Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 551South Africa
Newnet Property (Pty) Ltd trading as Sunshine Hospital v Road Accident Fund and Another (053391/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 551 (13 June 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Newnet Property (Pty) Ltd trading as Sunshine Hospital v Road Accident Fund and Another (053391/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 551 (13 June 2024)
Newnet Property (Pty) Ltd trading as Sunshine Hospital v Road Accident Fund and Another (053391/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 551 (13 June 2024)
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sino date 13 June 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 053391/2024
DOH:
05 JUNE 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
13/6/2024
In
the matter between:
NEWNET
PROPERTY (PTY) LTD
TRADING
AS SUNSHINE HOSPITAL
APPLICANT
and
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
FIRST
RESPONDENT
COLLINS PHUTJANE
LETSOALO
SECOND
RESPONDENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically and by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by way of email and
shall be
uploaded on caselines. The date for hand down is deemed to be on 13
June 2024
JUDGMENT
Mali J
[1]
On 5 June 2024 the applicant, being
the company trading as the hospital treating victims of road
accidents approached this court
by way of urgency. The applicant
sought orders against the second respondent, the Chief Executive
Officer of the Road Accident
Fund (“the first respondent”),
a public entity established in terms of section 2(1) of the Accident
Fund Act 56 of
1996.
[2]
In the notice of motion, the orders sought
are couched as follows:
“
(i)The
first respondent is hereby ordered to make payment of the judgments
obtained in favour of the applicant in the amount of
R 92 085 106.36
within 7 days from date if service of the Order on the first
respondent.
(ii)The first
respondent is hereby ordered to provide the applicant with an updated
Requested Not Yet Paid (RNYP) list within 7
days from date of service
if this order.
(iii)That the first
respondent is hereby ordered to provide an updated Requested Not Yet
Paid (RNYP) list to the Applicant every
14 days after compliance with
prayer 2 supra.
(iv)The first
respondent is hereby ordered to adjudicate all accounts issued to the
first respondent by the applicant within 120
days from receipt of
such account from the applicant.
(v)The first
respondent is directed to make payment to the applicant of all mounts
fur to the applicant on the May 2023 RNYP list
within 30 days from
date of service of this order on the first respondent, and thereafter
to make payment to the applicant of all
amounts due to the applicant
as per a current RNYP list within 30 days of such adjudicated account
appearing on the RNYP list.
(vi)The second
respondent be directed and ordered to ensure that the first
respondent complies with prayers 2 to 6 above....”
BACKGROUND
[3]
It is common cause that the applicant
as a hospital specialising in treating victims of road accidents
attended to the patients
whose medical bills are normally paid by the
first respondent. Some of the patients get admitted directly
from the accident
scene and other patients get transferred from other
hospitals. The first respondent makes payments based on invoices
issued by
the applicant to it. The first respondent utilises a method
referred to as Requested Not Yet Paid (RNYP) to validate the
applicant’s
payments. The significance of the RNYP list is that
same is
confirmation
of the amounts due for payment by the first respondent to the
applicant. Once an amount is placed in the RNYP list,
it is
effectively an admission by the first respondent that such invoice
has been checked and audited and is therefore due for
payment. The
first respondent is obligated to pay the applicant as a supplier
within 30 days of adjudication of the accounts which
are then placed
on the RNYP list.
[4]
The first respondent did not make
payments in time. As a result, in 2020 the applicant approached the
high court on urgent basis
and obtained an order directing the first
respondent to make payment to the applicant of the outstanding amount
of R353 443 850.34
in respect of RNYP claims. By agreement
between the parties, the first respondent would make payment by way
of monthly instalments
of R36 908 000.00 being the
applicant’s minimum monthly requirement to avoid closing.
[5]
After 18 (eighteen) months the first
respondent stopped paying in terms of the above order. The first
respondent’s failure
to make payment compelled the applicant to
attach in execution various movable assets of the first respondent to
sell in an auction.
In response to the attachment, the first
respondent launched an application to suspend the sale of attached
assets, which the applicant
opposed. The applicant further brought a
counter application against the first respondent for an amount of
R301 721 492.50 together
with a payment proposal of monthly
instalments in the amount of R45 581 098.50. The first respondent
appealed the above order up
to the Constitutional Court, but to no
avail.
[6]
The applicant continued obtaining judgments
against the first respondent as the applicant did not stop servicing
the patients, thus
resulting in the first respondent’s
indebtedness to the applicant. The amount of R92 085
106.36 which is subject
of this application is based on judgments
obtained by the applicant. During May 2023 the first respondent
stopped sending updated
lists of RNYPs, at that stage the amount
owing on RNYPs was R380 000 .00. The first respondent also
stopped adjudicating the
applicant’s new claims since October
2023.
[7]
The applicant would continue to service the
road accident victims in between non- payments and short payments
from the first respondent.
In April 2023 due to non- payments
the applicant shut down its operations and retrenched some staff
members. Since the applicant’s
re-opening in August 2023,
it has treated more than 970 (Nine Hundred and Seventy) patients.
[8]
The applicant commenced engagements with
the first respondent which did not bear much fruit. On 26 March 2024
the applicant’s
auction flowing from the abovementioned order
of 2020 was interrupted by the South African Police Service (SAPS) at
the instance
of the first respondent. The auction did not take place,
subsequently the applicant served a warrant of execution to South
African
Revenue Service (SARS), as the government collecting agent of
fuel levy, the levy used to fund the first respondent’s
coffers.
The said execution did not yield positive results. The
applicant further engaged the South African Reserve Bank (SARB),
Department
of National Treasury also to no avail. Due to the
unsuccessful efforts mentioned above the applicant brought this
application.
[9]
In opposing the application, the first and
the second respondent did not file an answering affidavit but only
filed heads of arguments
dealing with a point
in
limine
. The first point being lack of
urgency.
URGENCY
[10]
The applicant put the following undisputed
version; that the applicant has 28 (twenty-eight) patients in its
wards as at date of
this application and which patients are extremely
ill and in need of constant medical care. Some of the aforesaid
patients need
critical care. Should the hospital not receive payment
of those amounts due in terms of the judgments, the applicant will be
unable
to render medical care and medication to the patients and
their health and lives shall be placed at severe risk. Many of the
patients,
some with such serious injuries have been in the care of
the applicant for several months (depending on the injuries). The
care
provided by the applicant is therefore ongoing and critical to
save the lives of these patients
.
[11]
Furthermore, the applicant has 150 (One
Hundred and Fifty) staff members who are associated with and employed
by the hospital and
who make up the administration, medical and
cleaning staff of the applicant. Should the applicant not receive
payment of the funds
due to it, then it will have no option but to
retrench all the 150 (One Hundred and Fifty) employees, cancel
contracts with the
service providers of certain employees and close
down the hospital. The applicant, other than struggling to provide
medical care
and pay salaries, is struggling to pay suppliers and
employees, purchase PPE to be provided to its employees (specifically
the
frontline medical employees), medical equipment and medical
supplies which are so desperately needed to treat the current
patients
let alone the patients which are admitted on a weekly basis.
[12]
The question is whether the application
meets the requirement of Rule 6 (12) of the Uniform Rules which
provides as follows:
“
(12)
(a) In urgent applications the court or a judge may dispense with the
forms and service provided for in these Rules and may
dispose of such
matter at such time and place and in such manner and in accordance
with such procedure (which shall as far as practicable
be in terms of
these Rules) as to it seems meet.
(b) In every affidavit
or petition filed in support of any application under paragraph (a)
of this subrule, the applicant shall
set forth explicitly the
circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent and the reasons
why he claims that he could not
be afforded substantial redress at a
hearing in due course.
(c) A person against
whom an order was granted in his absence in an urgentapplication may
by notice set down the matter for reconsideration
of the order.”
[13]
In
East Rock Trading 7 (PTY) LTD and another v Eagle Valley Granite
(PTY) LTD and others
[1]
the
court held:
‘“
The
correct and the crucial test is whether, if the matter were to follow
its normal course as laid down by the rules, an Applicant
will be
afforded substantial redress. If he cannot be afforded substantial
redress at the hearing in due course, then the matter
qualifies to be
enrolled and heard as an urgent application.”
[14]
Regarding the substantial redress, the
applicant made submissions as to why it cannot be afforded
substantial redress in the ordinary
course. In the process of getting
the matter to be heard in the ordinary course the hospital would have
been closed. Furthermore,
the first respondent’s conduct
threatens the lives and well-being of a number of patients. The
respondents did not
place any version pertaining to the closure of
the hospital with its attendant consequences, except to state that
the applicant
have self-created urgency. There are no facts to
support the above in their heads of arguments, save to say, “
the
applicant must make out a case for urgency in its founding
affidavit
.” They also refer to
the case of
Luna Meubel Vervaardigers
(Edms) Bpk v Makin & Another t/a Makin Furniture Manufacturers
and restated the law there as follows:
“
"The
degree of relaxation should not be greater than the exigency of the
case demands. It must be commensurate therewith. Mere
lip service to
the requirements of Rule 6 (12) (b) will not do and an applicant must
make out a case in the founding affidavit
to justify the particular
extent of the departure from the norm, which is involved in the time
and day for which the matter be
set down."
[15]
The submissions made in respect of urgency
relating to the order sought on RNYPs and the order sought on
enforcing payments needs
to be differentiated. There is no version
put forward by the applicant as to the steps it took since May 2023
when the first respondent
stopped sending RNYPs and when the first
respondent further stopped adjudicating RNYPs in October 2023.
In a nutshell the
applicant did not explain the delay in bringing an
urgent application for an order seeking the first respondent to issue
and adjudicate
RNYPs.
[16]
In respect of the monetary order of R
92 085 106.36, by 30 April 2024 the applicant became aware
that the National Treasury
complained of the applicant’s
ineffective purported attachment due to non- compliance with the law
and that the National
Treasury was in no position to pay the first
respondent’s debt. In the circumstances of this case, I
cannot not find
that the delay of three weeks after all the efforts
by the applicant is so inordinate. Furthermore, I am persuaded that
the applicant
will not be afforded substantial redress in the
ordinary course. In the result the application is urgent, insofar as
it concerns
the judgment debt in the amount of R92 085 106.36
RESPONDENT’S
CASE
[17]
On behalf of the respondents the following
points of law were raised (i) That the matter is res judicata, (ii)
no cause of action
and (iii) non- joinder.
RES JUDICATA
[18]
According to the respondents the matter has been finalised and
the applicant already have judgments; it cannot seek another
judgment.
The applicants seek relief
based on alleged court orders providing for payment. The applicant’s
attempt to change the nature
of their own orders from being
ad
pecuniam solvendam
to
ad factum praestandum
is not
competent. The applicant does this in circumstances where it has
raised the very same issue against the same party, being
the first
respondent.
[19]
The applicant’s counter argument is that this
application is about forcing the second respondent to make the first
respondent
to effect payment. It is apposite to repeat the prayer
pertaining to the payment.
“
(ii)The
first respondent is hereby ordered to make payment of the judgments
obtained in favour of the applicant in the amount of
R 92 085 106.36
within 7 days from date if service of the Order on the first
respondent.”
[20]
In paragraph 7 of the founding affidavit, it is stated; “
The
Second Respondent is cited herein insofar as it has an obligation to
ensure that the RAF is delivering on its mandate. As shall
be shown
below, the RAF and the Second Respondent are intentionally and
contemptuously not doing so.”
The applicant's case for
mandamus is aimed at the second respondent. The submissions made are
that the order sought in order for
the second respondent “
to
press the button”
. In support of its argument the applicant
referred to section 12 (1) (b) of the Road Accident Fund Act 56 of
1996 (the Act), which
provides that the Chief Executive Officer shall
be the person who is suitably qualified and experienced to manage the
day-to-day
affairs of the Fund.
[21]
The
applicant further asserts its argument for the enforcement against
the second respondent by making reference to Nyathi v MEC
for
Department of Health, Gauteng and Another
[2]
.
The apex court was seized with
whether
section 3 of
the
State Liability Act
[3]
precluding execution of judgment orders against state functionary was
unconstitutional. The issue arose from the failure of the
state
attorney to honour the court order to pay the judgment debt.
[22]
At paragraph 75 the court held that “The
judgment
creditor would have to obtain a mandamus order and if the
State
functionary
does not comply with the mandamus then he or
she would be held in contempt of court. This process is a
tedious one which places
an onerous burden on the judgment creditor
and does not translate into money in the pocket for the judgment
creditor….”
(own emphasis).
[23]
At paragraph 79 it is held “
The practical
effect of s 3 is that the State cannot be forced to honour court
orders as there is no manner in which compliance
can be enforced. In
the result, the ordinary citizen has no effective remedy available in
a situation where the State and its officials
fail to comply with a
court order. In terms of contempt of proceedings, the High Court
found that s 3 of the Act does not mean
that a Minister cannot be
arrested for inherent power to protect and regulate their process,
especially in light of s 173 of the
Constitution. However, contempt
of court proceedings do not put money in the pocket or food on the
table.”
[24]
The case of Nyathi is
distinguishable, herein there is nothing prohibiting the execution of
judgment orders as the applicant had
already done. In fact, the
applicant submitted that it did not arrange another auction, and
made it clear that it has
no appetite for same as it will only get
the fraction of what is being owed.
[25]
Secondly the first respondent is not a state
functionary as Nyathi dealt with judgment orders within the
state
functionaries. In terms of Schedule 3 of the Public Finance
Management Act
[4]
Schedule
(PFMA) the first respondent is a public entity
.
Furthermore,
in terms of section 49 (2) of the PFMA if the public entity has a
board or other controlling body, that Board
or controlling body is
the accounting authority. Section 11 of the Act provides for the
powers and functions of Board and procedure.
In the present case the
legal position regarding public entities has no inhibitions regarding
the attachment of assets, the assets
were attached however the issue
is the alleged obstruction by the first respondent.
[26]
The applicant raised the very same issue against
the same party, being the first respondent. The applicant
does
not bring a different case against the first respondent, except that
the court must order the second respondent to make payment.
There
is no substantial case made against the second respondent bar that he
is cited “
herein insofar as it has an obligation to ensure
that the RAF is delivering on its mandate.”
There are no
allegations made against the second respondent proving that he
precluded the first respondent to deliver on its mandate.
The
applicant’s argument assumes that were the orders in the first
place issued against the second respondent, the current
problems
would be non-extant. I cannot agree with this contention, because the
second respondent acts on behalf of the first respondent.
In essence
the judgment is against the first respondent, there is no legal
position changing same. The order sought mirrors the
order that has
already been granted. In my view the first respondent remains the
sole judgment debtor.
[27]
In conclusion I am inclined to agree with the
respondents’ contention that the applicant has already
made the
same case for the application it seeks herein. This point alone is
dispositive of the application, it is not necessary
to deal with
other points of law. In the result the respondents’ point
in
limine
must succeed.
ORDER
1.
The application is dismissed with costs to
include the costs of
two counsel where so employed.
N P MALI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
the applicant:
Adv.
A.F Arnoldi SC
Adv.
B.D Stevens
Adv.
T. Motha
arnoldi@lawcircle.co.za
brookstevens@lawcircle.co.za
advmotha@lawcircle.co.za
For
the respondents:
Adv.
G. Naude SC – 082 566 3940
gerhard@lawcircle.co.za
[1]
Case
Number 11/33767 South Gauteng High Court Johannesburg para 9
[2]
2008 (5) SA 94 (CC)
[3]
S
3 of Act 20 of 1957
Subject
to subsections (4) to (8), no execution, attachment or like process
for the satisfaction of a final court order sounding
in money may be
issued against the defendant or respondent in any action or legal
proceedings against the State or against any
property of the State,
but the amount, if any, which may be required to satisfy any final
court order given or made against the
nominal defendant or
respondent in any such action or proceedings must be paid as
contemplated in this section.
[4]
Act 1 of 1999.
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