Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1128South Africa
Mashele v Gildenhuys Malatji Attorneys and Others (2024-118227) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1128 (13 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 November 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mashele v Gildenhuys Malatji Attorneys and Others (2024-118227) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1128 (13 November 2024)
Mashele v Gildenhuys Malatji Attorneys and Others (2024-118227) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1128 (13 November 2024)
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sino date 13 November 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO.: 2024-118227
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 13 November
2024
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
Kelebogile
Stephinah
Mashele
Applicant
and
Gildenhuys
Malatji
Attorneys
First Respondent
Greyling
Erasmus
Second Respondent
Moribe
Attorneys
Third Respondent
Katlego
Moribe
Fourth Respondent
Legal
Practice
Council
Fifth Respondent
Legal
Practitioner’s Indemnity Insurance
Fund
Sixth Respondent
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant approached the court on the
basis of extreme urgency for an order in the following terms:
i.
that the first or third respondent, whoever
of the two holds funds of the applicant in trust paid by the Road
Accident Fund as compensation
for a claim against the Road Accident
Fund within a period of no more than 72 hours, the amount being R1
973 403,79;
ii.
alternatively, the second and fourth
respondents be ordered to inform the applicant and the court in
writing, what transpired after
the funds from the Road Accident Fund
were paid to either of them.
[2]
I struck the matter from the roll and
undertook to provide reasons for my decision. I also afforded the
applicant’s attorneys
of record the opportunity to file an
affidavit providing reasons why a costs order
de
bonis propriis
should not be granted
against it.
[3]
This judgment contains the reasons for my
decision to strike the matter from the roll and deals with the issue
of costs.
Revisiting the
requirements for urgency
[4]
The facts of this matter, and particularly
the explanation provided by the applicant’s legal
representatives for approaching
the urgent court on the truncated
timelines of this application, highlight the need to revisit the
purpose of urgent court proceedings
and the jurisdictional factor
implicit to urgent court applications.
[5]
The procedure provided for in Rule
6(12) is designed to address situations that require immediate
judicial intervention. Certain
matters cannot wait to be adjudicated
on the standard court schedule because an applicant would not be
afforded substantial
redress at a hearing in due course if the matter
is not heard on an expedited timeline.
[6]
The
rule entails two requirements. The circumstances relating to urgency
have to be set out explicitly, and the reasons why the
applicant in
this matter could not be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in
due course. The second requirement was emphasized
in
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another (t/a Makin’s
Furniture Manufacturers):
[1]
‘
Mere
lip service to the requirements of Rule 6(12)(b) will not do and an
applicant must make out a case in the founding affidavit
to justify
the particular extent of the departure from the norm,
which
is involved in the time and the day for which the matter be set
down
’. [My emphasis]
[7]
Luna Meubelvervaardigers
is
authority for the proposition that the applicant must not only
explain why it approaches the urgent court, as opposed to setting
the
matter down on the ordinary opposed motion roll, but also why the
time lines provided for opposing the application were truncated
to
the effect that it was in that particular application. The rule and
practice in this Division is that an urgent matter must
be enrolled
for the Tuesday before the previous Thursday.
[8]
Two different principles underlie these
requirements. The first is, that an applicant who approaches the
urgent court ‘cuts
the line’ and is afforded preferential
treatment in that its application is heard by a judge months before
other applicants,
whose legal matters might be of equal importance
(to them at least) have to await their allocated hearing date
patiently. The second
principle is rooted in the well-known maxim
audi
et
alteram partem.
The Rule of Law
requires a court to have regard to both sides of a matter, and
respondents must be provided with a reasonable
and fair
opportunity to put their ‘side of the story’ sufficiently
before the court. The timelines prescribed
in the Uniform Rules
of Court are deemed to provide such a reasonable time frame, and any
deviation must be justified and substantiated.
[9]
Our
courts have acknowledged that there are different degrees of
urgency.
[2]
The degree of
urgency determines how much an applicant can prescribe a deviation
from the normal time periods, and requirements
for service.
[10]
It is trite that a party’s failure to
institute proceedings on an issue that existed and of which that
party may have
been aware for some time would make it difficult for
such a party to have the issue adjudicated on an urgent basis. It
would, however,
not, necessarily, close the doors of the urgent court
to such an applicant, particularly where an ongoing violation of
rights occurs.
It might impact only the time frames laid down by the
applicant in its notice of motion for filing a notice to oppose and
an answering
affidavit. Where reasonable time frames for the delivery
of opposing papers are provided that correspond with the periods
prescribed
in the Uniform Rules of Court, an applicant only needs to
explain why the matter cannot be heard on the ordinary opposed motion
roll since the respondent’s rights in relation to fair
procedure have been safeguarded.
[11]
The need for the applicant to explicitly
deal with the question as to why the facts of this particular matter
render it apposite
to deal with the matter in the urgent court,
however, remains. The facts of each case will determine whether the
applicant has
made a case demonstrating that substantial redress
would not be obtained in due course. The substantial redress must
relate to
the applicant herself; it is fact and context-specific.
[12]
In
this regard, parties are referred to the Constitutional Court’s
approach in
Hotz
and Others v University of Cape Town
,
[3]
where the applicants averred that a significant degree of urgency
attends the application because the ‘matter concerns the
exercise of constitutional rights and the manner in which the
boundaries of the exercise ought to be interpreted, particularly
in
the context of student protests.’
The Constitutional Court,
however, explained that the applicants:
‘
[H]ave
not established urgency, particularly why this matter is more urgent
than any other matter where constitutional rights are
implicated.’
[13]
The same reasoning finds application in
this matter.
Context
[14]
This application was brought on the basis
of extreme urgency. The periods allowing the respondents to answer
this application were
severely truncated. The notice of motion is
dated 15 October 2024. The respondents were instructed to file
notices of their intention
to oppose by 18 October 2024 and
answering affidavits by 21 October 2024. The application was served
on the respondents on
17 October 2024.
[15]
Since it is important for the costs order
that I grant in this application, it needs to be mentioned that the
applicant’s
attorney of record issued the urgent application
after a letter was delivered to the first and second respondents on 6
September
2024, demanding that the money paid over to the first
respondent by the Road Accident Fund, be paid over to them. The
applicant’s
attorneys never received a reply to this letter,
and proceeded with the urgent application. It became apparent when
the answering
affidavit was filed that the first respondent did
respond to the letter but that an incorrect email address was used.
The answer
never reached the applicant’s attorney of record.
Instead of picking up a phone and calling a colleague to enquire
why
communication went unanswered, the applicant’s attorney of
record pursued litigation.
[16]
Collegiality is not an old-fashioned
concept that should be ignored when an attorney is to pursue
litigation against another attorney
on behalf of a client. This
application might have had a completely different outcome had it not
been instituted and feverishly
persisted with, against the first
and second respondents.
[17]
It is also important to note that the Legal
Practice Council (LPC) directed a letter to the applicant personally
in July 2023, after
the applicant lodged a claim against the third
and fourth respondents with the LPC during April 2023. The applicant
was clearly,
already at that stage, aware of the fact that the first
respondent paid the money received from the Road Accident Fund over
to its instructing correspondent, herein represented by the third and
fourth respondents. The LPC responded by informing the applicant
that
the third respondent was guilty of misconduct and that the nature of
the proceedings warranted misconduct proceedings to be
instituted.
[18]
Despite knowing that the first and second
respondents accounted to their instructing correspondent already in
July 2023, the applicant
instituted these urgent court proceedings
with severely truncated timelines against not only the third and
fourth respondents but
also the first and second respondents.
[19]
In casu
,
the applicant did not state why she would not be afforded substantial
redress in due course if the application was not heard on
the Tuesday
it was enrolled for. She does not provide a sufficient explanation or
acceptable reason for the severely truncated
time periods. To be
clear, she does not explain why it was necessary to deviate from the
time periods prescribed in the Uniform
Rules of Court to afford the
respondents sufficient time to respond to her claim, even if she
approached the urgent court for an
expedited hearing of the
application. She averred that should she wait a day longer than she
already had, the funds might be used
by the first to fourth
respondents. The LPC already in 2023 found, and communicated, that
there was misconduct on the third and
fourth respondents’
side and that the applicant only sought legal advice in August
2024. In this context, there was
no need for the severely truncated
periods to file answering papers.
[20]
Applicant’s
legal team, in the affidavit filed on my request, indicated that they
relied extensively on a recent judgment
from this division
Lotriet
and Another v Oosthuizen and Others
.
[4]
I fail to understand why the applicant’s legal team relied on
this judgment as the court in the
Lotriet
matter explained that the relief sought by the applicant on urgency
requires, among others, that the applicants demonstrate absence
of
alternative relief that they may obtain at a later stage in ordinary
proceedings.
[5]
The court
subsequently held that ‘the applicant’s demand for the
deposit of compensation into the account of the third
respondent is
an indication that there exists alternative relief that the applicant
could obtain in an ordinary hearing of the
matter – this also
would have been fatal for a matter brought on urgency’.
Costs
[21]
Counsel for the first and second
respondents submitted that the applicant, already a victim of
misconduct, should not be required
to carry the costs of this
application. Sutherland DJP, in a widely published Practice Directive
dated 4 October 2021, warned that
to curb the abuse of the urgent
court, judges shall consider the award of punitive costs
de
bonis propriis
where non-urgent matters
are enrolled, and also consider an order forbidding attorneys and
counsel to charge their own client a
fee.
[22]
The circumstances of this application are
unique in that the papers filed, as it stands, clearly indicate the
harm suffered by the
applicant. None of the issues with this
application can be attributed to the applicant in person. I am thus
of the view that this
is an appropriate matter where justice requires
a
de bonis propriis
costs
order to be granted against the attorneys representing the applicant.
[23]
To assist the applicant, I am amenable to
case managing the matter since the striking of a matter from the roll
does not equate
to an application being dismissed, as is averred
by the applicant’s attorney in his affidavit. I may be
approached
in chambers by the applicant’s legal representatives
if they deem it in their client’s best interest.
[24]
I cannot ignore that the first and second
respondents sent the reply to the letter of demand to the wrong email
address, which the
applicant’s legal representative did not
receive. This oversight has consequences and impacts the costs order
that stands
to be granted.
[25]
There was no appearance on behalf of the
third and fourth respondents. No costs order stands to be granted in
their favour.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is struck from the urgent court roll.
2.
The first and second respondents' costs incurred after the
answering affidavit was delivered to the applicants, as between party
and party, are to be paid
de bonis propriis
by
the applicant’s attorneys of record, KS Ntuli Attorneys, the
remainder of the first and second respondents’ costs
are to be
carried by themselves;
3.
The third and fourth respondents are to carry their own costs;
4.
The applicant’s legal representatives may approach Van
der Schyff J in chambers to case-manage the application.
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.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be emailed to the parties/their legal representatives.
For the applicant:
Adv. M. Musetha
Instructed by:
K.S. Ntuli
Attorneys
For the first and
second respondents:
Adv. M. Van der
Westhuizen
Instructed by:
Gildenhuys Malatji
Inc.
For the third and
fourth respondents:
No appearance
Date of the
hearing:
29 October 2024
Date of judgment:
13 November 2024
[1]
1977
(4) SA 135
(WLD) at 137F.
[2]
Commissioner,
SA Revenue Services v Hawker Air Services
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006
(4) SA 292
(SCA) at 299 paras [9]-[11].
[3]
[2017]
ZACC 10
at para
[15]
.
[4]
(14413/2022)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 285 (5 May 2023). A copy of the judgment was handed
up. I requested counsel to provide me with another
copy after I
misplaced the copy handed up, and he emailed it to my registrar.
[5]
Ad
para [18].
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