Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 468South Africa
Compensation Commissioner and Others v Compensation Solutions (Pty) Ltd (56219/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 468 (14 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 May 2024
Headnotes
judgment. The matter served before Ally, AJ who, on 17 July 2023, refused the Plaintiff’s application for summary judgment
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Compensation Commissioner and Others v Compensation Solutions (Pty) Ltd (56219/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 468 (14 May 2024)
Compensation Commissioner and Others v Compensation Solutions (Pty) Ltd (56219/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 468 (14 May 2024)
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sino date 14 May 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 56219/2021
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHERS
JUDGES:
YES
/ NO
(3) REVISED:
YES
/NO
DATE: 14/5/24
SIGNATURE
In
the application between:
COMPENSATION
COMMISSIONER
1
ST
Applicant/Defendant
DIRECTOR
GENERAL, DEPARTMENT OF
2
ND
Applicant/Defendant
LABOUR
THE
MINISTER OF LABOUR
3
RD
Applicant/Defendant
And
COMPENSATION
SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Respondent/Plaintiff
JUDGMENT
POTGIETER AJ:
[1]
The three Applicants are the three Defendants in the main action
whilst
the Respondent is the Plaintiff in same. I shall hereinafter
refer to them as in the main action, i.e. the Applicants shall be
referred to as the Defendants and the Respondent as the Plaintiff.
[2]
The Defendants are applying for leave to amend their Plea, more
particularly
by substituting their existing Plea with, as the
Defendants termed it in their Notice of Intention to Apply for Leave
to Amend,
“…
a
completely new plea
”
of which a copy was attached to the Notice of Intention to Amend. The
present application arises from the Plaintiff’s
objections to
the proposed new Plea. There are many grounds of objection but they
are numerous only because there are numerous
issues raised in the
proposed new Plea. However, and for reasons which shall become
apparent immediately below, the Defendants
are only allowed to amend
their Plea to raise two Special Pleas of different types of
prescription
[1]
and
consequently it is not necessary to list the other grounds of
objection because the other grounds of amendment to the
Defendant’s
Plea are impermissible.
[3]
When the Defendants originally pleaded the Plaintiff applied for
summary
judgment. The matter served before Ally, AJ who, on 17 July
2023, refused the Plaintiff’s application for summary judgment
and gave the Defendants leave to file a Notice of Amendment of the
Defendants’ Plea in order to raise alleged prescription
of the
Plaintiff’s claims. The only conceivable Prescription Pleas
are:
[3.1]
prescription based upon sections 43 and 44 of
the so-called COIDA,
Act;
[3.2]
prescription in terms of the 1969 Prescription
Act.
[4]
Ally, AJ furthermore ordered that in the event of Defendants’
failing to file
the said Notice of Intention to Amend within a
prescribed period, the Plaintiff could re-
enrol
the application for summary judgment and apply for summary judgment.
[5]
There can be no doubt that what Ally, AJ, had found was that had it
not been for the
possibility of properly pleaded Pleas of
Prescription summary judgment would have been granted the Plaintiff.
The deadline for
filing a Notice of Intention to Amend to raise the
said Prescription Pleas and the
sequelae
of failing to do so
timeously
viz
that the Plaintiff could apply for summary
judgment again, in my opinion, makes this conclusion inevitable.
[6]
In the premises, when the Defendants’ Counsel rose to address
me I enquired
from him on what basis the Defendants sought to raise
new issues other than merely the two Prescription Pleas
aforementioned? I
indicated that I was disinclined to hear argument
pertaining to any other amendments because of my interpretation of
Ally, AJ’s
aforementioned judgment.
[7]
The Defendants’ Counsel could not advance any argument to
dispel my
prima facie
view of the matter and consequently,
(and correctly so), indicated that the Defendants would pursue merely
an amendment in respect
of the two Pleas of Prescription.
[8]
The fact that the Defendants attempted to amend their Plea in various
respects not
permitted in terms of Ally, AJ’s judgment means
that this is not an application to amend the Defendants’ Plea
in the
terms permitted by Ally, AJ. The Defendants’
application should, on this ground, be dismissed. However, it cannot
be
gainsaid that the abortive amendment also contains two types of
prescription which was indeed something permitted to be raised in
a
Notice of Intention to Amend, by Ally, AJ. A dismissal of the
Defendants’ present application on the grounds that it did
not
comply with the permission granted by All, AJ, to apply to amend the
Defendants’ Plea to raise only Prescription, would,
inevitably,
lead to another round of an application to amend and objections
thereto. Another Court would be burdened with the copious
papers I
have been burdened with in this application and that is obviously
undesirable, especially in the light of the fact that
I have
considered the issues underlying the two Pleas for Prescription
foreshadowed in Ally, AJ’s order. I thus proceed to
consider
the objections to those two proposed amendments to the Defendants’
Plea.
[9]
The Plaintiff’s objection to the proposed Special Plea in terms
of sections
43 and 44 of COIDA is approximately four pages long and
consists of three sub-paragraphs of which sub-paragraph 3.2 consists,
in
turn, of 10 sub-sub-paragraphs. I therefore do not intend
repeating those grounds especially where some of the grounds consist
of merely motivating the gravamen of the objection. The gravamen of
the objection is that the Plaintiff’s claims do not fall
within
the ambit of sections 43 and 44 of COIDA because the Plaintiff’s
claims are based on medical invoices in respect of
medical services
provided, albeit that same were ultimately in respect of services for
the benefit of an employee. The following
words in paragraph 3.2.3 of
the Plaintiff’s objection to the proposed amendment sum up the
position of the Plaintiff:
“
To
interpret these sections as to include medical invoices would lead to
an absurdity
.”
[10]
The Plaintiff’s grounds of objection to the Plea of
Prescription in terms of
the Prescription Act are that the Plea is
bad in law for the following reasons:
[10.1]
The Defendants fail to state why the claims have prescribed.
The
Defendants fail to contend when the liability arose in respect of
each claim and consequently the Plea is excipiable.
[10.2]
A variety of factual averments and what must be made from
these
averments, (
vide
paragraphs 4.2.2, 4.2.3 and 4.2.4 of the
Notice of Objection). I deem it unnecessary to list these facts
because the contention
that the Prescription Plea based on the
Prescription Act is “
bad in law
” means that the
principles applicable to the adjudication of Exceptions apply and
that does not permit the introduction of
extraneous evidence and/or
documentation.
[10.3]
Should the proposed amendment be permitted the amended Plea
will
disclose no defence and will, accordingly, be excipiable.
[11]
The Defendants’ present application was supported by a Founding
Affidavit to which the
Plaintiff filed an Answering Affidavit and the
Defendants thereupon filed a Reply. In my finding the Affidavits were
largely either
unnecessary or failed to take anything of any import
any further given the principles applicable to exceptions and
applications
to amend pleadings. I thus do not intend dealing with
the contents of the Affidavits to any material extent save to remark
about
the late Reply.
[12]
The Reply was way out of time. The excuse proffered is that the more
junior of the two Junior
Counsels appearing for the Defendants became
indisposed, (she was pregnant and apparently developments in her
pregnancy led to
the indisposition), and was not available for some
months to attend to the Reply.
Non constat
that no cogent or
plausible reason was advanced why the more senior of the two Juniors
appearing for the Defendants could not settle
the Reply which is, in
any event, a document of no consequence as it does not really deal
with what is contained in the Plaintiff’s
Answering Affidavit.
The proffered excuse that the more senior of the two Counsels
appearing for the Defendants was busy with other
matters in his
practice is singularly without merit. No details of what was being
done and what time was absorbed that could have
possibly been used to
draft the Reply timeously, have been provided. A simple generic
averment has been made and its lack of merit
is, in the light of
trite principles which are applicable when condonation is requested,
dictate that the proffered excuse is meaningless.
[13]
I have nevertheless decided to have regard to the contents of the
Reply because to do otherwise
opens the door to a potential lament
and the potential
sequelae
thereof. It is precisely because of
the meaninglessness of the Reply, with a corollary that it does not
matter whether the Reply
is considered or not, that has constrained
me to have had regard to the reply.
[14]
In the premises the application for condonation for the late filing
of the Reply is granted and
the Defendants are ordered to pay the
costs of the application for condonation. The scale of costs are
addressed herein later.
[15]
The Plaintiff’s objection to the Defendants’ proposed
Plea of Prescription, relying
upon COIDA, does not object to the
proposed amendment on the grounds that the issue is
res iudicata
yet the Plaintiff’s Answering Affidavit and the Plaintiff’s
heads of argument
in casu
rely heavily on this issue. This
gives rise to the interesting question whether the Plaintiff can rely
on other grounds than those
stipulated in the Plaintiff’s
Notice of Objection? My
prima facie
opinion is that the
Plaintiff cannot do so but the fact is that both parties fully argued
the question of
res iudicata
and the point I have mentioned as
being an interesting one, was not argued at all. In the premises, and
for present purposes only,
I shall deal with the
res iudicata
point and shall firstly do so because if there is merit therein,
cadit quaestio
.
[16]
The Defendants do not dispute that there are other decisions in this
Division in actions between the same
parties as at present which have
ruled that precisely the same Plea based on sections 43 and 44 of
COIDA is unsustainable. The
Defendants merely argue that all of those
decisions are the subject matter of appeals or steps to ensure that
appeals can occur,
(i.e. pending applications for leave to appeal,
one of which awaits an outcome from the Apex Court).
[17]
The Defendants furthermore do not dispute that the Supreme Court of
Appeal, (“
SCA
”),
in an action between the same parties as
in
casu
,
found, (and here I am paraphrasing), that “
compensation
”
and “
medical
costs
”
are not the same thing.
[2]
The
SCA finding supports the Plaintiff’s contention that sections
43 and 44 of COIDA do not apply to the Plaintiff’s
claims.
[18]
The Defendants address the aforegoing decisions on the basis that
they are all decided wrong
and have invited me to formulate my own
opinion. As far as the SCA’s judgment is concerned, it would be
fruitless of me to
do so because I am in any event bound by whatever
the SCA has ruled.
[19]
Insofar as decisions by other Courts of the same stature as this
Court are concerned I can only
depart from same if I am convinced
that they are clearly wrong. Besides the fact that no argument was
advanced in support of a
contention that the previous decisions of
Courts of equal stature to this one, are wrong, I am in any event not
convinced that
any of the previous decisions dismissing a Special
Plea such as the present Special Plea relying upon sections 43 and 44
of COIDA
are wrong. Some of those decisions rejecting such a Plea
either rely upon the aforementioned SCA case or analyses of COIDA
which
result in the same conclusion as the SCA made. Rather than
there being any grounds to conclude that the previous decisions are
clearly wrong, there appears to me to be grounds to the contrary.
[20]
In the premises the application to amend the Defendants’ Plea
to raise a Plea of Prescription
based upon sections 43 and 44 of
COIDA is dismissed with costs. (The Scale will be addressed herein
later).
[21]
I turn now to deal with the objections to the Special Plea based on
prescription in terms of
the Prescription Act.
[22]
In my finding the only ground of objection to the proposed Plea of
Prescription based on the
Prescription Act which is worthy of
consideration in proceedings of this nature is the objection that the
Special Plea falls foul
of
Gericke
v Sack
1978 (1) SA 821
(SCA)
,
i.e. a Plea of Prescription which does not contain certain details is
excipiable and does not disclose a defence.
[3]
[23]
The other grounds of objection to the Prescription Act Plea are,
largely, if not completely,
reliant upon facts and interpretations to
be made of those facts. It has long been the practice in this
Division that the question
of prescription is something best dealt
with at trial. Only in the clearest of cases, where it is not readily
conceivable what
evidence at trial could be proffered to disturb a
prima facie
impression that prescription either is good or
bad, are issues pertaining to prescription decided in applications of
this nature.
This excludes evidence.
[24]
A similar objection to the Defendants’ Prescription Plea based
on the Prescription Act
arose in case number 4915/2021 before, HF
Jacobs, AJ. It was found, (
vide
paragraph [8] at CaseLines
0-59 under the lastmentioned case number), that the Defendants’
Plea “…
lacks a firm allegation of the date of
inception and the date of completion of the period of prescription as
stated in Gericke v
Sacks
(sic)”.
[25]
In casu
the Defendants’ Counsel contends that the
difference between this case and any previous case is that the
Defendants have
now attached Annexure “MM2” to their
proposed amended Plea. On my understanding of the Defendants’
Counsel’s
submissions and on my understanding of paragraph 4.2
of the proposed amended Plea, (p. 002-298), Annexure “MM2”
is
an extract from Annexure “CS1” attached to the
Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim. It is, if my understanding is
correct, thus contended that the Defendants no longer rely solely on
a contention that everything contained in Annexures to the
Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim have prescribed but are more
specific in that Annexure “MM2” has identified
specific
claims as being prescribed.
[26]
Whether or not the Defendants’ submissions pertaining to
Annexure “MM2” are
correct, I simply do not know. I have
deemed it unnecessary to compare Annexure “CS1” to the
Plaintiff’s Particulars
of Claim with Annexure “MM2”
to the proposed Plea. This would have been a time consuming exercise
simply to ascertain
an irrelevancy. This would still not address the
gravamen of the Plaintiff’s objection which, so it appears to
me, remains
the same as the objection raised by the Plaintiff in the
case before HF Jacobs, AJ.
[27]
The Defendants’ Special Plea on the Prescription Act, (i.e. the
“
fourth special plea
”), is extremely succinct. It
consists of one paragraph with only three sub-paragraphs, (excluding
the sub-paragraph making
the conclusion that allegedly the
Plaintiff’s claims had prescribed), and Annexure “MM2”.
It is from these that
one must attempt to glean why the Defendants
contend that the Plaintiff’s claims have prescribed. This is
something I have
found to be impossible to do by perusing the
relevant Plea read with Annexure “MM2”. The fact that
Annexure “MM2”
contains two columns with, respectively,
the following headings “
Date of incident
” and
“
First Acceptance Date
” do not assist, especially
in the light of the fact that the present case bears a 2021 case
number and some of the listed
dates are 2021 dates.
[28]
I am therefore, in the premises, constrained to conclude that the
Defendants have failed to properly
plead prescription based on the
Prescription Act and consequently the amendment,
as it now stands
,
cannot be entertained. The application to amend the Defendants’
Plea as set out in the Defendants’ present fourth
Special Plea,
(i.e. the Plea of Prescription based on the Prescription Act), is
refused with costs as set out below.
[29]
What remains to be dealt with pertains to costs.
[30]
The Plaintiff’s main motivation, (I do not imply that this
might necessarily be the only
motivation but it is the only one of
any import in my opinion), for a punitive costs order is that the
Defendants persist in attempting
to raise Pleas which have already
been dismissed as unmeritorious by previous decisions. I am not
convinced that there is any merit
in this contention insofar as
everything done by the Defendants is concerned.
[31]
It furthermore appears to me that in other decisions punitive costs
were ordered for the reasons
relied upon by the Plaintiff which I
have recorded directly above. Axiomatically I am not bound by those
previous decisions pertaining
to the appropriate scale of costs and,
in any event, I do not regard the fact that the Defendants persist in
raising or attempting
to raise Pleas that had been dismissed as
unmeritorious in the past by a Court of equal stature as a ground to
justify a punitive
costs order. The situation might have been
different had all of the appeal attempts on which the Defendants have
embarked, run
their course and the Defendants had failed to upset the
previous judgments on the same issues. However, this is not the case.
[32]
If one were to punish a litigant merely because previous decisions by
a Court of the same stature
as the Court in which a present
application is being adjudicated have found against a litigant on the
same issue, this would imply
that there is an element of finality in
the previous decisions despite the fact that they are pending the
outcome of higher Courts
on precisely the question whether or not the
previous decisions are correct. Whilst it is true that a decision of
a Court remains
effective and must be complied with until it is set
aside by a competent Court, (
in casu
, a higher Court), one
cannot lose sight of the fact that the principle I am referring to is
analogous to the principle that judgments
against which appeals have
been noted and are pending, are suspended pending the outcome of the
appeal. Only in extraordinary circumstances
is the contrary true.
[33]
In the premises I find that the mere fact that there are previous
decisions on the same issues
which are the subject matter of appeals
cannot be justification for penalizing a litigant raising the same
issue in other cases
before a Court of similar stature to those
Courts who made the previous decisions subject to appeal.
[34]
Having stated the aforegoing there is certain conduct of the
Defendants which justifies a punitive
cost order
viz
:
[34.1]
The late filing of a Replying Affidavit without
any proper
application for condonation therefor.
[34.2]
The attempt to amend the Defendants’ Plea
by raising other
Pleas than those permitted by Ally, AJ.
[35]
In the premises I make the following orders:
[35.1]
The Defendants’ application to amend the
Defendants’ Plea
as set out in the Defendants’ new Plea attached as Annexure to
the Defendants’ Notice of Intention
to Amend, is refused with
costs. These costs are to be on Scale B, (and, to avoid doubt, shall
include the costs of Senior Counsel
where so employed but will not be
on an attorney and own client or attorney and client basis). This is
subject to the costs orders
made below.
[35.2]
The Defendants’ application for condonation
for the late filing
of the Reply is granted and the Defendants are ordered to pay the
costs of same on an attorney and own client
scale, (in order to avoid
doubt, on Scale C).
[35.3]
The costs occasioned by the Defendants’
attempt to amend the
Defendants’ Plea beyond the scope of the permission granted by
Ally, AJ on 17 July 2023, are to be paid
by the Defendants on Scale
C, (in order to avoid doubt they are to be attorney and own client
costs).
TALL
POTGIETER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
FOR
PLAINTIFF (RESPONDENT IN
THE APPLICATION TO
AMEND:
ADV
EJJ NEL
CELL:
082 414 2634
E-MAIL:
ejj.nel@brooklynadvocates.co.za
VDT
ATTORNEYS (DONALD FISCHER)
CELL:
082 226 3695
E-MAIL:
donaldf@vdt.co.za
FOR
DEFENDANTS (APPLICANTS
IN THE APPLICATION
TO AMEND:
ADV
M MAKHUBELA
CELL:
078 199 1150
E-MAIL:
mswazim@law.co.za
ADV
MS NTESO
CELL:
063 964 6112
E-MAIL:
butsinteso@gmail.com
THE
STATE ATTORNEY
RUDZANI
SIKHALA
CELL:
072 046 4045
E-MAIL:
rsikhala@justice.gov.za
This
judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the Court Online
digital data base of the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
e-mail to
the attorneys of record of the parties. The deemed date and for the
delivery is the 14
TH
day of MAY 2024.
[1]
The Plaintiff
contends that, in fact, the Defendants are only allowed
to plead one
type of prescription
viz
prescription
in terms of the Prescription Act. Whether this is correct or not is
of no import in the light of my findings and
orders herein later.
[2]
Compensation
Commissioner v Compensation Solutions (Pty) Ltd (997/2021) ZASCA 165
(29 November 2023) at par. [26]
.
[3]
Vide
par. 25 of the Plaintiff’s heads of argument at p. 016-12. The
reference of the
Gericke
decision appears to be incorrect and I have given the correct
reference above.
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