Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 170South Africa
Sewatumong Micro Lending CC t/a Sewatumong Cash Loans and Another v Chairperson of the National Credit Tribunal, Maseko and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 170; 7996/2020 (9 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sewatumong Micro Lending CC t/a Sewatumong Cash Loans and Another v Chairperson of the National Credit Tribunal, Maseko and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 170; 7996/2020 (9 March 2023)
Sewatumong Micro Lending CC t/a Sewatumong Cash Loans and Another v Chairperson of the National Credit Tribunal, Maseko and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 170; 7996/2020 (9 March 2023)
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sino date 9 March 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO.: 7996/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
09/03/2023
Date
of hearing: 8 March 2023
Date
of Judgment: 8 March 2023
In
the
matter
between:
SEWATUMONG MICRO
LENDING CC
t/a
SEWATUMONG CASH
LOANS
1
st
Applicant
SETLAKALA
GILBERT SETSHEKGAMOLLO
2
nd
Applicant
and
THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE
NATIONAL CREDIT TRIBUNAL,
JOSEPH
MANDLA
MASEKO
1
st
Respondent
THE
NATIONAL CREDIT
REGULATOR
2
nd
Respondent
THE
EXECUTIVE MEMBER FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF
TRADE
AND INDUSTRY
3
rd
Respondent
PRENESEN
MOODLY
4
th
Respondent
LUCKY
RABOTAPI
5
th
Respondent
JUDGMENT
1.
In case 7996/2020 I delivered my judgment
ex tempore
.
The outstanding issue is costs.
2.
The first applicant in the case is
Sewatumong Micro Lending CC, with its
member as the second applicant, and then there are five respondents
with the third respondent
not participating in the application before
court.
3.
This is essentially a review application
which includes also certain relief wherein the applicants seek
declaratory orders. Those
declaratory orders are also premised on the
provisions of PAJA or the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act and
constitute therefore
inherently review proceedings.
4.
The applicants and the first, fourth and
sixth respondents, earlier today, reached agreement, which agreement
has been set out in
a draft order between the said parties, which I
made an order of this Court, and the content of the draft order reads
as follows.
I read it into this judgment because it is pertinently
relevant to my decision. The upshot of the draft order is that:
4.1.
the
applicants
withdraw their application against the first, fourth and fifth
respondents.
4.2.
each party is to pay its own legal costs;
and
4.3.
the applicants’ appeal of the
decision of the National Consumer Tribunal on 12 March 2019
dismissing the application for condonation
will be considered by a
full panel of the tribunal in due course.
5.
When the parties came to court this morning
counsel for the applicants told this court that the applicants also
intended to withdraw
as against the second respondent. The second
respondent is the National Credit Regulator. The applicants’
counsel did however
convey to this court that the applicants were not
willing, notwithstanding the fact that it intended to withdraw the
application,
to tender the second respondent’s costs. I am
therefore to consider whether the second respondent is entitled to
its costs.
6.
Counsel for the second respondent indicated
to this Court that the second respondent accepts the withdrawal but
is obviously not
satisfied with the non-tender of costs and insists
on costs. Mr. Makhubele, who appeared for the applicants, then
attempted to
persuade me that in this case the second respondent is
not entitled to costs because of the way the second respondent had
conducted
itself prior to the litigation. Several unpersuasive
examples were provided of what was the alleged undue conduct by
officials
of the second respondent.
7.
The applicants then made propositions to
this court premised on a case which was handed up to me. It is the
case of
Waste Products Utilisation (Pty)
Ltd v Wilkes and Another (Biccari interested party)
2003 (2) SA 590
(W)
where the then Witwatersrand Local
Division had to decide on an issue of costs where a party had
withdrawn the special costs relief
it had sought as against an
attorney. In that case a cost order was sought during the course of
litigation against an attorney
who participated in the falsification
of evidence that was placed before the court on behalf of the
defendants in that action.
8.
On the day of the hearing of that case the
party who sought costs against the attorney decided, for whatever
reason, not to persist
with its application for costs
de
bonis propriis
against the attorney and
withdrew the request for special costs. What then transpired is that
because of that withdrawal, the said
attorney’s legal team
argued that the implicated attorney was naturally entitled to costs
because it was effectively successful
due to the withdrawal. In that
case, the court, however, decided that the attorney is not entitled
to costs because he came to
court with unclean hands in the sense
that he participated in the falsification of evidence or at least
prima facie
did so and therefore no costs order was granted. As such the facts of
that case differ substantially from the present matter.
9.
In the same
Waste
Products Utilisation
- case that was
handed up to me, however, the court, and that is to be found on page
597 of that judgment, sets out the general
proposition namely, and I
quote:
“
Where
a party withdraws a claim the other is entitled to costs unless there
are good grounds for depriving him: Germishuys v Douglas
Besproeiingsraad
1973 (3) SA 299
(NC) and Sentraboer
Kooperatief
Bpk v Mphaka
1981 (2) SA 814
(O).
”
10.
The general principle is therefore that,
where a party withdraws a claim, the other party is entitled to costs
unless there are
good grounds for depriving that party of costs. It
accords with the general principle that a successful party should be
awarded
costs. I disagree with the applicants in respect of their
contention that I am entitled to consider whatever happened prior to
the launching of this application.
11.
Counsel
for the applicants also sought to convince me that it does not follow
that, when a party is cited to proceedings and, but
no substantive
relief is sought against that party, such party is entitled to costs.
That proposition is firstly not good, because
there is relief sought
against the second respondent. It may very well be that, due to the
draft order that was concluded between
the other parties to this
application, the relief has become academic. That does not mean that
the second respondent was before
this court without a good case or
because of a frolic on its own. In this respect, I also refer to the
case of
Van
Staden and Others NNO v Pro-Wiz (Pty) Ltd
2019 (4) SA 532
(SCA)
where the Supreme Court of Appeal had the following to say on
paragraph 13 of the judgment
[1]
:
“
[13]
Furthermore, as a matter of principle, when a party is cited in legal
proceedings it is entitled without more to participate
in those
proceedings. The fact that they were cited as parties gives them that
right. Here the liquidators were cited and decided
to resist the
application. They were entitled to do so by the mere fact of their
joinder as parties.
”
12.
The upshot being that where a party has
been joined, it has a right to oppose the relief sought, and if the
case is withdrawn against
such party, the corollary being that it is
entitled to the costs, unless some exceptional circumstances exist
that allows a court
to exercise its judicial discretion otherwise.
13.
The applicants, concededly so, joined the
second respondent as a party to the proceedings. As a natural
consequence the second respondent
had the right to participate in the
proceedings and resist the relief sought by the applicants. It is
furthermore so that one of
the main disputes between the parties in
the litigation which the second respondent raised, as a pertinent
issue, is the fact that
the applicants failed to have exhausted their
internal remedies as they were required to do as envisaged in section
7 of PAJA.
14.
This is premised on the notion that the
applicants had launched an internal appeal before the National Credit
Tribunal, which appeal
was pending when the applicants lodged their
review application. On that premise alone, it seems at least
prima
facie
that there was no exhausting of
internal remedies. The question then is whether there were
exceptional circumstances why these
remedies did not have to be
exhausted. The mere fact that the applicants had already launched
their internal appeal evinces a concession
that such remedies exist
and ought to be exhausted. This has now, however, been overtaken by
the agreement that the applicants
reached with the first, fourth and
fifth respondents, referred to hereinbefore, namely that it was
agreed between those parties
that the appeal will be proceeded with
and be considered by a full panel of the National Consumer Tribunal
in due course.
15.
In my view this constitutes a clear
concession that the point taken by the second respondent was good in
law and ought to have been
successful. In those circumstances, save
for the fact that the mere withdrawal of the application against the
second respondent
would have entitled the second respondent naturally
to costs, it seems that it is conceded by the agreement concluded
with the
other parties that the point taken by the second respondent
was proper. In my view therefore the second respondent is entitled to
costs of the application.
16.
In the premises, I issue the following
order:
16.1.
the application, as against the second
respondent, by agreement between the parties, is withdrawn.
16.2.
the applicants shall pay the second
respondent’s costs of the application.
D
VAN DEN BOGERT
Acing
Judge
High
Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Counsel
for the Applicants:
M
Makhubele
Instructed
by:
TF
Mathebula Incorporated
Ref.:
CIV05/2022
Counsel
for the Second Respondent:
P
Carstensen SC
Instructed
by:
Cowan
- Harper- Madikizela Attorneys
Ref.:
MN N380
[1]
In
that case the applicants for business rescue had withdrawn their
application but refused to pay the costs of the liquidators
and
premised on a wrong legal principle the court a quo had refused the
liquidators their costs, notwithstanding that they had
been joined
as parties to the application.
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