Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1078South Africa
Department of Correctional Services and Another v Moagi and Others (2022-006301) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1078 (25 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 October 2024
Headnotes
judgment based on the amounts as calculated in the 2019 Request. In her affidavit in support of summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Department of Correctional Services and Another v Moagi and Others (2022-006301) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1078 (25 October 2024)
Department of Correctional Services and Another v Moagi and Others (2022-006301) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1078 (25 October 2024)
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sino date 25 October 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case Number: 2022-006301
1.��� REPORTABLE: NO
2.��� OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.��� REVISED:� NO
DATE:� 25 October 2024
In the
matter between:
DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES�������������������
First Applicant
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES�������������
Second Applicant
and
MAMOTABOLO ANNAH MOAGI���������������������������������������
First Respondent
THE GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES PENSION FUND�����
Second Respondent
THE GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES MEDICAL SCHEME����
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
K. Strydom AJ
Introduction
[1]
In essence this
application for rescission turns on the following determination: Should an
order, which was granted in a party�s
presence, be rescinded if said party
subsequently discovers a document it, at all times, had in its possession, but neglected
to
provide to its legal representatives to prepare a defence in terms thereof? What
follows below is an examination of why the answer
is �No�.
Background
[2]
The first Respondent (�the
Respondent�
[1]
),
was employed by the first applicant from 2005 until her retirement in January
2021. She was appointed as an assistant director
on a personal notch, without
pay progression. In 2006 it became apparent that her post class was incorrectly
captured by the first
applicant as one with pay progression. As a result,
incorrect pension fund and medical aid deductions, shortfalls in subsidies and
incorrect calculations of retirement benefits due to her, were made. On the
other hand, the incorrect capturing also resulted in
overpayments in terms of
pay progression being made to her during this period.
[3]
After the error was
finally corrected by the first Applicant, in March 2019, the first Applicant
attended to a calculation of the
resultant shortfall in payments that were due
to the respondent for the period between her appointment in 2005 and the
rectification
in March 2019. On the 18
th
of July 2019, the second
Applicant sent a request for payment of the calculated amounts to its Chief
Deputy Commissioner of Human
Resources (�the 2019 Request�).
[4]
The 2019 Request
confirmed that the following payments were calculated as due:
a.
R806 846.19 in respect
of her pension fund
b.
R366 759.00 in respect
of her medical aid;
c.
R52 334.82 in respect
of her housing subsidy; and
d.
R505 522.75 in respect
of her service bonus.
[5]
Of these amounts, only
that which was due in respect of her pension fund was paid in August 2021.
[6]
The Respondent
instituted action for,
inter alia,
the payment of the remaining amounts
per the 2019 Request. Summons was served on the Applicants in July 2022.
Following service
of what amounted to a so-called �bare denial plea� on the 16
th
of September 2022, she applied for summary judgment based on the amounts as
calculated in the 2019 Request. In her affidavit in
support of summary
judgment, she submitted that on the Applicants� own version as evidenced by the
2019 Request, they were indebted
to her in the amount of R924 616-57.
[2]
[7]
The Applicants did not
file an affidavit resisting summary judgment. Upon direct questioning during
the present proceedings it was,
however, confirmed that, when the summary
judgment application was heard on the 21
st
of November 2022, the
Applicants were duly represented by counsel and that the judgment was not
granted in default of appearance
by the Applicants.
The grounds for rescission�
[8]
According to the
Applicants, an internal memorandum, dated 27 October 2021 (�the 2021
Memorandum�) evinces the correct calculations
in relation to the rectification
of the Respondents� post class. In terms thereof, the Applicants do not owe any
amounts to the
Respondent. In arriving at this conclusion, the Applicants set
off the alleged salary overpayments made to the Respondent. They
also reduced
the amounts calculated as owed to the Respondent to the last three years prior
to rectification on the basis of prescription.
[9]
Initially, the
Applicants asserted that they were entitled to rescission of the order by
virtue of common error (per Rule 42(1)(c),
alternatively on the common law
grounds of fraudulent misrepresentation and/or the doctrine of
instrumentum
noviter repertum
(the coming to light of as yet unknown documents).
[10]
At the hearing hereof,
Counsel for the Applicants confirmed that they would no longer be relying on
fraudulent misrepresentation
as a ground for rescission.
General
comments regarding rescission
[11]
In the Applicant�s heads
of argument, and during argument, it was seemingly argued that as the Applicants
have proven a �
bona fide
defence� and have shown �good cause�, they
would be entitled to rescission. Naturally this is conflation of the requirements
for
the rescission of a judgment granted in the absence of a party and those
relating to instances where judgment was granted in the
presence of a party.
[12]
As was stated in
Freedom Stationery
(Pty) Limited and Others v Hassam and Others:
[3]
�There are exceptions to this general rule.
The requirements for relief under these exceptions depend on whether the
judgment was
given on the merits of the dispute between the parties after
evidence had been led or whether the order was made in default of appearance
of
the party that seeks to have it rescinded.
In respect of the first category the test
is stringent
. Such
judgment can only be set aside on the ground of fraud or, in exceptional
circumstances, on the grounds of justus error or
the discovery of new
documents.
A default judgment, on the other hand,
may be set aside in terms of Uniform Rule 31(2)(b),
rule 42 or the common law. �
[Underlining
my own]
[13]
In the heads of argument,
the following submission is made:
�
To obtain a rescission in terms of the
common law, the applicant bears the onus "to show good cause (a) by giving
a reasonable
explanation of his default; (b) by showing that his application is
made bona fide; and (c) by showing that he has a bona fide defence
to the
plaintiff's claim which prima facie has some prospect of success."
[4]
[14]
This restatement of the
oft-quoted dicta in
Grant v Plumbers (Pty) Ltd
1949 (2) SA 470
(0),
is correct, save for a glaring omission: It pertains to rescission in terms of
common law of judgment granted in default, not those
granted in the presence of
the applicant.
[15]
Having admitted that
in
casu
judgment was not granted by default, the Applicants are subject to the
more stringent test for rescission based on the grounds discussed
below.
Rule
42(1)(c): Common error
[16]
The Applicants submitted
that the failure to disclose the content of the 2021 Memorandum during the
summary judgment proceedings,
is due to a common error between the parties.
[17]
As to the error on the
part of the Applicants, it is submitted that, when the application for summary
judgment was argued, the Applicants
legal representatives �...
proceeded on
the understanding that the 18 July 2019 memorandum was the only relevant
memorandum
.�
[5]
[18]
The reason for the
failure of the Applicants� legal representatives to present a defence based on
the content of the 2021 Memorandum,
is explained as follows:
�
It was necessary for the office of the
State Attorney to obtain all the necessary information and/or documents from
all the relevant
departments for purposes of fully ventilating the defence,
however, not all the information was forthcoming and readily available
.�
[6]
and that:
�Because of the bureaucratic complexity and
number of personnel involved in the office of the Department of Correctional
Services
and when the documents pertaining to this matter were collated,
certain documents including the latest report containing the readjusted
figures
were erroneously not brought to the attention of the State Attorney.�
[7]
[19]
As to the Respondent�s
error, the argument was that the 2021 Memorandum constituted an acceptance the
Respondents proposals made
in 2018 in relation to how the alleged salary
overpayments should be dealt with. She supposedly erred by, inadvertently overlooking
the fact that the 2021 Memorandum constituted a settlement when she instituted
action against the Applicants.
[20]
To succeed with an
application for rescission based on this subrule, the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Tshivase
held that two broad requirements must be satisfied. Firstly,
it must be proven that
��both parties are of one mind and share the same
mistake; they are, in this regard, ad idem.�
[8]
Secondly, there must be a causative link between the mistake and the grant of
the order or judgment. In order to prove the causative
link, no new evidence
may be lead, unless it is aimed at proving that
��the factual material which
led the court to make its original order was, contrary to the parties'
assumption as to its correctness,
incorrect�
[9]
[21]
In casu
, the assertion is that the legal
representatives, and not the Applicants, erroneously believed that the 2019
Request contained
the correct amounts. There was no error on the part of the
Applicant as a party, only the failure to properly brief their legal
representative. This aspect will be further expounded on in the discussion
below relating to the doctrine of
instrumentum noviter repertum.
[22]
Factually, the
Applicants cannot succeed on the basis of this subrule as there was, in any
event no commonality to the alleged error.
Even if it were accepted (which it
is decidedly not) that the Applicants intended the 2021 Memorandum to constitute
a settlement
between the parties, the concession during argument that it was
not furnished to the Respondent prior to the summary judgment being
granted,
makes short shrift of this argument.
Doctrine
of
instrumentum noviter repertum
[23]
In
Childerley
Estates Stores v Standard Bank of SA Ltd,
[10]
De Villiers JP concluded that �
justus error is not a good ground for setting
aside a judgment save in certain exceptional cases based on instrumentum
noviter repertum.�
[11]
[24]
In argument, counsel
for the Applicants cited the size, internal bureaucracy and turn-over of staff
within the relevant departments
of the Applicants as reasons for the late
�discovery� of the 2021 Memorandum. However, a perusal of the founding and
replying affidavits
of the Applicants makes it clear that this document was not
lost or long forgotten or hidden from the knowledge of the Applicants.
They
simply failed to properly instruct their legal representatives. In the replying
affidavit the simple truth is laid bare:
�It is accepted that this document ought to
have been provided to the state attorney timeously in preparation for the plea
on behalf
of the applicants, however,
an oversight occurred
.�
[12]
[Underlining my own]
[25]
The negligence or bureaucratic
bungling of the Applicants is hardly an �exceptional circumstance�. By
comparison, one of the examples
of �exceptional circumstances� listed in
Childerley
is an instance where �...
it was
without the slightest fault on the
part of the applicant
seeking to introduce the new document or his legal
representative that the document was not found and produced before judgment�
[13]
[Underlining my own]
[26]
As was aptly put in
Bakoven
by Erasmus J:
�� the applicant who was negligent and the author of [their]
own problem will not succeed with an application to have the judgment
set aside
.�
[14]
Finding
[27]
As indicated at the start
of this judgment, the Applicants are not entitled to rescind the order made.
[28]
I pause to add that the
parties had raised certain points
in limine
, which by virtue of my
finding have been rendered nugatory. However, for the sake of completeness I
will briefly restate the objections
and my responses thereto:
[29]
The Respondent
submitted that, as the judgment was not by default, rescission was the
incorrect procedure to follow. This is incorrect
in law. In this regard I refer
to the excerpts from
Freedom Stationary
as set out in paragraph 12
supra.
This finding should not be understood to imply that because rescission is a
competent remedy
in casu
, appeal is not.
[30]
Both parties objected
to the other�s late filing of affidavits. The Respondent�s answering affidavit
had been filed some eight months
out of time, but approximately a year before
the matter was heard. She explained that due to the non-payments of the
Applicants
her medical aid was cancelled. Not being able to obtain adequate
care, she was rendered blind. She is reliant on Samaritans from
the community
and struggled to find and collate documents in response. No prejudice was
suffered by the Applicants as a result
of the late filing. I accordingly, at
the hearing, granted her application for condonation.
[31]
The Applicants�
replying affidavit (and heads of argument), on the other hand was filed a mere
5 days before this matter was to
be heard. I reserved judgment on their
application for condonation. In view of my finding and given that the replying
affidavit
was a restatement of the assertions in the founding, I grant
condonation in respect thereof. In this regard, I am of the view that
any
prejudice suffered by the Respondent will be cured by the order as to costs set
out below.
Costs
[32]
The Respondent submitted
that she should be awarded her costs on an attorney client scale. I agree.
[33]
In coming to this
conclusion, I had regard to the following factors:
a.
Judgment was granted
against the Applicants in November 2022. On the 30
th
of January 2023,
the application for rescission was served. In terms of Part A thereof, the
Applicants sought an urgent stay of
execution, pending the present
determination. The Respondent, on the 5
th
of February 2023,
consented to hold over execution proceedings pending the present determination.
Having been granted this reprieve,
the Applicants sat back on their laurels and
did nothing to actively prosecute the application for rescission. It was the
Respondent
who, without the benefit of a replying affidavit or the Applicant�s
heads of argument, submitted her heads of argument and applied
for a hearing
date in May 2024. Despite being served with the notice of set down in June
2024, the Applicants took no action for
four months. Finally, as indicated
supra, five days before the matter was to be heard on the 21
st
of
October 2024, the replying affidavit and Applicants� heads of argument were
forthcoming.
b.
The Applicants�
affidavits are littered with unfounded attacks on the Respondent�s integrity. Throughout
the theme was that she
was aware of the 2021 Memorandum and intentionally and
unlawfully failed to disclose this to the Court
a quo
. �Elsewhere, she
is accused of egregious conduct and misleading the court a quo.
[15]
The blatant
incorrectness of such statements was confirmed at the hearing hereof by Counsel
for the Applicants. Imputations of
fraud were unreservedly withdrawn and, as
shown
supra
, it was later conceded that the Respondent had never been
provided with the 2021 Memorandum.
c.
The reliance on the
discovery of the �new� document (the 2021 Memorandum) as a basis for
rescission, was, in effect, a thinly veiled
attempt to obtain a �second bite at
the cherry�. The Applicants all but admitted that they neglected to properly
prepare their
case
a quo
and wanted this Court to sanction a �re-do� at defending
the Respondent�s claim.
[34]
In
Mkhatshwa and
Others v Mkhatshwa and Others
,
[16]
the Constitutional Court explained the rationale behind costs on an
attorney-own client scale as follows:
�[20] The
primary underlying purpose of any costs award is to minimise the extent to
which a successful litigant will be out of
pocket as a result of litigation
that she or he should not have had to endure. Indeed, this Court has recognised
that costs orders
often do not even achieve this objective, and fall short of
assisting the successful litigant in fully recovering her or his expenses.
It
follows that, at times, it may be just and equitable to award costs on a
punitive scale, not just to punish vexatious litigation,
but also to assist the
successful litigant in recouping their often substantial expenses.�
[35]
In view of the lackadaisical
and, at times, dilatory conduct of the Applicants in defending their case or briefing
their legal representatives,
this stillborn application was brought. One takes
a rather dim view of an applicant that requests that a validly obtained court
order not be enforced pending rescission and who, once such indulgence is
granted by the other side, fails to bring the matter
to finality.
[36]
The awarding of
punitive costs herein should not be understood as an imputation of the conduct
of the Applicants� legal representatives.
By all accounts, they acted as far as
they had instructions. During the hearing, concessions were made voluntarily
where the law
indicated same should be made. The blameworthy conduct is laid
squarely at the door of the Applicants themselves.
ORDER
[37]
In the result, the
following order is made:
1.
The application for rescission is dismissed.
2.
The Applicants are to pay first
Respondent�s the costs on an attorney and client scale.
K STRYDOM
ACTING JUDGE
OF THE HIGH
COURT,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Judgment
reserved: 22 October 2024
Judgment handed
down: 25 October 2024
For the Applicant:
Adv A. Mare
instructed by Jacobson & Levy Inc
For the Respondent:
Adv N. Jongani
instructed by the State Attorney Pretoria
[1]
The second and third Respondents are cited as interested parties
and played no active role in the rescission application.
[2]
The liquidity of the 2019 Request or the ascertainability of the
amounts calculated therein were not in issue before me, nor was
it submitted
that same was disputed in the court
a quo
.
[3]
Freedom Stationery (Pty) Limited and Others v Hassam and Others
(921/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 170
;
2019 (4) SA 459
(SCA) (30 November 2018) (�
Freedom
Stationary
�)
[4]
Applicants� Heads of Argument at para 49
[5]
Founding affidavit to the Rescission application para 56
[6]
Founding affidavit to the Rescission application para 58
[7]
Founding affidavit to the Rescission application para 56
[8]
Tshivhase Royal Council and Another v
Tshivhase and Another; Tshivhase and Another v Tshivhase and Another
[1992] ZASCA 185
;
1992 (4) SA 852
at page 37 (�
Tshivase�
)
[9]
Tshivhase
at page 38
[10]
Childerley Estate Stores v Standard Bank of SA Ltd
124 OPD
163
(�Childerley�)
[11]
Childerley
at para 166
[12]
Applicant�s
replying affidavit at para 90
[13]
Childerley
at para 166
[14]
B
akoven Ltd v GJ Howes (Pty) Ltd
1992 (2) SA 466
(ECD) (�
Bakoven
�) at 474A-C..
[15]
See for instance Founding affidavit to the Rescission
application paras 77 and 78
[16]
Mkhatshwa and Others v Mkhatshwa and Others
[2021] ZACC 15
�
references omitted
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