Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 515South Africa
Motlana v Msibi N.O and Another (38673/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 515 (4 June 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Motlana v Msibi N.O and Another (38673/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 515 (4 June 2024)
Motlana v Msibi N.O and Another (38673/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 515 (4 June 2024)
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sino date 4 June 2024
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No.
38673/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
04 JUNE 2024
SIGNATURE:
In the matter between:
LETUMILE
MASHADI MOTLANA
Applicant
and
KHANDANI
MSIBI N.O.
First Respondent
ZINHLE
MJALI N.O
Second Respondent
In Re
KHUMO
NALEDI SIBEKO
First Applicant
KHUMO
NALEDI SIBEKO obo MORONGOE
Second Applicant
KEARABETSWE SIBEKO
KHUMO
NALEDI SIBEKO obo MARANG
Third Applicant
GABONTHONE WARONA
SIBEKO
and
KHANDANI
MSIBI N.O.
First Respondent
ZINHLE
MJALI N.O
Second Respondent
KGOSEGO
DINGAKE
Third Respondent
LETUMILE
MASHADI MOTLANA
Fourth Respondent
THATO
DINGAKE
Fifth Respondent
THE
MASTER OF THE HIGH COURT
Sixth Respondent
This judgment is
prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected as such,
and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties /
their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for handing
down is deemed to be 04 June 2024.
JUDGMENT
RETIEF
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an interlocutory application in which the applicant, the
fourth
respondent in the main application, seeks to compel the first
and second respondents [respondents] in the main and interlocutory
application, to make discovery of documents in terms of uniform Rules
35(12) and (14) in terms of a notice she delivered on the
3 May 2023
[the notice] [compel relief]. The applicant too, as far as is
necessary, seeks this Court to direct that Rule 35(14)
is applicable
to the application proceedings under case number: 338673/2022
[request relief]. The request relief is sought after
the notice was
served and Rule 35(14) too is sought in the compel relief. A factor
for consideration.
[2]
By way of introduction the correct case number in this application is
38673/2022 and not 338673/2022 as prayed for. No amendment of the
prayer was sought nor moved, or for that matter, explained. A
factor
for consideration.
[3]
To appreciate the relief sought requires a brief mention of the
dispute
on the papers. The respondents are the duly appointed
trustees of the Toka Trust (IT1[...]) [trust].
The applicant in the main application see,
inter
alia
, their
removal. The
applicant is cited as the fourth respondent in the main application
as an interested party only against whom no relief
is sought .
Notwithstanding the applicant has opposed the relief in the
main application and filed a counter application.
One of the live
disputes on the papers is whether the applicant is still a
beneficiary of the trust.
[4]
The
applicant raised the counter application against respondents seeking
that she, together with other interim trustees be appointed
as
trustees of the Trust. In their stead. Procedurally and on the face
of it, the counter application is not brought in reconvention
against
the applicants in the main application as a counter application
suggests.
[1]
The procedural
consequences of the counter application in its present form are
inevitable and have been foreshadowed in the respondents’
argument in this interlocutory application. This too, is a factor for
consideration.
[5]
It is against this procedural background that the applicant seeks her
compel and request relief. To deal with the relief sought requires
this Court to return to basic principles governing discovery
in
application.
DISCOVERY
OF DOCUMENTS IN APPLICATION PROCEDURES
[6]
To commence, discovery of documents is rare and not a usual
occurrence
in application proceedings. In consequence, it is not for
the taking by a party as of a procedural right. It is for this reason
that Rule 35(13) of the Uniform Rules of Court unequivocally provides
that:
“
(13)
The provisions of this rule relating to discovery shall mutatis
mutandis apply, in so far as the court may
direct, to applications.
”
[7]
The necessity for leave to initiate and to determine the scope of its
applicability of discovery of documents in every matter on its own
merits, is catered for in Rule 35(13).
[8]
The
requirements by any party to initiate utilise Rule 35 in applications
was clearly dealt with in
Lorentz
v MacKenzie
,
[2]
the Court in dealing with a Rule 35 said the following:
“
It is clear
that the uniform rules of court do make provision for the provisions
of Rule 35 relating to discovery to apply to applications.
But this
is clearly and unequivocally stated to be subject to the proviso that
the Court direct this to be so. The Applicant’s
first argument
requires that the clear wording of the Rule insofar as this Court may
direct be ignored. This clearly cannot be
done and no authority for
so doing was referred to.”
[9]
As
stated in
Lewis
Group Limited v Woollam
:
[3]
“
[4]
Rule
35, which regulates the discovery procedure in general civil
litigation, is primarily applicable in action proceedings. Rule
35(13) provides, however, that ‘The provisions of this rule
relating to discovery shall
mutatis
mutandis
apply,
in so far as the court may direct, to applications’. The
fact that, differently to the position in respect
of actions, a party
seeking discovery in motion proceedings is able to obtain it only
insofar as the court might direct points
to the availability of the
procedure in applications as being out of the ordinary, and, to that
extent, exceptional. Indeed,
in
Moulded
Components and Rotomoulding South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Coucourakis
1979
(2) SA 457
(W)
at 470D-E,
Botha J
remarked: ‘In application proceedings we know that discovery is
a very, very rare and unusual procedure to be
used and I have no
doubt that that is a sound practice and it is only in exceptional
circumstances, in my view, that discovery
should be ordered in
application proceedings’.
”
[10]
See also
Premier
Freight (Pty) Ltd v Breathetex Corporation (Pty) Ltd
,
[4]
where Plasket AJ, as he then was, had the following to say:
“
[9]
The starting point in the enquiry as to the application of Rule
35(13) is that there is no discovery in applications:
it is
only possible for discovery to apply in applications if, in terms of
Rule 35(13), a Court has been approached to make the
Rules relating
to discovery, or some of them, applicable and makes an order to this
effect. A court has a discretion to allow discovery
in applications.”
COMPEL
RELIEF
[11]
Against the principles above, this Court deals with the compel
relief.
[12]
To commence, the applicant served her notice before and without
requiring leave and, to
compound the issue, seeks compel relief on
the basis of the respondent’s non-compliance of such notice,
complaining of the
respondents’ unsatisfactory reply.
[13]
The applicant in her founding papers states at paragraph 7 that:
“
7.
This is an interlocutory application to obtain an
order
compelling the trustees, in terms of the provisions of Rule 35(11) of
the Uniform Rules of Court (“
the Rules
”)
(own emphasis),
to furnish me
(own emphasis)
with the documentation required by virtue of my notice in terms of
Rule 35(12) and/or (14) of the Rules dated the
3
rd
of May 2023 (“the notice”). In so far as necessary, I
seek that the Court direct, in terms of 35(13) that the provisions
of
Rule 35(14) are applicable.”
[14]
Applying the uniform rules and the principles laid down and attitude
alluded to above,
the leave in terms of Rule 35(13) is not only
necessary but is required in respect of the applicant’s Rule
35(12) and 35(14)
request before the service of the notice. This was
not done prior to 3 May 2023. The applicants compel relief is clear,
she requires
compliance with the notice. The applicant appears to
appreciate the necessity by stating the same in the preamble of her
notice.
However referring to Rule 35(13 is not compliance of Rule
35(13).
[15]
In any event, it appears that the applicant also requires compliance
in terms of Rule 35(11).
Reference of Rule 35(11) is misleading as
Rule 35(11) as it is not a means for the applicant to compel
production of documents
“-
to furnish me
-“ but for
a Court to order the production of documents in proceedings.
[16]
The applicant states in her founding papers that by virtue of her
merely being a party
to the proceedings, this would include the main
application, that she is entitled to make the request for documents
under Rule
35(12) and (14). Again entitlement to request is not
compliance of Rule 35(13) nor does it sustain the compel relief in
terms of
Rule 35(11). The applicant’s failure to obtain such
direction prior to the service is fatal to the compel relief. It
flows
that the applicant’s compel relief as couched and sought
on the papers must fail.
REQUEST
RELIEF
[17]
However, what of the request relief in terms of Rule 35(14) where
reference is made to
an incorrect case number and now that the horse
has bolted? The horse bolted in so far as leave is sought after the
notice and
compel relief has been prayed for in respect of the same
subrule 14. In the premises, an after the fact request.
[18]
Without amending the case number this Court is not inclined to grant
the relief as prayed
without consideration of a competent order.
Therefore, this Court is inclined to deal with the basis of the
request relief
per se
.
[19]
It may be helpful to when considering the basis to consider what the
applicant has already
requested in terms of Rule 35(14).
[20]
This is not an easy task as according to the applicant’s notice
she does not differentiate
between the documents she requires in
terms of Rule 35(12) and those in terms of Rule 35(14). It appears as
if the finer nuances
of the subrules are missed or the applicant
simply casts her discovery request net so wide in the hope of
catching something.
This subrule was designed
for the situation where a party to an action or with leave in
applications, requires for the purpose of
pleading, the production of
a specific document of which he has knowledge and which he or she can
describe precisely. This does
not appear to be the case here
according to the notice
.
[21]
Furthermore, the document request in the notice is wide, the
applicant request is extensive
and
the
applicant
simply states that by virtue of being a party to the
proceedings, she “
- is entitled to make the request for
documentation under Rule 35(12) and (14)
”. This is not
entirely correct. Corrected in argument, as previously explained. The
applicant’s Counsel correctly made
reference to exceptional
circumstances.
[22]
Returning
to the
Moulded
Components and Rotomoulding SA (Pty) Ltd v Coucourakis
[5]
matter, the learned Judge did decline the request to make discovery
procedure applicable for a number of reasons which,
inter
alia
,
included the wide form in which the relief was sought and the Court’s
perception that the contemplated exercise would be
something of a
“
fishing
expedition
”.
In consequence, the determination of any request should be done upon
an examination of the request with reference to its
particular
content assessed in the context of the peculiar characteristics of
the litigation and mindful of the premise that the
request should, as
a matter of policy, be granted only exceptionally
.
[23]
The
determination of the request also requires reference to the
Ingledew
v Financial Services Board
,
[6]
matter in which the Constitutional Court reminded litigants that Rule
35(14) grants a right to information which is narrow in so
far as its
terms unequivocally limit the nature of the documents and tape
recordings covered by the rule to those “
relevant
to a reasonably anticipated issue in an action
”
and further limits the documents in question to those required for
purposes of pleading if the issues pending between the
parties are
those that are reflected in the pleadings.
[7]
[24]
Considering the context of the peculiar
procedural characteristics of the matter before this Court, what the
applicant is asking
this Court to do is to permit it to obtain
documents which have not been clearly defined in the answering
affidavit, which are
not clearly and specifically requested in terms
of this sub-rule in the notice itself, without leave, and in
circumstances when
the respondents in their answer to the applicants’
counter application have unequivocally stated the following:
“
9.
I have read the affidavit of the fourth respondent, which apparently
also serves as a founding affidavit,
in her purported application
against the trustees. This purported application for relief against
the trustees is an abuse of the
rules of court, and a material
irregularity. She has not correctly joined the trustees, in her
so-called application.
13.
The trustees deal with the allegation in the fourth respondent’s
affidavit ex abundanti cautela to demonstrate
the factual
inaccuracies in her affidavit -”
[25]
The veracity
of the respondent’s complaints although not for this Court to
determine is a factor in the exercise of its discretion.
To allow the
applicant to obtain documents at this stage when, procedurally she
may not even be entitled to pursue as a result
of her own procedural
choices, is a weighty factor to consider. The parties are not at full
stretch yet.
[26]
Having regard to all the circumstances
including all the factors highlighted in this judgment including, but
to a lesser extent,
the inaccuracies in the prayer couching the
request relief. This Court, in exercising its discretion is not at
this stage inclined
to grant the request relief. The factors applied
by this Court in the request relief apply equally to the compel
relief. In consequence,
the compel relief should also fail on the
same basis.
[27]
Lastly there is no reason why the costs should
not follow the result.
In consequence, the
following order follows:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The Applicant to pay the First and Second
Respondents’ costs, including the appointment of two Counsel on
scale B.
L.A.
RETIEF
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
:
For
the applicant:
Adv L
Hollander
Instructed
by attorneys:
Nicole
Ross Attorneys
Email:
nross@nicolerosslaw.com
narina@nicolerosslaw.com
For
the first & second respondent:
Adv P
Daniels SC
Cell:
083 600 0214
Email:
jpdaniels@law.co.za
Adv A
Kohler
Cell:
079 497 3955
Email:
adv.akohler@gmail.com
Instructed
by attorneys:
Vasco
de Oliviera Inc
Tel:
011 326 2505
Email:
vasco@oliveira.co.za
Matter
heard:
22
April 2024
Date
of judgment
:
04
June
2024
[1]
Hosch-Fömrdertechnik
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Brelko CC and Others,
1990
(1) SA 393 (W).
[2]
1999 (2) SA 72
(TDP) at 74F-G.
[3]
[2017] 1 All SA 231 (WCC).
[4]
2003
(6) SA 190
at par [9] at pg 194C.
[5]
Paragraph
[9].
[6]
[2003] ZACC 8
;
2003 (4) SA 584
(CC) at par
[15]
.
[7]
See
MV
Urgup: Owners of the MV Urgup v Western Bulk Carriers (Australia)
(Pty) Ltd and Others
1999
(3) SA 500
(C) at 515B-I.
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