Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 415South Africa
Minister of Police and Another v Ntone (75038/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 415 (6 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 May 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Rescission application – Rule 42 of the Uniform Rules of the Court and common law requirements. Relief erroneously sought and granted. Rationality for instituting proceedings – Rule 42 and or common law requirements not satisfied-no legal foundation. Application dismissed – costs - attorney and client scale.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Police and Another v Ntone (75038/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 415 (6 May 2024)
Minister of Police and Another v Ntone (75038/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 415 (6 May 2024)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 75038/2019
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
DATE:
03 May 2024
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
MINISTER OF
POLICE
First Applicant
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
Second Applicant
And
NTONE SERAME
KENNETH
Respondent
In
Re
:
KENNETH SERAME
NTONE
Applicant
And
MINISTER OF
POLICE
First Respondent
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC
PROSECUTIONS
Second Respondent
Delivery:
This judgment is
issued by the Judge whose name appears herein and is submitted
electronically to the parties /legal representatives
by email. It is
also uploaded on CaseLines and its date of delivery is deemed 06 May
2024
.
Summary:
Rescission
application – Rule 42 of the Uniform Rules of the Court and
common law requirements. Relief erroneously sought
and granted.
Rationality for instituting proceedings – Rule 42 and or common
law requirements not satisfied-no legal foundation.
Application
dismissed – costs - attorney and client scale.
JUDGMENT
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA AJ
[1]
The applicants applied for a rescission of the order granted by
Strydom AJ on 11 July
2022 and a variation of the order granted by
Davis J on 14 January 2022 in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform
Rules of the Court.
The application was grounded on a premise that
the relief sought was mistakenly sought with the consequent result of
the orders
erroneously granted by the Judges.
[2]
The application is comprised of
TWO PARTS
. In Part A, the
applicants applied for the postponement of the trial in the main
action
sine die
which was scheduled and ripe to be held on 25
July 2022 pending the relief sought in Part B as envisaged in the
notice of motion.
In Part B, the applicants sought an order to
rescind the order granted by Strydom AJ on 11 July 2022 which reads
as follows:
‘
By
having read the papers filled (
sic
)
on record and having Counsel for Plaintiff the Court makes the
following ordered (
sic
):
(i)
The Respondent’s
(
sic
)
defence is struck out.
(ii)
The applicant is
granted leave to apply for default judgment.
(iii)
Ordering the first
(
sic
)
and second respondents to pay the costs of this application.
[3]
In this matter, the applicants applied for an order:
[3.1]
rescinding an order granted on 11 July 2022.
[3.2]
varying the order granted on 14 January 2022.
[3.3]
that the respondents pay the wasted costs of 25 July 2022.
[4]
The subject of contention is traceable to an order granted by Davis J
on 14 January
2022 which became the subject of
PART B
action
for the rescission of the 11 July 2022 order granted by Strydom AJ.
[5]
Davis J order reads as follows:
[5.1]
The Minister and DPP are ordered to deliver their discovery
affidavits in terms of Rule 35(1) of the
Uniform Rules of the Court
and to furnish their responses as per the [respondents] Rule 35(9)
Notices (sic) within 10 (ten) days
of delivery of this order upon the
[Applicant’s] attorneys of record.
[6]
The applicants sought an order for the variation of Davis J judgment
to read as follows:
[6.1]
Paragraph one (1) of the order granted by Davis J on 14 January 2022
is varied to read as follows:
[6.1.1] The First and
Second Respondents are ordered to deliver their discovery affidavits
in terms of Rule 35(1) of the Uniform
Rules of the Court within ten
(10) days of delivery of this order upon the Respondent’s
attorneys of record.
[6.1.2] The order
granted by Strydom J on 11 July is rescinded and set aside.
[6.1.3 The plea of
the Minister and DPP in the main action be reinstated.
[6.1.4] The wasted costs
of 25 July 2022 are unreserved.
[6.1.5] There is no order
as to costs on the wasted costs oof 25 July 2022.
[6.1.6] The
respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the rescission application.
[7]
It is deduced herein that the Davis J order became a stimulus to the
rescission application
in that the applicants (respondents in the
main action) were ordered to file their discovery affidavits in terms
of Rule 35 of
the Uniform Rules of the Court in which they failed to
defend or comply with the order. The failure prompted the respondent
(applicant
in the main action) to file an application for striking
out of the applicant’s defences on 27 May 2022. The latter
application
was heard by Strydom AJ on 11 July 2022 which was granted
in favour of the respondent.
[8]
For the purpose of this application, I will focus on
PART B
with the intended objective of determining whether the applicants
have made a
prima facie
case for the granting of the
rescission order. It then raises a question whether the order granted
by Strydom AJ entailed the prejudicial
application of the law against
the applicants? Simply, the crux of this application is to determine
whether the applicants have
fulfilled Rule 42(1)(a) or common law
requirements to satisfy the granting of a rescission order.
Law
on rescission applications
[9]
Let me move from a premise articulated by Theron AJ in
Molaudzi
v S
2015 (8) BCLR 904
(CC)
in that:
the
rule of law and legal certainty will be compromised if the finality
of a court order is in doubt and can be revisited in a substantive
way. The administration of justice will also be adversely affected if
parties are free to continuously approach courts on multiple
occasions in the same matter. However, legitimacy and confidence in a
legal system demands that an effective remedy be provided
in
situations where the interests of justice cry out for one. There can
be no legitimacy in a legal system where final judgments,
which would
result in substantial hardship or injustice, are allowed to stand
merely for the sake of rigidly adhering to the principle
of
res
judicata
, (paras
37-39).
[10]
Followed by Khampepe J in
Zuma v Secretary of the Judicial
Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of State Capture, Corruption
and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including Organs of State
2021 (11) BCLR 1263
(CC):
like
all things in life, like the best of times and the worst of times,
litigation must, at some point, come to an end. The Constitutional
Court, as the highest court in the Republic, is constitutionally
enjoined to act as the final arbiter in litigation. This role
must
not be misunderstood, mischaracterised, nor taken lightly, for the
principles of legal certainty and finality of judgments
are the
oxygen without which the rule of law languishes, suffocates and
perishes, (
Zuma
v State Capture Commissio
n
para 1
).
[11]
The essence of the rule of law and the quest for finality of
judgments finds its way into the
application of Rule 42 of the
Uniform Rules of the Court regarding the rescission of court
judgments, which reads as follows:
(1)
The court may,
in addition to any other powers it may have, mero motu or upon the
application of any party affected, rescind or
vary:
(a)
an order or
judgment erroneously sought or erroneously granted in the absence of
any party affected thereby.
[12]
The substance of this rule (Rule 42) entails justified proof by the
applicant that, first, an
order was erroneously sought and secondly,
was also erroneously granted in his or her absence. I must also state
that reading from
the implications of Rule 42 (1)(a) the judicial
discretion in granting or not of the rescission order is of
importance, particularly
for the applicant’s rights or
interests that are affected by the judgment. Hence, I consider the
satisfaction of Rule 42
as ‘
double-edged
’ in that
the applicant must satisfy the prescribed requirements in the Rule
itself and or those prescribed by common law.
It is my considered
view that the requirements are not separated from each other in that
their purpose is to determine the legitimacy
and reasonableness of
the grounds upon which the applicant relies for a successful
rescission application. This simply means that
the Rule 42(1)(a)
requirements alongside of the common law are sides of the ‘
same
coin
’ in that they are designed for a common purpose. They
seek to establish a justified reliance on the mistakenly granted
order
alongside a
bona fide
explanation regarding the
non-appearance in court with the consequent result of the order being
granted against the applicant.
As stated by Khampepe J in
Zuma
v State Capture Commission
with reference to the discretion
to be exercised by courts in applications of this nature held:
[once]
an applicant has met the requirements for rescission, a court is
merely endowed with a discretion to rescind its order. The
precise
wording of rule, after all, postulates that a court “may”,
not “must”, rescind or vary its order
– the rule is
merely an “empowering section and does not compel the court”
to set aside or rescind anything.
This discretion must be exercised
judicially
, (
para
53
).
The overall implications
of the exercise of judicial discretion means that as expressed by
Strydom J in
SecureBT (Pty) Ltd v Norris
(21699/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1037 ‘
it is a fundamental
principle of our law that a court order must be effective and
enforceable and must be formulated in a language
that leaves no doubt
of what the order requires to be done. Not only must the order be
couched in clear terms, but its purpose
must also be readily
ascertainably from the language used. … [and] the general
principle is that once the court has duly
pronounced a final judgment
or order it has itself no authority to correct, alter or supplement
it … as its jurisdiction
over the matter has ceased
’,
(
paras 18-20
). It means that the court has to be
satisfied of the (i) reasonableness of the explanation proffered by
the applicant on the non-appearance
in court to defend the matter;
(ii) the application was also not meant to delay the respondent’s
claim and (iii) there are
legitimate reasons why the matter was not
defended such as in the Strydom AJ order. The satisfaction entails
the fulfilment of
the principles of the doctrine of precedent wherein
a final order granted by the court is not binding on the parties
themselves
but carry a long-life span in the area of the law until
set aside by another court through an appeal or a review process. It
is
in this context that this court seeks to establish the rationality
of reasons proffered that will also enable the justification
of the
granting or not of a rescission order.
[13]
The core content of this application as learnt from the
State
Capture
rescission judgment is whether the applicant
satisfied the grounds in terms of Rule 42 or common law. Drawing from
that judgment,
it is evident that for a successful application, the
order must have been mistakenly granted or sought or in the absence
of the
applicant. The situation is different in the
State
Capture
judgment from this case in that Mr Zuma vehemently
refused to appear before the Constitutional Court and was found
guilty of contempt
of court. Thus, in this case the applicant pleads
the lack of awareness of the order granted by Davis J in para 6 above
which granted
the respondent (applicant in the main action) an order
for the applicants to file their discovery affidavits in terms of
Rule 35(1)
of the Uniform Rules of the Court. Davis J order became a
subject of contention in the Strydom AJ order with the consequent
result
of the striking out of the applicant’s defences, setting
the stage for a default judgment against the applicants.
[14]
I reiterate, this matter captures the content of the prescripts of
Rule 42(1)(a) and those of
common law in that the operative framework
is grounded on a legal question whether the applicants in the
circumstances of this
case have legitimate and reasonable grounds
upon which an existing court order may be rescinded? At face value,
this application
is ‘
double-edged
’ in that the
satisfaction of the 42(1(a) and or common law requirements has a
potential to influence the Davis J order.
Analysis
[15]
This application was triggered by the order granted by Strydom AJ
which was issued on 11 July
2022 as noted in paragraph 2 above. It is
grounded on a premise that it was erroneously sought and granted by
the Court, hence
it finds its application in the provisions of Rule
42(1)(a) or common law. As noted, I will narrow the focus of this
analysis only
on
PART B
to the exclusion of
PART A
that
is subject to the outcome of this application.
[16]
In this case, after having read its facts, the Deponent for the
applicants, (Senior Assistant
State Attorney) made a case for being
unaware of the lack of compliance with the court order (Davis J
order) with the subsequent
result of the Strydom AJ order that was
now being sought to be rescinded. At the sight of factors presented
in the founding affidavit,
the explanation given on behalf of the
applicants gave an insight on the poor handling of the case from its
inception. I am puzzled
with the way in which the applicants sought
to rescind the Strydom AJ order whilst they are the author’s of
their own misfortune.
The shocking observation is confirmed in the
affidavit as the Deponent contends:
to
the extent that the Minister and DPP was in default for complying
timeously with notices served on them during the period July
2021 to
November 2021,
I
am unable to explain why the Minister and DPP did not comply
…
as far as I have been
able to determine, this matter was not allocated to another State
Attorney’s Office since the retirement
of Mr Olwage
’,
(
paras 5 –
5.3
), (author’s
emphasis).
[17]
It is my view that the applicants did not have any rational basis
upon which reliance may be
placed towards the satisfaction of Rule 42
(1)(a) or common law requirements. In essence, the application
shamefully lacks any
justifiable reasons for the inaction of the
applicants in, first, complying with the Davis J order. The Deponent,
by his own endorsement,
was also unable to determine why the matter
was not acted upon before his joining the office of the State
Attorney.
[18]
There is no legal foundation to determine the legitimacy of the ‘
not
being aware
’ approach in matters that fall within the scope
of authority in the workplace environment of the applicants. This
application
falls flat on this ground alone which I found to be
unreasonable. I must state that the archives of the applicants
regarding urgent
matters and lack of appropriate succession plans for
hand-over to new incumbents in office cannot be at the prejudice of
the respondent.
The application is the showing of unequal legal power
authority in litigation where the arm of government displays its
power over
an ordinary citizen.
[19]
In a country such as ours recovering from the historic ills of the
past, particularly against
the quality of access to justice, which is
today envisaged in section 34 of the Constitution of the Republic of
South Africa, 1996
(Constitution) and the value of remedial actions
in section 172 to be provided as such by the courts, the applicant’s
conduct
amounts to travesty of justice in using its power and
authority to silence the beneficiaries of South Africa’s
democratic
gains. Section 34 provides that ‘everyone has a
right to have their disputes resolved in a fair public hearing’
whilst
section 172 provides for entitlement to just and equitable
remedies. The core content of these latter sections (34 and 172) is
the crucial role that is played by the principle of the interests of
justice in the exercise of the judicial discretion by this
court as
envisaged in section 173 of the Constitution against which to
determine the reasonableness of the explanation proffered
by the
applicants. The applicants did not give these sections their own
constitutional space to ensure the flourishing of the jurisprudence
on rescission principles. The applicants hindered the evolution of
these principles by the ‘lens’ of unawareness of
the
existing court order or as to the reasons why the said order was not
complied with. The significance of section 7(2) of the
Constitution
was not even tested as the state is required not only to protect,
promote and respect the rights but
fulfil
them in line with
broader democratic ideals of the new dispensation and not for such
rights to be couched under the ‘lens’
of being unaware,
(Mogoeng CJ in
Law Society of South Africa v President of the
Republic of South Africa
2019 (3) BCLR 329
(CC)
,
paras
75-78
).
[20]
“Unawareness” is not law which could have formed the
basis upon which an order was
sought and granted erroneously. In this
case, the applicants have not made out a case about a legal issue or
fact that could have
in the first place, persuaded the Judge (Davis
J) not to grant the discovery order on 14 January 2022. Secondly, it
is also conspicuous
that an application for striking out the defences
was lodged on 27 May 2022 whilst the Deponent emphasised that they
were not aware
of the struck-out application until 20 July 2022. The
Deponent argues, he deposed an affidavit on 06 June 2022 relating to
the
documents that were in his possession whilst the order was
granted on 11 July 2022, they only became aware of it on 20 July
2022.
Let me pause, the Deponent states that the 06 June affidavit
was followed by discovery affidavit which was deposed on 20 June 2022
by way of an electronic e-mail communication which, as the applicant
alleged, complied with the file discovery and was therefore
erroneous
for the respondent to have proceeded with the application to have the
defences struck out as envisaged in Rule 35(6)
of the Uniform Rules
of the Court. I am finding it difficult to connect the link between
unawareness and the sequence of events
that the Deponents places
before this court. I am of the considered opinion that this
application was meant to delay the determination
of the merits of the
main action and served as a mere distraction of this Court to the
evolution of the rescission principles.
[21]
The applicants have failed to satisfy this court of the common law
requirements regarding the
existence of a
bona fide
defence in
not defending the matter when the order was granted. The Office of
the State Attorney, within the sphere of governance
is not
individualistic in nature and it is not for this court to determine
how it should have structured and catered for the retirement
of the
predecessors of the Deponent to ensure urgent matters were brought to
his immediate attention as the latter could not even
explain before
this Court the circumstances of not defending the Davis J order which
is the basis of the Strydom AJ order.
[22]
The lack of awareness touches on the core content of the
constitutional responsibility of this
Court to pronounce without any
hesitation the abuse of the court processes that have a negative
impact of the fulfilment of the
rights of the respondent. This
application was more of a frivolous exercise that was meant to delay
the gist of the main application
under the framework of being
‘unaware’. I restate, unawareness is not law that could
have formed the root cause upon
which to determine the rationality of
the reasons proffered by the applicants. It does not qualify with
what I would refer to as
‘ignorance of the law’ which was
settled in
S v De Blom
1977 (3) SA 513
(A)
which
could be excusable whilst in this instance, the issue was not about
knowing the content of the law itself but the general
lack of
awareness why the order was not complied with. Lack of awareness
about the existence of the law cannot be equated with
the lack of
knowledge regarding the content of the law itself. This was a
complete disregard of the law and court processes which
would not
qualify as a lack of knowledge about the law.
[23]
It is inexcusable that the applicants would lodge this application
based on the lack of ‘awareness’
which was a glaring
breach of the basic and fundamental principles of the law in
litigation, particularly with compliance with
court orders. I am not
finding any reasonable and justifiable reasons by the applicants that
could have enabled this court to determine
any
bona fide
defences based on common law and Rule 42(1)(a), (Notyesi AJ in
Minister of Police v Lulwane
(429/2020) [2023]
ZAECMHC 21 (09 May 2023
). As expressly stated by Theron AJ in
Molaudzi
and Khampepe J in
Zuma v State Capture
above, which remain persuasive in this judgment, the finality of a
matter is of essence and the parties may not come to court for
a
simple delay or its deferral. In this case, the applicants’
motivation in bringing this matter was nothing more than to
preserve
what they fear would have been the fruitless expenditure of the
public purse if the matter goes on trial. I am fortified
by this
reasoning in that the applicants fail to acknowledge the impact of
their conduct on the fulfilment of the rights of the
respondent.
Equally, to give effect in upholding the integrity of this Court,
particularly with its orders. The applicants, falling
within the
branches of the state, with equal responsibility to ensure the
independence of the courts and for the latter to apply
the law
without fear or favour, it is discomforting that financial resources
of the state may be used as a bait against which to
deny the
enforcement and fulfilment of the fundamental rights of ordinary
citizens. This Court, as the upper guardian in the resolution
of
disputes between the state and citizens or
vice versa
should
not be limited in fulfilling this role through vexatious litigation
with no prospects of success.
[24]
As noted above, the focus herein was only on
PART B
of this
application and the applicant’s case does not come near the
satisfaction of Rule 42(1)(a) requirement of fulfilling
the
erroneously sought and granted order. Even at common law, the
two-tier test was not satisfied in that there was no
bona fide
defence and reasonable explanation for rescission of the order that
could have served as a yardstick against which to exercise
a judicial
discretion that could have resulted in the granting of the rescission
application. Therefore, it is my view that the
applicants have not
satisfied the Rule 42(1)(a) and or common law requirements that the
order was mistakenly granted. I find no
legitimate reasons not to
dismiss the claim for a rescission of the Strydom AJ order.
[25]
Further, in exercising my discretion on the allocation of costs in
this application, with reasons
articulated herein, it is evident that
the applicants did not have the legal basis in instituting these
proceedings. In the premises,
the applicants are ordered to pay the
costs of this application as they appear in the order below.
[26]
Accordingly, the following order is made:
[26.1]
The application for the rescission of the Strydom AJ order is
dismissed.
[26.2]
The applicants are ordered to pay the respondent the costs of this
application on an attorney and client scale.
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
ACTING JUDGE, THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Dates
Heard
: 02 November
2023
Date
Delivered
: 06 May
2024
Appearances
:
Plaintiff
:
State
Attorney Office (per: M Morena)
316
Thabo Sehume Street
Pretoria
Defendant
:
Nemukongwe
Attorneys
255
Pretorius Street
Pretoria
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