Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 727South Africa
Keele v Legal Practice Council and Others (1930/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 727 (2 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Keele v Legal Practice Council and Others (1930/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 727 (2 August 2024)
Keele v Legal Practice Council and Others (1930/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 727 (2 August 2024)
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sino date 2 August 2024
Latest amended version
dated 26 August 2024.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 1930/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 2 August 2024
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
Dr.
Mothobi Godfrey Keele
Applicant
and
Legal
Practice Council
First Respondent
Kalipa
Kagiso Mangaliso Mafungo
Second Respondent
Sheriff
Pretoria Central
Third respondent
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for the setting
aside of a writ of execution and the attachment carried out pursuant
thereto, alternatively
for the staying of a sale in execution. The
applicant, a lay person, appeared in person. The first respondent
abides the court’s
decision. The application is opposed by the
second respondent.
[2]
The application was initially launched in
the urgent court. It was struck from the roll. On a reading of the
affidavits, the following
scenario unfolds:
i.
A review application launched by the
applicant against the respondents was dismissed with costs on 7
September 2022. The judgment
with reasons was handed down on 23
August 2023 by Sardiwalla J. The applicant delivered an application
for leave to appeal on 11
September 2023. The applicant received a
notice of set down for the taxation of the Bill of Costs of the
second respondent on 13
November 2023. The applicant subsequently
filed a Notice of an Irregular Step in the Proceedings on 14 November
2023. I pause to
note that the applicant is of the view that the
taxation of the Bill of Costs amounts to an irregular step because
the execution
and operation of the order of Sardiwalla J was
suspended due to the delivery of the application for leave to appeal.
The taxation
occurred on 29 November 2023, and the applicant avers
that the taxation occurred ‘notwithstanding the fifteen (15)
days’
he had to apply to the court for the complaint to be
removed in terms of Rule 30(2)(c).
ii.
The applicant received an email on 31
January 2024 from Sardiwalla J’s registrar informing him that
leave to appeal was granted
to the Full Court. The appeal, however,
lapsed on 28 February 2024. He sent an email to the second respondent
on 28 February 2024
seeking an indulgence. He explained that he was
in Bloemfontein at the Supreme Court of Appeal and requested to
deliver the documents
on 4 March 2024. The writ of execution was
issued on 18 March 2024, and on 20 March 2024, the Sheriff attached
the applicant’s
vehicle, a BMW 320i M Sport. On 30 July 2024
the applicant filed a notice of appeal, which includes a prayer for
condonation for
the lateness of the appeal.
[3]
The applicant confirms that he received the
notice of set down for the taxation of the bill of costs. However,
instead of filing
a notice of intention to oppose the taxation, he
filed a notice in terms of Uniform Rule 30, and the taxation occurred
in his absence.
[4]
There are currently eight costs orders
under different case numbers against the applicant. Counsel for the
second respondent contends
that the applicant is not entitled to
litigate risk-free and in the absence of costs orders being executed
against him.
Discussion
[5]
The application is based primarily on the
premises that (i) the taxation of the Bill of Costs constitutes an
irregular step that
negates the taxation and renders the taxed Bill
of Costs unlawful; (ii) that he seeks condonation for the late filing
of the notice
of appeal and intends to proceed with the appeal of the
judgment and order handed down in case number 1930/2021.
[6]
The filing of a notice of leave to appeal
suspended the operation and execution of the order handed down by
Sardiwalla J in case
number 1930/2021. If regard is had to Rule
30(2)(c), the taxation proceeded within the period that the applicant
could have issued
the Rule 30(1) application. Whether there is merit
in the contention that it is irregular to set down a taxation while
an application
for leave to appeal is pending is beside the point. By
proceeding with the taxation, the second respondent deprived the
applicant
of bringing a Rule 30(1) application.
[7]
Although the applicant did not file a
notice to oppose the taxation, the Rule 30(2)(b) notice was an
indication of his opposition.
The failure to file a notice of
intention to oppose the taxation can be ascribed to the provision of
Rule 30(2)(a), which allows
a party to utilise Rule 30(1) only if
that party has not taken a further step in the cause with knowledge
of the irregularity.
The second respondent failed to answer this
issue in the answering affidavit.
[8]
The vehicle in question has been attached
for costs reflected in the Bill of Costs taxed under case number
1930/2021. I accept that
other Bills of Costs have been taxed in
other matters, but there is no indication that writs of execution
were issued under other
case numbers for the costs for which the
applicant is responsible, or that the same asset was attached in
terms of such other writs
of execution.
[9]
In
the matter of
Stoffberg
NO and Another v Capital Harvest (Pty) Ltd
(“
Stoffberg
”)
[1]
Binns-Ward J stated the following regarding Rule 45A:
“
[26]
The broad and unrestricting wording of rule 45A suggests that it was
intended to be a restatement of the courts'
common law discretionary
power. The particular power is an instance of the courts' authority
to regulate its own process. Being
a judicial power, it falls to be
exercised judicially. Its exercise will therefore be fact specific
and the guiding principle will
be that
execution
will be suspended where real and substantial justice requires that.
'Real and substantial justice' is a concept that defies
precise
definition, rather like 'good cause' or 'substantial reason'.
It
is for the court to decide on the facts of each given case whether
considerations of real and substantial justice are sufficiently
engaged to warrant suspending the execution of a judgment; and, if
they are, on what terms any suspension it might be persuaded
to allow
should be granted.
”
(My
emphasis).
[10]
The constitutional principle of access to
justice dictates that a party who complains that an irregular step
has been taken by another
party be afforded the opportunity to place
his complaint before a court for adjudication. ‘Real and
substantive’ justice
demands that a writ of execution issued on
the premise of a Bill of Costs taxed in the absence of a party who
raised an irregular
step regarding the set down for the taxation in
the midst of that party utilising the process provided for in Rule
30, be set aside.
[11]
This order only relates to the writ of
execution and subsequent attachment under case number 1930/2021.
[12]
The principle applies that costs follow
success applies.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The writ of execution issued in case number 1930/2021, and the
subsequent attachment of the applicant’s
BMW
320i M Sport
premised on the writ of execution issued
in case number 1930/2021 is set aside, with costs.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
For the applicant:
In person
For the second
respondent:
Mr. K. Mafungo
Instructed by:
Mafungo Attorneys
Date of the
hearing:
31 July 2024
Date of judgment:
2 August 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 1930/2021
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: NO
Date: 26 August 2024
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
Dr.
Mothobi Godfrey Keele
Applicant
and
Legal
Practice Council
First Respondent
Kalipa
Kagiso Mangaliso Mafungo
Second Respondent
Sheriff
Pretoria Central
Third respondent
AMENDMENT OF ORDER
GRANTED ON 2 AUGUST 2024
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
Rule 42(1)(b) provides that a court may
mero motu
vary
an order in which there is an ambiguity, or omission to the extent of
such ambiguity or omission.
Background
[2]
I granted the following order on 2 August
2024 in the current matter:
‘
The
writ of execution issued in case number 1930/2021, and the subsequent
attachment of the applicant’s BMW 320i M Sport premised
on the
writ of execution issued in case number 1930/202 is set aside, with
costs.’
[3]
The order followed an application for the
setting aside of a writ of execution and the attachment carried out
pursuant thereto,
alternatively for the staying of a sale in
execution.
[4]
The application, instituted by Dr. Keele,
was primarily based on the premise that the taxation of a Bill of
Costs, that preceded
the issue of the writ of execution, and that
followed an order granted by Sardiwalla J in terms whereof a review
application that
was instituted by Dr. Keele, was dismissed with
costs, constituted an irregular step that negates the taxation and
renders the
taxed Bill of Costs unlawful.
[5]
I found that the taxation occurred after
Dr. Keele gave notice of an irregular step on receipt of the Notice
of Taxation, and before
the procedure provided for in Rule 30 was
allowed to run its course. I clearly stated that the question of
whether the taxation
of the Bill of Costs indeed constituted an
irregular step was not decided.
[6]
I stated in paragraph 10 the judgment that:
‘‘
Real
and substantive’ justice demands that a writ of execution
issued on the premise of a Bill of Costs taxed in the absence
of a
party who raised an irregular step regarding the set down for the
taxation in the midst of that party utilising the process
provided
for in Rule 30, be set aside.’
Discussion
[7]
Pursuant to the judgment and order being
handed down on 2 August 2024, and after Mr. Mafungo’s
application for leave to appeal
was dismissed, Mr. Mafungo sent a
letter to my office. The letter is dated 7 August 2024. In the
letter, Mr. Mafungo referred to
paragraph 11 of the judgment, where
it is stated that the order relates only to the writ of execution and
subsequent attachment
under case number 1930/2021. He interprets
paragraph 11 to mean that the taxed Bill of Costs, being the
underlying cause for the
writ, was not set aside. He referred to the
decision in
Firestone South Africa (Pty)
Ltd v Gentiruco
AG
1977 (4) SA 298
(A),
where the Supreme Court of Appeal explained that the court may
clarify its orders if on a proper interpretation of the meaning
thereof remained ambiguous or otherwise uncertain. In paragraph 6 of
the letter, he wrote:
‘
For
the avoidance of doubt and uncertainty by any party affected by the
order, clarity is sought from her Ladyship as to whether
Her
Ladyship’s judgment of the 2nd of August 2024, in any way
affects or is intended to affect the rights which accrued the
Second
Respondent by virtue of the Taxing Master ascertaining the amount of
the costs awarded by Sardiwalla J at the taxation conducted
on 29
November 2023.’
[8]
I subsequently notified the parties that I
intend to clarify the issue by amending the order granted on 2 August
2024 to provide
that the taxed Bill of Costs, being the underlying
cause for the issue of the writ of execution issued in case number
1930/2021,
be set aside.
[9]
To my surprise, I received a subsequent
email, dated 23 August 2024, from Mr. Mafungo, wherein he claims that
neither Dr. Keele
nor himself made an application to vary the order,
and that I am
functus officio
to
amend the order. I received a follow- up email on the same date from
Mr. Mafungo wherein he expressly stated that it is not appropriate
for me to receive new submissions and pronounce on issues pleaded by
way of affidavit before the Supreme Court of Appeal, since
he filed
an application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal
after I dismissed his application for leave to appeal
on 7 August
2024.
[10]
Rule 42 is clear. A judge may
mero
motu
vary and order in which there is
an ambiguity or omission, to the extent of such ambiguity or
omission. I notified the parties of
my intention to vary the order to
ensure that all parties whose interests may be affected have notice
of the order proposed.
[11]
Since the setting aside of the writ of
execution issued under case number 1930/2021 was ordered on the
premise that the Bill of
Costs was taxed before the procedure
provided for in Rule 30 was allowed to run its course, it
automatically follows that the taxation
of the bill of costs was
irregular and that the taxed Bill of Costs should be set aside. The
emphasis in paragraph 11 of the judgment
of 2 August 2024 that the
order relates only to the writ of execution and subsequent attachment
under case number 1930/2021 was
included because it was stated during
an argument that a number of writs of execution were issued against
Dr. Keele.
[12]
It was an omission on my side not to
include an order setting aside the taxed Bill of Costs in the order
handed down on 2 August
2024. This omission lies at the root of the
perceived ambiguity. As indicated in the judgment, I am of the view
that by proceeding
with the taxation, the second respondent deprived
the applicant of bringing a Rule 30(1) application. This necessitates
that the
taxed Bill of Costs be set aside.
[13]
This exposition and the amended order are
to be provided to the Supreme Court of Appeal, which will consider
the application for
special leave to appeal.
ORDER
In the result, the
order granted in case number 1930/2021 on 2 August 2024 is amended to
read as follows:
1.
The taxed Bill of Costs, which forms
the subject matter of the writ of execution issued in case number
1930/2021, is set aside.
2.
The writ of execution issued in case
number 1930/2021, and the subsequent attachment of the applicant’s
BMW 320i M Sport premised
on the writ of execution issued in case
number 1930/2021 is set aside, with costs.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
For
the applicant:
In
person
For
the second respondent:
Mr. K.
Mafungo
Instructed
by:
Mafungo
Attorneys
Date
of initial judgment:
2
August 2024
Date
of amendment of the order:
26
August 2024
[1]
(2130/2021)
[2021] ZAWCHC 37
(2 March 2021).
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