Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 151South Africa
van Schalkwyk v FJ Jordaan Incorporated and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 151; 80976/2019 (1 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 March 2023
Headnotes
the High Court has the inherent constitutional power to protect and regulate its own proceedings, which included the power to stay proceedings on grounds dictated by the interest of justice.[4]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## van Schalkwyk v FJ Jordaan Incorporated and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 151; 80976/2019 (1 March 2023)
van Schalkwyk v FJ Jordaan Incorporated and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 151; 80976/2019 (1 March 2023)
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sino date 1 March 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO.: 80976/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
01/03/2023
In
the matter between:
CORNISE
VAN
SCHALKWYK
Plaintiff
And
FJ
JORDAAN
INCORPORATED
First Defendant
FJ
JORDAAN
Second Defendant
ROSEMARY
DREW
Third Defendant
JONATHAN
WHITE
Fourth Defendant
JUDGMENT
van
der Westhuizen, J
[1]
The plaintiff instituted an action against the present defendants for
the recoupment
of alleged damages suffered due to the alleged
misconduct of the defendants. Allegedly the defendants allowed the
plaintiff’s
claim against a third party to become prescribed.
That claim related to alleged damages suffered as a result of
injuries sustained
by the plaintiff during an incident that occurred
earlier.
[2]
The defendants defended the action and filed a special plea and a
plea over. The special
plea raised related to the defendants seeking
a stay of the proceedings instituted against them by the plaintiff
for recovery of
the alleged damages suffered. The plaintiff filed a
replication to the defendants’ special plea, to which the
defendants
filed a rejoinder.
[3]
The action came before me for adjudication of the claim against the
defendants for
damages due to the alleged negligence on the part of
the defendants who, as claimed, allowed the plaintiff’s claim
against
the said third party to become prescribed.
[4]
The defendants sought at the commencement of the trial a separation
of the special
plea from the merits of the action in terms of the
provisions of Rule 33(4). The plaintiff opposed the application for
separation.
After hearing argument, I ruled a separation of the two
issues and delivered an
ex tempore
judgment in that regard.
[5]
Further, the defendants applied in terms of the Special Plea for the
stay of the plaintiff’s
present action pending the finalisation
of the plaintiff’s claim instituted against the respective
third parties under case
numbers 57229/2016 and 59346/2017
respectively.
[6]
From the pleadings it is gleaned that the plaintiff suffered injuries
as a result
of an incident that occurred when the plaintiff slipped
and injured herself on premises where the floor was wet and slippery.
[7]
The plaintiff initially appointed the defendants to institute an
action against the
appropriate party that would be liable for the
compensation of the plaintiff’s damages. The defendants
instituted an action
for the recovery of the damages under case
number 57229/2016. On receipt of a plea in that matter, the
defendants apparently opted
to institute a second action against
another third party under case number 59346/2017. In the latter
action, no plea was filed.
Neither of those two actions progressed to
trial and are still pending.
[8]
Whilst the aforesaid two actions remained pending, the plaintiff
approached her current
attorneys of record for assistance. She was
apparently advised to institute an action against the present
defendants for recovery
of her damages. In the present action it is
alleged on behalf of the plaintiff that her claim for the recovery of
her damages has
become prescribed due to the alleged misconduct of
the present defendants. The claim against the present defendant was
premised
upon two bases: firstly, that the present defendants
negligently breached the terms of their mandate provided to them by
allegedly
causing the plaintiff’s claim for damages suffered as
a result of the aforementioned incident to become prescribed;
secondly,
the said claim is based upon delict, in that the defendants
have breached a legal duty owed by them to the plaintiff, by allowing
the plaintiff’s aforementioned claim for damages to have become
prescribed. Either way, the
causae
are prescription driven.
[9]
The amount for damages is the same amount in all the actions.
[10]
In the first action, under case number 57229/2016, no plea of
prescription was filed. As recorded
earlier, no plea was filed in the
second action under case number 59346/2017. Accordingly, no plea of
prescription was filed to
date.
[11]
In an application by the plaintiff for condonation in the second
action, a possibility was raised
in an opposing affidavit by the
defendant in that action, that the claim may have become prescribed.
That issue was vehemently
denied and facts were provided in a
replying affidavit, on behalf of the plaintiff, why the issue of
possible prescription was
a non-issue. Condonation was granted to the
plaintiff by the court hearing the condonation application.
[12]
It is to be recorded that at the time that a condonation application
was presented to the court
in the second action, the plaintiff was
already represented by the plaintiff’s present attorneys of
record. The present defendants
no longer represented the plaintiff in
any of the two aforementioned actions, or in that condonation
application.
[13]
Apparently the present attorneys of record of the plaintiff, together
with her counsel representing
her, advised the plaintiff to hold over
on prosecuting the two aforementioned actions and not to proceed
therewith in the meantime.
This is common cause. Consequently, a
deliberate decision was taken not to proceed to have either, or both,
of the two pending
actions finally determined.
[14]
It is trite law that the issue of prescription is to be pled
specifically.
[1]
Furthermore, a
court may not
mero
moto
raise the issue of prescription.
[2]
The purpose for claiming prescription is to bring certainty to the
period wherein a claim could be instituted. It brings finality
to
proceedings.
[15]
Furthermore, there has been no determination by a competent court
that the issue of prescription
of the plaintiff’s claim was
alive and pronounced thereupon. In the present instance, the issue of
prescription was raised
by the plaintiff against her own claim
against the third parties who have to date not raised, nor pled, the
issue of prescription.
No authority was cited for the proposition
that a plaintiff may raise prescription against its own instituted
claim. The present
matter is not akin to a situation where no claim
was instituted on behalf of a plaintiff, thereby rendering the
appointed legal
representatives possibly guilty of negligence in that
regard. Claims were instituted on behalf of the plaintiff. That is
common
cause.
[16]
Further in this regard, it is submitted by counsel on behalf of the
plaintiff that this court
was in as good a position as to determine
the issue of prescription. There is no merit in that submission. The
issue of prescription
has not yet been raised in any proceedings for
the claim for damages suffered by the plaintiff. As recorded earlier,
claims were
instituted on plaintiff’s behalf. Those claims must
first be determined, one way or the other. The plaintiff deliberately
elected not to proceed with those claims. In the absence of a
decision in either of those matters, the present action may have
been
prematurely instituted. G1
[17]
It is not appropriate, and it would be irresponsible, for this court
to pronounce upon an issue
that has not yet been raised in pending
actions where it would be appropriately dealt with, should the issue
be raised in either
of those two pending actions. This is not a
matter of possible
lis alibi pendens
. There is no pending
possible decision on the issue where this court may have jurisdiction
to entertain that issue in a likewise
manner.
[18]
It was submitted on behalf of the defendants that prior to 2017, the
High Court could regulate
its own process, which included the power
to stay or pend proceedings in exceptional cases.
[3]
Post 2017, the position was relaxed and it was no longer to only be
exercised in exceptional cases. The Constitutional Court held
that
the High Court has the inherent constitutional power to protect and
regulate its own proceedings, which included the power
to stay
proceedings on grounds dictated by the interest of justice.
[4]
[19]
In my view, having regard to all the foregoing, the interest of
justice dictates that the present
proceedings be stayed, pending
determination of the two pending actions under case numbers
57229/2016 and 59346/2017 respectively.
[20]
Consequently the Special Plea stands to be upheld.
I grant the following
order:
1.
The special plea is upheld with costs
2.
The plaintiff’s action under case
number 80976/2019 is stayed pending the final determination of the
actions instituted under
case numbers 57229/2016 and 59347/2017
respectively;
3.
The action under case number 80976/2019 is
postponed
sine die
.
C
J VAN DER WESTHUIZEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
On
behalf of the Defendants:
G F Heyns SC
Instructed
by:
Ditsela Inc.
On
behalf of Respondent:
S
W Davies
Instructed
by:
Wiese & Wiese Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
1 February 2023
Judgment
handed down:
1 March 2023
[1]
Prescription Act, 68 of 1969
,
section 17
[2]
Ibid
[3]
See in this regard,
Herbstein
& Van Winsen, The Civil Practice of the High Courts of South
Africa, 5
th
ed.
Volume 1, at 306
[4]
Mokona
v Tasso Properties CC et al
2017(5) SA 458 (CC)
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