondent. However, the point
is raised that the
applicant’s claim has prescribed against the
second respondent. Neither scenarios sought to be relied upon by the
applicant
against the second respondent can hold. The granting of the
amendment will, consequently, serve no practical purpose against the
second respondent and, therefore, its alleged joint liability with
the first respondent is without basis. Furthermore, the first
respondent, even if it was accepted that it was the employer of the
driver of the offending vehicle, which it has denied and this
is
supported by the admission of the employment of the driver by the
third respondent and, even if it was accepted that it was
the first
respondent’s business interests that were being pursued when
the accident occurred, the applicant’s reliance
on joint and
several liability of the respondents cannot stand in the light of the
prescription of its claims against the second
and third respondents.
[18]
The applicant’s raising of the first
respondent’s misrepresentation and application of estoppel to
hold the first respondent
liable cannot stand either as that was
never pleaded and cannot be raised for the first time in a
replication as, inter alia, the
first respondent cannot procedurally
respond to the new allegations.
ANALYSIS
AND CONCLUSION
[19]
I agree fully firstly that the applicant’s
claims against the second and the third respondents have prescribed
and find, secondly,
that the first respondent’s alleged joint
and several liability with the second and the third respondents falls
with the
prescription of the claims against it co-respondents. The
first respondent can in none of the pleaded circumstances of the
applicant’s
case be held individually liable. The application
the amendments directed at the liability of the respondents stands to
be dismissed.
COSTS
[20]
With their success in these proceedings, the
respondents are entitled to an order for costs in their favour.
ORDER
[21]
Resulting from the findings and conclusion in
this judgment, the following order is made:
1.
The application for leave to amend is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs.
_____________________________
MPN
MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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
21 February
2024.
HEARD
ON:
16 August 2023
DECIDED
ON:
21 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
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