Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 869South Africa
Minister of South African Police Services and Others v Mudolo (A274/12022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 869 (17 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 July 2024
Headnotes
the order of the court a quo to be set aside and that the application be dismissed with costs. [12] During the hearing of the appeal, Mr Bester SC, counsel for the appellants, did, however, not insist that the appeal being heard on the merits as envisaged in section 16(2)(a)(i). Mr Bester submitted that an order in terms of section 16(2)(a), save for the issue of costs, should be granted. A draft order in the following terms was accordingly submitted:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of South African Police Services and Others v Mudolo (A274/12022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 869 (17 July 2024)
Minister of South African Police Services and Others v Mudolo (A274/12022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 869 (17 July 2024)
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sino date 17 July 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
A27412022
(1)
REPORTABLE:NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST
TO
OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
17/7/2024
MINISTER
OF TH£ SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE SERVICES
First
Appellant
CORNELIUS
ROELOFSE MARITZ
Second
Appellant
THE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS, PRETORIA
Third
Appellant
and
WILLIAH
JOSEPH MUDOLO
Respondent
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This appeal lies against an order granted
by the court a
quo
on
27 May 2022 in the following terms:
"1.
This matter was called in the Urgent Court on 18 May 2022. Having
heard counsel for the parties, the Court reserved judgment.
2.
On
25
May 2022, an erroneous order was issued
in which it was stated that "the matter is struck off the roll
with costs due to
a
lack
of urgency."
3.
Having, scrutinised the said order
on 27 May 2022 and realising that there is an error, the Court
decided to mero motu rescind it,
in terms of Rule 42(1) and replace
it with the following:
3.1
The application is granted with
costs."
[2]
The appellants initially appealed the
relief granted in paragraph 3 of the order, rescinding the erroneous
order issued on 25 May
2022, on the basis that they were not heard
prior to the order being granted. To their credit the appellants did
not persist with
this ground of appeal. The rescission was clearly
necessary to correct an administrative error, and nothing turns on
the rescission
of the erroneous order.
[3]
It needs mentioning that in terms of the
judgment delivered by the court a
quo
on
2 August 2022, costs were granted on an attorney-client scale,
whereas only party and party costs were granted in terms of the
court
order dated 27 May 2022.
It
is trite that an appeal lies against an order and not the judgment.
[See,
inter
a/ia, Tavakoli
and
Another
v
Banty Hills (Pty) (Ltd)
2019 (3) SA 163
(SCA) at para [3]
[4]
This judgment, therefore, proceeds on the
basis that a party and party cost order was granted.
BACKGROUND
[5]
On 17 October 2020 the respondent, a
businessman who was on a business trip to Nigeria, was arrested
at OR Tambe International
Airport
on
a charge
of
fraud. The respondent
was
charged with fraud and remained in custody until he was released on
bail on 17 June 2021. In terms of the bail conditions the
respondent
had to remain in Gauteng and was not allowed to be within 500 metres
from any port of entry. The respondent was, furthermore,
required to
report to the nearest police
station
every
Monday
and
Friday.
[6]
On 8 March 2022
the respondent's
bail conditions
were amended
by
the Magistrates
Court
to allow the respondent
to
travel outside Gauteng
and
abroad. The respondent
arranged
a trip abroad and on 22 March 2022, his attorney requested his
passport from the second appellant, Colonel Marais ("Marais").
According to the respondent, Marais refused to hand over the passport
and informed his attorney that the National Prosecuting
Authority (NPA) had filed a notice of
appeal on 18 March 2022. The refusal to hand over the respondent's
passport culminated in
the urgent application in which the respondent
claimed the following relief:
"
2.
Compelling the respondents
to
release the applicant's passport number ZP028394 to allow him to
undertake travel, both local and overseas, in compliance with
the
order of the Pretoria Magistrates Court dated 8 March 2022.
3.
In the event of the respondents
filing
a
notice of appeal,
it is directed
that such appeal shall not suspend
the order granted by the Honourable Magistrate on 8 March
2022
and the order
shall continue
to be operational
and enforceable
until the final determination
of the appeal."
[7]
As set out
supra,
the
relief was granted with costs by the court a
quo
on 27 May 2022.
MOOTNESS
[8]
At the hearing of the appeal, the parties
were
ad idem
that
the appeal has become moot in the following circumstances:
8.1
the order granted by the Magistrate on 8
March 2022 was set aside on appeal on 13 September 2022;
8.2
the respondent proceeded to file an
application for special leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of
Appeal, which application was
dismissed on 16 November
2022;
8.3
thereafter, the respondent brought an
application for leave to appeal to the Constitutional Court, which
application was dismissed
on-6 March 2023.
[9]
Notwithstanding the fact that the appeal
has become moot, the appellants maintained that the appeal should
proceed in respect of
the cost order granted by the court a
quo.
[10]
In the heads of argument filed on behalf of the appellants, the
appellants relied on the provisions of
section 16(2)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
, which reads as follows:
"16(2)(a)(i)
When at the hearing of an appeal the
issues are of such
a
nature
that the decision sought will have no effect or result, the appeal
may
be
dismissed
on
this ground alone."
(own
emphasis)
[11]
Relying on the aforesaid discretion, the
appellants submitted that the court should hear the appeal in
circumstances where an unconscionable
result would ensue if the
appeal is dismissed and the appellants remain liable for the costs of
the application. The order sought
in the heads of argument was
accordingly
for
the appeal to be upheld, the order of the court
a
quo
to
be set aside and that the application be dismissed with costs.
[12]
During the hearing of the appeal, Mr Bester
SC, counsel for the appellants, did, however, not insist that the
appeal being heard
on the merits as envisaged in
section 16(2)(a)(i).
Mr Bester submitted that an order in terms of
section 16(2)(a)
, save
for the issue of costs, should be granted. A draft order in the
following terms was accordingly submitted:
"1.
It is ruled
that
for purposes
of section
16(2)(a)
of the
Superior
Courts
Act 10 of 2013, save for the issue
of
costs,
the
decision sought on appeal will have no practical effect or result;
2.
The cost order granted by the court
a
quo is set aside;
3.
No order
as
to
costs
in the appeal (including the costs of
the application for leave to appeal);
4.
The order contained in paragraphs 1
-
3
disposes of the issues on appeal."
[13]
In the result, the cost order granted by
the court a
quo
stands
to be considered in terms of
section 16(2)(a)(ii)
, which reads as
follows:
"16(2)(a)(ii)
Save under exceptional circumstances, the question whether the
decision would have no practical effect or result
is to be determined
without reference to any considerations of
costs"
[14]
In
John Walker
Pools
v Consolidated
Aone
Trade
and Invest
6
(Pfy)
Ltd (in liquidation)
and Another
2018 (4) SA 433
(SCA) the court summarised the position under
section 16(2)(a)(ii)
as follows:
"[15]
Counsel for JWP conceded that the
only practical effect which an appeal order would have was in
relation to costs. In terms of
s 16(2)(a)(ii)
of the
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
, the question whether
a
decision would have practical effect or
result is, save under exceptional circumstances, to be determined
without reference to any
consideration
of costs. The costs referred to in
this provision are the costs incurred in the court against whose
decision the appellant or would-be
appellant is seeking to appeal,
not the costs in the appellate court. The section is concerned with
the decision of the court
a
quo
and the circumstances in which an appeal against the decision of that
court can be dismissed without an enquiry into the merits.
If the
costs incurred in the court
a
quo
were very substantial, this might constitute an exceptional
circumstance leading to the conclusion that
a
reversal of that court's decision would
have practical effect."
(footnote
excluded)
[15]
In
Mgwenya NO
and Others v Kruger
(1060/16)
[2017]
ZASCA 102
(16 September 2017), the appeal became moot because the
first respondent passed away before the hearing of the appeal. The
appellants
similarly conceded that the appeal and any order made
thereon would have no practical effect or result. Having made the
aforesaid
concession, the appellants also relied on the provisions of
section 16(2)(a)(ii)
and requested that the appeal be heard. The
court dealt with the request and the principles, involved in
considering
such
a request as follows:
[7]
Counsel for the appellants, however,
had
a
second
string to their bow. They submitted that, if the appeal were not to
be heard on its merits, the church would be saddled with
the costs
orders made in favour of the first respondent and this would be most
'unfair' to the church. In this regard counsel for
the appellants
stressed that the costs incurred to date were substantial. However,
in so arguing, the appellants were confronted
with a significant
obstacle in the form of s 16(2)(a)(ii) of the SC Act which reads as
follows:
'Save
under exceptional circumstances, the question whether the decision
would have no practical effect or result is to be determined
without
reference to any consideration of costs.'
It
follows that it is incumbent upon the appellants to show that
exceptional circumstances exist justifying this court, in deciding
whether its judgment or order
would
have
a
practical
effect
or
result,
to
have
regard
only
to considerations of costs.
[8]
In MV Ais Mamas Seatrans Maritime v
Owners, MV Ais Mamas
&
another
2002
(6)
SA 150
(C), Thring J conducted
a
comprehensive inquiry
as
to the meaning of 'exceptional
circumstances' in our case law. The conclusion
reached
at 156H-J, with which
I
am
in agreement,
is that
'[w]hat is ordinarily
contemplated
by
the words "exceptional
circumstances" is something out of the ordinary and of an
unusual nature; something
which
is excepted
in
the sense that the general rule does not apply to it; something
uncommon, rare or different
. . . '.
Further, the approach
to the construction
of
the phrase
'exceptional circumstances' in
legislation was stated as follows by this court in Norwich Union Life
Insurance Society v Dobbs
1912 AD
395
at 399:
'Moreover,
when
a
statute
directs
that
a
fixed
rule shall only be departed
from
under exceptional circumstances, the Court, one would think, will
best give effect to the intention of the Legislature by taking
a
strict rather than
a
liberal view of applications for
exemption, and by carefully examining any special circumstances
relied upon.'
[9]
In essence the submissions made on
behalf of the appellants in this regard constituted
a
plea ad misericordiam. The appellants
also sought to rely on the judgment
in Oudebaaskraal
(Edms)
Bpk en andere
v Jansen
van Vuuren en andere
2001
(2
)
SA
806
(SCA). In my view, Oudebaaskraal is clearly distinguishable. In that
matter the appeal
became
academic
as
a
result of the repeal of the Water
Act 54 of 1956 at the time when the
appeal
was
ripe for hearing. By that stage
a
trial of seven days in the Water Court
had taken place rendering
a
record
of 2 379 pages. This included the evidence of several expert
witnesses. The appeal record consisted of 35 volumes. This court
held
that these circumstances were exceptional, justifying the conclusion
that in the event of
a
successful
appeal, the judgment or order of the court would have had
a
practical effect
or
result.
I
should
mention
that
Oudebaaskraal
was
decided
in
terms
of s 21A(3) of the Supreme Court Act
59 of 1959 which, for all practical purposes, is similarly
worded
to s 16(2)(a)(ii)
of
the
SC
Act. See
also
Radio
Pretoria
v Chairman,
Independent
Communications Authority of South
Africa
&
another
2005 (1) SA 47
(SCA)
at 55G-56F.
[10]
In the present matter the appeal related to an order granted in
Motion Court which was set aside by the full court. No viva
voce
evidence was tendered and the appeal
record
constituted
only three volumes
running to 437 pages. Oudebaaskraal
and the present appeal are simply not comparable. It follows that,
although the appeal was rendered
moot by the death of the first
respondent, the circumstances relied upon by the appellants cannot,
for purposes of s 16(2)(a)(ii)
of the
SC
Act, by any stretch of the imagination
be regarded as exceptional in the sense of something out of the
ordinary, or of an unusual
nature, uncommon, rare or different to the
extent that the general rule as embodied ins
16(2)(a)(ij should not apply."
[16]
In
casu
the
appellants relied, in their heads of argument, on the merits of the
appeal in support of their submission that
"an
unconscionable resulf'
will ensue if
the cost order granted by the court a
quo
against the appellants would be allowed
to stand.
[17]
Having read the record of appeal, I
appreciate the appellants' stance that to allow the cost order
granted by the court a
quo
to
stand would be hugely unfair to the appellants. This is, however, not
the test to apply in terms of section 16(2)(a)(ii).
[18]
"Exceptional circumstances"
must exist, insofar as only a cost
order must, in the circumstances, be determined without having regard
to the merits of the appeal.
This much is clear from reasoning of the
Supreme Court of Appeal in the
Mgwenya
matter.
[19]
Having failed to establish exceptional
circumstances as envisaged in section 16(2)(a)(ii), the
appeal stands to be dismissed in terms of
section 16(2)(a).
COSTS
[20]
The question of costs in an appeal that has
become moot is determined with reference to the time when it became
apparent that the
appeal became moot. In
casu:
20.1
leave to appeal was granted by the court a
quo
on 5
October 2022;
20.2
the notice of appeal was delivered on 2
November 2022;
20.3
the date for the hearing of the appeal was
allocated by the registrar on 27 January 2023;
20.4
the
date
on
which
the
appeal
became
moot
was
the
date
on which
the
respondent's application for leave to
appeal
to
the
constitutional
court was dismissed on 6
March 2023.
[21]
The duty of the parties aft r 6 March 2023
was set out in the
John Walker Pools
matter
supra
at
437 H as follows:
''.As
a
general
rule,
litigants
and
their
legal
representatives
are
under
a
duty,
where an appeal or proposed appeal becomes moot
during the pendency of appellate proceedings, to contribute to the
efficient use
of fudtaial resources by making sensible proposals
St'.)
that
appellate court's intervention is not needed.
"
[22]
Neither the appellants nor the respondent
complied with their respective duties in terms of 'the general rule.
In the result, I am of the
view that the parties should bear their own
costs.
Order:
I
propose the following order:
1.
The
appeal
is
dismissed.
2.
No
order
as
to
costs.
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN, J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGHT -COURT
GAUTENG
DIVSION,
PRETORIA
I
agree.
KUBUSHI,
J
JUDGE
OF TI:IE HIGHT COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORlA
l
agree.
# COLLIS,J
COLLIS,J
# JUDGE
OF THE HlGH COURT
JUDGE
OF THE HlGH COURT
# GAUTENG
DIVISlON, PRETORIA
GAUTENG
DIVISlON, PRETORIA
It
is so ordered.
# DATESHEARD:
DATES
HEARD:
08
May2024
# DATEDELIVERED
DATE
DELIVERED
17
July 2024
APPEARANCES
For
the Appellant's:
Advocate
G
Bester
SC
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
For
the
Respondent:
Advocate
J Mnisi
Instructed
by:
Matojane
Ma
lungana Inc
sino noindex
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