Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 543South Africa
Road Accident Fund v Phungula (38313/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 543 (13 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 June 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Road Accident Fund v Phungula (38313/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 543 (13 June 2024)
Road Accident Fund v Phungula (38313/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 543 (13 June 2024)
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sino date 13 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 38313/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
13/6/2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Applicant
and
NKOSINATHI
EMMANUEL PHUNGULA
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 13 JUNE 2024
CP
WESLEY AJ
1.
In this application the applicant seeks an order:
1.1
that the late filing of the application be condoned in terms of Rule
27(3);
1.2
that the order that was granted by my brother, the honourable Kumalo
J, on 2
March 2023, in terms of which judgment was granted against
the applicant in the sum of R6 234 275.00 in respect of
loss
of earnings, together with interest and costs, be rescinded in
terms of Rule 42, alternatively, the Common law; and
1.3
that each party pays their own costs, alternatively, that the
respondent pays
the applicant’s costs in the event of
opposition.
2.
The respondent does oppose the application. In its answering
affidavit
the respondent seeks an order that the application be
dismissed with costs on the attorney and own client scale.
3.
At the commencement of her argument for the applicant, counsel
conceded
that the applicant did not make out a defence to the
respondent’s claim in respect of loss of earnings, together
with interest
and costs, on the papers. In this regard the arguments
that are made by the applicant in its founding affidavit are that the
damages
award by the court in the amount of R6 234 275.00
in respect of loss of earnings, together with interest and costs, was
not properly quantified; that the actuary concerned relied on
assumptions that were not clarified by the industrial psychologist
concerned as well as the unverified earning of, it is presumed, the
applicant; and essentially that the applicant’s damages
were
actually less than the damages that were awarded by the court.
4.
Having regard to the applicant’s papers, it is correct that
the
applicant has not made out a defence therein to the respondent’s
claim as foresaid. The arguments that are put up by
the applicant are
speculative at best, and are not supported by any countervailing
evidence.
5.
The approach that a court should take in an application for
condonation
in terms of Rule 27(3), and the factors that a court
should take into account, are succinctly summarised in Harms,
Civil
Procedure in the Superior Courts
.
[1]
Save for what follows, it is not necessary to repeat same herein. The
court has had regard to what Harms records. One of the factors
that a
court must take into account is the
applicant’s
prospects of success. According to Harms,
[2]
condonation
ought
to be refused if the proceedings lack merit. The court respectfully
agrees with this.
6.
Insofar as the application for rescission is based on the Common law,
in order to succeed
an applicant must give, at least, a reasonable
and acceptable explanation for the default and show that on the
merits that it has
a
bona
fide
defence.
[3]
According to the
applicant, it was in default of appearance at the court concerned, on
the day in question, because the attorney
concerned at the State
Attorney had to attend to another trial in another matter where the
applicant was a party at the same time.
The applicant’s legal
representative thus made a deliberate election not to be present at
the court concerned, on the day
in question, when the judgment was
granted against the applicant. In the court’s view, this is
neither a reasonable nor acceptable
explanation for the applicant’s
default. Regarding the applicant’s
bona
fide
defence on the merits, it has already been shown that the applicant
has
not made out a defence to the respondent’s claim as foresaid.
7.
Insofar as the application for rescission is based on the Common law,
it can accordingly
not succeed.
8.
Insofar as the application for rescission is based on Rule 42,
subrule (1) provides
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;
(b)
an order or judgment in which there is an ambiguity, or a patent
error
or omission, but only to the extent of such ambiguity, error or
omission;
(c)
an order or judgment granted as the result of a mistake common to the
parties.”
9.
It should first be noted that Rule 42(1)(a) does not apply where a
party deliberately
elects to be absent.
[4]
As stated by Harms,
[5]
the term
“party” is defined to include the legal representatives
of a party. It has already been shown that applicant’s
legal
representative made a deliberate election not to be present at the
court concerned, on the day in question, when the judgment
was
granted against the applicant. It follows that Rule 42(1)(a) does not
presently apply.
10.
Insofar as the application for rescission is based on Rule 42(1)(a),
it can accordingly
not succeed. Although it is not necessary to make
a finding on the issue because of the foresaid finding, it should
also be noted
that the applicant has in any event not established
that the order or judgment concerned was erroneously sought or
erroneously
granted within the ambit of Rule 42(1)(a).
[6]
11.
The applicant does not either make out a case that there is an
ambiguity or a patent error
or omission in the order or judgment
concerned, within the ambit Rule 42(1)(b), or that the order or
judgment concerned was granted
as the result of a mistake common to
the parties, within the ambit of Rule 42(1)(c). Insofar as the
application for rescission
is based on Rule 42(1)(b) or (c), it can
accordingly also not succeed.
12.
As indicated, t
he respondent seeks a cost order
against the applicant on the attorney and own client scale. The
respondent seeks this cost order
because, in its view, the
application is a clear abuse of the court’s process. It was
submitted in argument that in the prevailing
circumstances, the
respondent should not be out of pocket regarding the costs of this
application.
13.
In a
special
case the court may come to the conclusion that the successful party
should not be out of pocket as the result of the litigation
and may
in its discretion then award costs, for example,
on
the attorney and own client scale.
[7]
Such
an order may be made where the other party has been guilty of
dishonesty, fraud or that his motives and conduct may have been
vexatious, reckless, malicious or frivolous, or that he has been
guilty of some form of misconduct in connection with the matter
investigated or in the conduct of the case.
[8]
14.
In the court’s view, the application was still born, having no
prospects
of success from the outset. It is accordingly a frivolous
application, amounting to an abuse of the court’s process. In
the prevailing circumstances, the court agrees that the respondent
should not be out of pocket regarding the costs of the application.
A
cost order against the applicant on the attorney
and own client scale falls to made.
15.
In argument the respondent requested that I grant an order that the
conduct
of the
attorney
at State Attorney concerned who failed to appear for the applicant as
set out above be referred to the Legal Practice Council
for
investigation. I am not inclined to do so at this juncture. If the
respondent or his attorneys are of the view that this must
be done,
they can make the report to the Legal practice Council.
16.
In the result I make the following order:
16.1
The application is dismissed.
16.2
The applicant is to pay the respondent’s costs, on the attorney
and own client scale.
CP
WESLEY
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Appearances
For
applicant:
Adv
L Keijser
instructed
by the State Attorney, Pretoria
For
the respondent:
Adv
CM Dredge
instructed
by Dirk Duvenhage Attorney
Date
heard:
21
May 2024
Date
of Judgment:
13
June 2024
[1]
April
2024 at B27.7.
[2]
Above and
authorities in note 25.
[3]
Harms above
at B42.10.
[4]
Harms above
at B42.4 and authorities in note 6.
[5]
Above and
authorities cited in note 5.
[6]
Harms above
and authorities in notes 7 to 17.
[7]
See
Nel
v Waterberg Landbouwers Ko-operatiewe Vereniging
1946 AD 597.
[8]
See
Van
Dyk v Conradie
1963 2 SA 413
(C);
De
Goede v Venter
1959 3 SA 959
(O);
Ward
v Sulzer
1973 3 SA 701
(A).
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