Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 927South Africa
Muthray and Associates Incorporated and Another v ABSA Bank Ltd and Others (081393/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 927 (17 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 September 2024
Headnotes
the view that papers could be filed at its leisure without any regard to the Uniform Rules of Court or the time spent by the presiding judge in preparing the matters on the unopposed motion roll.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Muthray and Associates Incorporated and Another v ABSA Bank Ltd and Others (081393/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 927 (17 September 2024)
Muthray and Associates Incorporated and Another v ABSA Bank Ltd and Others (081393/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 927 (17 September 2024)
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sino date 17 September 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 081393/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 17 September
2024
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
Muthray
& Associates Incorporated
First Applicant
Kineil
Muthray
Second Applicant
and
ABSA
Bank Ltd
First Respondent
Vigneshvarie
Pillay
Second Respondent
Thomson
Wilks Incorporated
Third Respondent
Keshan
Pillay
Fourth Respondent
In
re:
Keshan
Pillay
Plaintiff
and
Vigneshvarie
Pillay
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
and background
[1]
On 23 July 2024, Van der Westhuizen J
issued a
Rule Nisi
in the urgent court. The order was returnable on 12 September 2024.
The second and third respondents were granted leave to file
papers
prior to the hearing date on 12 September 2024.
[2]
The order, which operates as an interim
interdict pending the return date, reads as follows:
‘
2.
The First Respondent is interdicted
and restrained from producing copies of bank statements of
the First
Applicant Trust Account, with account number: 4[...], for the period
13 August 2020 to 19 June 2024 or any other period,
to the Second
and/or Third Respondent.
3.
The First Respondent is interdicted and restrained from disclosing or
providing in any way
any personal information of the Applicants or
its clients, which information is contained and can be found in the
bank statements
of the 1
st
Applicant’s Trust
Account.’
[3]
The applicants also sought a costs order to
be granted
de bonis propriis
against
the third respondent, the second respondent’s legal
representatives, and a punitive costs order against the second
respondent if she opposes the application.
[4]
The urgent court proceedings originated in
a subpoena
duces tecum
served on ABSA Bank. Of importance is the fact that ABSA was ordered
in terms of this subpoena to serve bank statements of the
first
applicant’s trust bank account for the period 13 August 2020 to
19 June 2024, to
the defendant’s
attorneys,
lodge it with the registrar
of this court, and file same on Caselines.
[5]
The
rule nisi
was enrolled to be heard on the return
date, 12 September 2024. The second and third respondents served a
condonation application
and answering affidavits on the applicants by
email on 11 September 2024 at 20h37.
[6]
When the matter was called on the unopposed
motion roll, it was evident that counsel for the second and third
respondents only had
instructions to request that the matter be
removed from the roll since it was opposed. He initially did not have
any instructions
to argue the matter on the merits.
Discussion
[7]
It is a fallacy for a respondent opposing a
matter enrolled in the unopposed motion court at the eleventh hour,
to merely accept
that the application will be removed from the roll
simply because an answering affidavit was filed.
[8]
A notice of intention to oppose the
application in the urgent court was filed on 23 July 2023. Despite
the
rule nisi
being granted, the respondents failed to file an answering affidavit
timeously and filed their answering affidavits the evening
before the
hearing date. The reasons for the delay in timeously filing an
answering affidavit set out in the condonation application
are
coached in general terms and do not cover the full period of the
delay.
[9]
In the condonation application the third
respondent claims that the applicants did not provide a timetable for
the filing of papers.
This view implies that the third respondent, an
officer of this court, held the view that papers could be filed at
its leisure
without any regard to the Uniform Rules of Court or the
time spent by the presiding judge in preparing the matters on the
unopposed
motion roll.
[10]
However, the main reason the
rule
nisi
stands to be confirmed is the
terms in which the subpoena
duces tecum
is phrased. It is trite that this type of subpoena requires a
witness to produce documents pertinent to a specific case.
Rule
38(1)(a)(ii) provides as follows:
‘
If
any witness is in possession or control of any deed, document, book,
writing, tape recording or electronic recording (herein
after
referred to as a ‘document’) or thing which the party
requiring the attendance of such witness desires to be
produced in
evidence, the subpoena should specify such document or thing
and
require such witness to produce it to the court at the trial
’.
[11]
In casu
,
the subpoena served on ABSA Bank requires identified bank statements
to be delivered, amongst others, to the defendant’s
attorney,
the third respondent in this application. Neither Rule 38(1) nor Form
16A in the First Schedule of the Uniform Rules
of Court provide for
documents to be delivered to any of the party’s attorneys. Rule
35, on the other hand, provides for
the discovery of documents in
action proceedings. It is evident from the supplementary affidavit
filed that the mechanism provided
for in Rule 35 was not exhausted
before the third respondent issued the subpoena in question.
[12]
I am alive to the fact that the subpoena
was not served on the applicants but on ABSA Bank, and that no
application has, to date,
been launched to have it set aside. The
relief sought is, however, tantamount to the setting aside of the
subpoena. Section 36(5)
of the Superior Court Act 10 of 2013,
provides for the cancellation of a subpoena by any judge of the court
after reasonable notice
by the Registrar to the party who sued out
the subpoena.
[13]
It is trite that the ‘documents’
referred to in subrule 38(1)(a)(iii) of the Uniform Rules of Court
must be a document
that is relevant to the issues before the court.
[14]
The information sought from the first
respondent indiscriminately encompasses the totality of transactions
recorded in the first
applicant’s Trust Bank Account
irrespective of the clients it relates to. By seeking access to
information on all the transactions
recorded in the first applicant's
Trust Bank account statements, the second and third respondents have
cast the net too wide. The
judge in the urgent court explained to the
second and third respondents’ counsel that they cannot use the
subpoena in a ‘fishing
expedition’ in the hope of
unearthing evidence. The second and third respondents are not
entitled to information about people
and entities not connected to
the divorce proceedings between the second and fourth respondents.
The applicants have an interest
to protect, that expands their own
interest and encompasses the interests of all their clients.
[15]
In its current form, the subpoena ordering
ABSA Bank to deliver copies of bank statements to the defendant’s
attorneys amounts
to an abuse of process. Even if condonation is
granted, the answering affidavits accepted, and the application
postponed to the
opposed motion court, the respondents do not have
any prospects of success. As a result, the condonation application
stands to
be dismissed.
Costs
[16]
It
is trite that an award of costs falls in the discretion of the court.
This discretion must be exercised judicially, having regard
to the
facts of the case. It is the duty of a litigant to avoid any course
that unduly protracts a lawsuit or increases costs.
Adopting the
wrong procedure could also result in a party being liable for the
costs.
[1]
[17]
The third respondent knew a costs order
de
bonis propriis
was sought against it.
Only an attorney can take responsibility for issuing a subpoena
duces
tecum.
The relentless opposition in
this application and the manner in which the second and third
respondents approached the opposition
warrants an order of costs that
marks this court’s displeasure. Exceptional circumstances are
present in this matter that
justify the granting of a costs order
de
bonis propriis
. Having regard to the
facts of this matter, it would not be just to require the second
respondent, the third respondent’s
client, to carry the costs
caused by the failed opposition of the application instituted by the
applicants.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The condonation application is dismissed;
2.
The
rule nisi
is confirmed;
3.
The third respondent shall pay the costs of the application,
de bonis propriis,
on the scale as between
attorney and client.
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 applicants:
Adv. E de Lange
Instructed by:
Muthray &
Associates Inc.
For the second and
third respondents:
Adv. B Denton
Instructed by:
Thomson Wilks Inc.
Date of the
hearing:
12 September 2024
Date of judgment:
17 September 2024
[1]
Sceepers
and Nolte v Pate
1909
TS 353.
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