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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 608
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## Progressiewe Privaat Sekuriteit Monitering en Reaksie (Pty) Limited v National Commissioner of South African Police Services and Others (A47/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 608 (18 June 2024)
Progressiewe Privaat Sekuriteit Monitering en Reaksie (Pty) Limited v National Commissioner of South African Police Services and Others (A47/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 608 (18 June 2024)
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sino date 18 June 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No A47/23
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED
DATE: 18 June 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
PROGRESSIEWE
PRIVAAT
SEKURITEIT
MONITERING
EN
REAKSIE (PTY) LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES
GENERAL
KJ SITHOLE N.O.
COLONEL
PN SIKHAKHANE
(in
her capacity as acting Section
Head, Central Firearms Registry)
THE
FIREARMS APPEAL BOARD
ADV.
LUNGELWA CAROL SHANDU N.O. (CHAIR OF THE APPEAL BOARD)
THE
MINISTER of POLICE
FIRST
RESPONDENT
SECOND
RESPONDENT
THIRD
RESPONDENT
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
Coram:
KOOVERJIE
J, COX AJ
et
MOGOTSI AJ
Heard
on:
15
MAY 2024
Delivered:
18
June 2024 - This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email,
by being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and
by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 16H00 on 18 June 2024.
ORDER
It is ordered that:
[1]
The appeal is removed from the roll;
[2]
The appellant is to pay the respondent’s wasted costs on a
party
– party scale, including the costs of senior counsel;
[3]
The scale of costs to be in terms of Uniform Rule 69(7), scale C
JUDGMENT
COX
AJ (KOOVERJIE J, MOGOTSI AJ CONCURRING)
[1]
On 6 June 2022 Khumalo J dismissed the urgent application of the
appellant against the respondents
which concerned the second and
third respondents’ refusal to renew the appellant’s
application of further firearm licences
in terms of
Section 24
of the
Firearms Control Act, 60 of 2000
. The appellant was granted leave to
appeal before the full court on 6 October of the same year.
[2]
The Director of the appellant is also the director and shareholder of
Magena Trading (Pty Limited
t/a Magena Security Services (herein
after referred to as Magena Trading). Magena Trading also
lodged a similar application
against the same respondents on the same
date. The remaining aspect in contention was the costs dispute.
[3]
For the sake of convenience, the court
a quo
heard both
applications simultaneously and delivered a judgment in both
applications. The same process was followed in the application(s)
for
leave to appeal. The two applications were however never
consolidated. Each application was allocated with its own case
and
appeal number, and the attorney for the appellant subsequently
applied for separate dates for the appeals. The registrar
provided the appellant with the date of 15 May 2024 whilst no date
for an appeal hearing was allocated in respect of Magena Trading.
[4]
The appellant’s understanding that both appeals were to be
heard on the same date is misconceived.
It cannot be disputed
that no date was allocated for the appeal of Magena Trading.
Consequently, this court was seized only
with the appeal of the
appellant.
[5]
It is necessary to emphasize that when the matter was heard before
us, the parties were in agreement
that the appeal had lapsed.
The remaining issue in dispute pertains to the costs.
[6]
The respondents persist in their view that the appellant failed to
fully comply with
Rules 49(6)(a)
and (13)
[1]
.
Moreover, in terms of
Rule 49(6)(a)
the appeal had lapsed since the
appellant failed to apply for a date of hearing when it filed the
appeal record. This entails
that the appellant would have to
launch a substantive application in accordance with
Rule 49(6)(b)
for
its reinstatement.
[7]
It was further argued that the appellant failed to do so timeously,
namely within 60 days of its
delivery of its notice of appeal as
required by
Rule 49(6)(a).
As early as 20 February 2023 the
respondents’ attorney informed the appellant of the lapsing of
the appeal.
[8]
The appellant concedes that it did not apply for a hearing date
within 60 days of its delivery
of its notice of appeal. In
Genesis
[2]
it was
held that if a written application for a date of hearing an appeal is
not timeously made to the registrar then the appeal
is deemed to have
lapsed. On the facts and contrary to the Rules, the appellant
applied for a date long after the expiry
of 60 days.
Rule
49(6)(a)
reads:
“
Within
60 days after delivery of a notice of appeal, an appellant shall make
written application to the registrar of the division
where the appeal
is to be heard for a date for the hearing of such appeal and shall at
the same time furnish him with his full
residential address and the
name and address of every other party to the appeal and if the
appellant fails to do so a respondent
may within 10 days after the
expiry of the said period of 60 days, as in the case of the
appellant, apply for the set down of the
appeal or cross-appeal which
he may have noted. If no such application is made by either party the
appeal and cross-appeal shall
be deemed to have lapsed: Provided that
a respondent shall have the right to apply for an order for his
wasted costs.”
[9]
It was argued on behalf of the respondents that such non-compliance
with the Rule forms the basis
of the respondents’ argument that
they are entitled to their wasted costs as provided for. The
appellant, on
the other hand, argued that the question of costs
should be reserved for the appeal court to decide. It contended
that prior
to making a costs order it would be necessary to establish
whether the appeal has indeed lapsed and which party was to blame for
the fact that the provision in
Rule 49(13)
had not been complied
with, namely the furnishing of security.
[10]
The appellant’s argument is untenable. On 7 May 2024 the
appellant filed its application for
reinstatement of its appeal. That
is clearly indicative of an acceptance by the appellant that the
appeal had lapsed and further
on counsel’s concession in court
that ‘technically’ it did.
[11]
Rule 49(13)(a)
is prescriptive and stipulates that an appellant is
required to furnish security for the respondents’ costs of
appeal.
It was common cause that there was a dispute between
the parties regarding the amount of security. Consequently, the
provisions
of
Rule 49(13)(b)
should have been invoked since it
provides for the way forward if the parties are unable to agree on
the amount of security.
In such a case, the registrar should
fix the amount. The rules are clear. The issue of
security was to be finalised
prior to filing of the appeal record
with the registrar. This essentially means that the appeal record
should not have been filed
before security was furnished.
[12]
The appellant argued that the responsibility was on the respondents
to approach the registrar to fix a suitable
amount. The
appellant was further unhappy with the security amount suggested by
the respondent which it found to be exorbitant.
The appellant’s
view was that at that point its hands were tied and that it was the
responsibility was on the respondents
to finalise the security amount
with the registrar. I do not agree with the contention that it
was only the responsibility
of the respondents to approach the
registrar. Nothing barred the appellant from persisting with
the security issue and cause
the registrar to fix an amount.
[13]
When the appellant applied for the hearing date, it was well aware
that the issue of security was not settled.
Nevertheless, it
proceeded to obtain a hearing date. In
LG
v JG
[3]
at para
13
Windell J stated as follows:
Therefore
,
if when applying for leave to appeal in terms of
rule 49(1)
, no
application is launched as envisaged by
rule 49(13)(a)
to release the
appellant wholly or partially from the obligation to give security,
and leave is granted to the Full Court (as contemplated
in
rule
49(2)
,then the remainder of
rule 49
is triggered, which sets out the
procedure to be followed by the parties in the prosecution of their
appeal before the Full Court.
[14]
The rules are unambiguous. If security has not been furnished,
the appeal record cannot be lodged.
Rule 49(13)
is peremptory
and in this regard it was stated at para 25 of the said authority:
If
security is not furnished, the appeal record may not be lodged.
Without an appeal record, no date can be assigned for the hearing
of
the appeal
(rule 49(7)(c))
, and
rule 49(7)(d)
may apply.
The
aforesaid provisions are prescriptive and demonstrate that due to non
– compliance with the Uniform Rules of Court the
appeal was not
ripe for hearing.
[15] It
is reiterated that the appellant proceeded in obtaining a date for
the hearing of the appeal despite its
knowledge of the shortcomings
referred to. Counsel for the appellant was hard pressed to explain
why the appeal was enrolled for
hearing when it was obviously not
ripe for hearing. The response that it did so, as ‘the
respondents did nothing’,
is not plausible. That is hardly a
reason to enrol a matter for hearing that was obviously not ready to
be heard.
[16]
Notably the appellant submitted in his supplementary heads of
argument that it had applied for a date at
the insistence of the
respondents. Even if that was the case, it remained irregular
to have applied for a hearing date if
the jurisdictional requirements
aforesaid were not met. In my view, the respondents are thus
entitled to their wasted costs
on that basis alone. There is no
substantive reason before us to saddle the appeal court with a
decision on the costs of
the proceedings before us.
[17]
The respondents persisted in their argument that a punitive costs
order against the appellant on the attorney
and client scale is
justified. Ultimately the question of costs is within the
discretion of the court. Such discretion must
be exercised
judicially, and all relevant factors have to be considered.
The
objective test regarding costs is always to enquire what is just and
fair in the circumstances.
[18]
I accept that the respondents were
put through unnecessary
expense as a result of the conduct of the appellant. Our courts
have pronounced that in order to justify
a punitive costs order,
exceptional circumstances must exist. The list is not
exhaustive. The courts have granted punitive
costs under
various circumstances. Hence there are no set of rules that
prescribe when punitive costs orders are justified.
Ultimately
this court is required to exercise its discretion judicially.
[19]
When considering the punitive costs orders, one of the factors taken
into consideration is whether a party
conducted itself in bad faith.
In my view, there was no element of
mala fides
on the part of
the appellant when it enrolled the appeal for hearing.
Consequently, a punitive cost order is not justified
in these
circumstances.
I COX
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I agree and it is so
ordered
H KOOVERJIE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I
agree
J MOGOTSI
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
15
MAY 2024
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
18
JUNE 2024
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPELLANT:
ADV.
M SNYMAN SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
M J
HOOD & ASSOCIATES ATTORNEYS, SANDTON
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
ADV.
I ELLIS SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
STATE
ATTORNEY, PRETORIA
[1]
The Uniform Rules of Court
[2]
Genesis
v Jamieson and Others
(Unreported)
(3212/2019)
[2021] ZAGPJHC 862 923 July 2021 para 33
[3]
LG v JG
(32377/2012)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 450 (28 April 2023)
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