Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 198South Africa
Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Sinqobile Security Services CC [2023] ZAGPPHC 198; 32833/2020 (14 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Sinqobile Security Services CC [2023] ZAGPPHC 198; 32833/2020 (14 March 2023)
Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Sinqobile Security Services CC [2023] ZAGPPHC 198; 32833/2020 (14 March 2023)
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sino date 14 March 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO. 32833/2020
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:NO
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE: 14/03/2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA EXCIPIENT/
DEFENDANT
AND
SINQOBILE
SECURITY SERVICES CC
RESPONDENT/ PLAINTIFF
JUDGMENT
MAKHOBA
J
1) The
applicant (defendant in the main action) is the PASSENGER RAIL AGENCY
OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD (PRASA), a legal
entity established in terms of
section 22 of the Legal Succession to the South African Transport
Service Act, 9 of 1989 with registered
address at PRASA House, 1[...]
B[...] Street, Hatfield, Pretoria, Gauteng Province.
2) The
respondent (Plaintiff in the main action) is SINQOBILE EQUESTRAIN
SECURITY SERVICES CC (Registration No.1[...]),
a close corporation
duly registered and in terms of the
Close Corporations Act, 69 of
1984
with principal place of business at 1[...] M[...] Street, Cnr
K[...] and M[...] Streets, Boksburg, Gauteng province, for purpose
of
this judgement the parties will be referred to as applicant and
respondent respectively.
3) The
respondent is duly registered as a private security provider with the
Private Security industry regulatory
Authority in terms of the
Private Security Industry Regulatory Act, 56 of 2001.
4)
During 2011 the applicant advertised a security tender under
reference P[...] Which was awarded to the respondent.
5) In a
letter dated 28/02/20 the applicant terminated the Respondents
appointment with effect from 30 April 2020.On
the 24 July 2020
respondent institutes summons against the applicant. The pleadings
closed in November 2020.
6) In
May 2022 The respondent gave notice of its intention to amend the
particulars of claim. The respondent effected
the amendment under
Rule 28 of the uniform Rules of court. In July 2022 the applicant
delivered its exception to the respondent’s
particulars of
claim on the basis that the particulars of claim do not disclose a
cause of action.
7) The
main issue between the parties is that the respondent in its amended
particulars of claim, claims that
the applicant failed to pay the
PSIRA (the Private Security Industry Regulatory Authority) increases
for certain periods of time.
However, the respondent does not allege
that any of its invoices remain unpaid.
8)
According to the amendments, the respondent claims that the
applicant’s failure to pay the PSIRA increases
was a breach of
the contract between the parties at the time.
9) In
his submissions before this court counsel for the applicant summarize
the applicant’s case as follows
(a) The respondent
can only seek payment if it has performed its obligations in terms of
the agreement.
(b) The issuing of
a correct invoice is obviously a pre-requisite for being paid the
correct amount.
(c) On the
respondent’s own version, it has not corrected its monthly
invoice.
(d) Respondent
cannot claim payment for the correct amount when correct invoice were
not issued. for this reason, the particulars
of claim disclose no
cause of action. Respondent has not alleged that the essential
prerequisite for payment has occurred.
10)
For
the above reasons the applicant referred the court to the locus
classicus case
on
reciprocal performance
[1]
11) The
respondent submitted to this court that, the respondent effected the
amendment by serving its amended pages
on 6 June 2022 and the
applicant did not object to the respondent affecting the amendment.
In this regards the respondent relies
on rule 28(8)
12) The
Respondent submitted further that the applicant did not serve and
file its notice of exception within 15 days
as per rule 28(8) but
waited until 25 July 2022 before it served the plaintiff with the
notice of exception. On this ground alone
the respondent asked the
court to dismiss the exception. The respondent denies that the
amendment creates a ripple effect for the
pleadings already filed.
13) Counsel
for the respondent asserts that in interpreting the respondent’s
particulars of claim as a whole the
respondent amended particulars of
claim disclose a cause of action.
14)
In
Pretorius V TPF
[2]
in paragraph
15 the court said the following:
“
In deciding an
exception a court must accept all allegations of fact made in the
particulars of claim as true; may not have regard
to any other
extraneous facts or documents; and may uphold the exception to the
pleading only when the excipient- has satisfied
the court that the
cause of action or conclusion of law in the pleading cannot be
supported on every interpretation that can be put on the facts.
The purpose of an exception is to protect litigants against claims
that are bad in law or against an embarrassment which is so serious
as to merit the costs even of an exception. It is a useful
procedural
tool to weed out bad claims at an early stage, but an overly
technical approach must be avoided.”
15)
Rule
23 (1) allows a defendant to deliver a notice of exception within the
time allowed if the particulars of claim fail to
make out a cause of
action
[3]
.
16)
Thus therefore in terms of Rule 28 an exception is allowed for 15
days after a party has effected an amendment
to a pleading. The
amendment may be effected at any stage before the court hands down
judgement.
17) It is not
in dispute that the applicant did not serve and file its notice of
exception within 15 days after the
respondent effected the amendment.
On this ground alone the exception must be dismissed.
18) Again the
excipient must show the court that upon every interpretation upon
which the pleadings are based, no cause
of action is disclosed.
19)
A
cause of action can be described as every fact which would be
necessary for the plaintiff to prove
[4]
The exception must go to roof of the claim.
20) The
submissions to by counsel for applicant, especially in paragraph nine
of this judgement are cogent but with
respect in my view do not
render the amendment of the further particulars excipiable
21) I am
therefore of the view that the applicant (defendants) failed to make
out a proper case, the Respondent (defendants)
amended particulars of
claim disclose a cause of action on this ground as well the exception
ought to be dismissed.
22) A request
was made by counsel for the respondent for a punitive costs order.
However, there is not enough reasons
furnished for a punitive costs
order.
23) I
make the following order:
(a) The exception
is dismissed with cost including the costs of two counsel.
D. MAKHOBA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For the
Plaintiff:
Adv L J Morison
SC
Instruction:
Cliffe Dekker
Hofmeyr Inc
For the
Defendant:
Adv Van den Berg
SC
Instructed by:
Albert Hibbert
Attorneys
Date heard:
28/02/2023
Date delivered:
14/03/2023
[1]
BK
Tooling (PTY) Ltd V Scope Engineering (Pty) Ltd [1978] ZASCA 1
[2]
2019 (2) SA 37
(CC) in paragraph 15
[3]
Rule
23(1) provides: Where any pleading is vague and embarrassing, or
lacks averments which are necessary to sustain an action
or defence,
as the case may be, the opposing party may, within the period
allowed for filing any subsequent pleading, deliver
an exception
thereto and may apply to the registrar to set it down for hearing
within 15 days after the delivery of such exception.
[4]
Mckenzie
V Farmers Cooperative Meat Industries Ltd Mckenzie V Farmers’
Cooperative Meat Industries Ltd. 1922AD 16 See also
Barclays
National Bank Ltd V Thompson
1989 (1) SA 547(A)
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