Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 356South Africa
Small Enterprise Finance Agency SOC Limited v Kgalemo Construction CC and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 356; 54791/2017 (15 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
15 May 2023
Headnotes
Judgment on 17 September 2017. The Defendants filed an Opposing Affidavit in the Summary Judgment application on 25 October 2017 whereafter the Summary Judgment application was argued in this Court on 9 January 2018 and the Defendants were granted leave to defend the
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Small Enterprise Finance Agency SOC Limited v Kgalemo Construction CC and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 356; 54791/2017 (15 May 2023)
Small Enterprise Finance Agency SOC Limited v Kgalemo Construction CC and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 356; 54791/2017 (15 May 2023)
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sino date 15 May 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No. 54791/2017
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
2023-05-15
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
SMALL ENTERPRISE
FINANCE AGENCY SOC LIMITED
(Registration no. 1[...])
Plaintiff
and
KGALEMO
CONSTRUCTION
CC
First Defendant
(Registration no. 2[...])
WELHEMINA
SEMEEMEE APHANE
Second Defendant
(Id no. 6[...])
LEHUMO
MAKGALEMELE APHANE
Third Defendant
(Id no. 8[...])
JUDGMENT
The
judgment and order are
published and distributed electronically.
VAN
NIEKERK PA, AJ
[1]
Plaintiff is a State-owned company with limited liability which
provides development
loans to approved lenders. First Defendant
is a close corporation and Second Defendant and Third Defendants are
members of
the First Defendant.
[2]
On 8 August 2017 Plaintiff
instituted action against the First Defendant, Second Defendant and
Third Defendant jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be
absolved, for payment of the amount of R2 485 647.94 with interest at
the rate of 13.30% per annum
from 1 March 2017 to date of payment,
such interest calculated and capitalised monthly in arrears.
The cause of action upon
which Plaintiff relies for the institution
of such claim is a written agreement entered into between Plaintiff
and First Defendant,
duly represented by the Second Defendant, in
terms whereof it was agreed that a loan be made to the First
Defendant in respect
of which the Second Defendant and Third
Defendant bound themselves as sureties. The three defendants
opposed such action
instituted, and after a protracted period the
matter was eventually enrolled for hearing on the civil trial roll of
this Court
on 11 May 2023.
[3]
On 5 May 2023 the Defendants served a substantive application for
postponement of
the matter to be heard on the date of the trial,
which resulted in the Plaintiff filing an Opposing Affidavit to such
application
for postponement on the 10
th
of May 2023, one
day before the trial date. Defendants did not file any replying
affidavit. Defendants tendered costs occasioned
by the postponement.
[4]
The purpose of the postponement sought by the Defendants was namely
to enable the
Defendants to file an amended Plea to the Plaintiff’s
Particulars of Claim wherein various defences are raised against the
Plaintiff’s cause of action which were not previously raised in
the pleadings filed on behalf of the Defendants.
[5]
In essence the Defendants attempts to achieve a postponement to
enable the Defendants
to file an amended Plea which would have the
following characteristics:
[5.1]
Matters which were previously common cause and admitted in the
Plaintiff’s Declaration will
now be denied;
[5.2]
Rectification is sought of the written Loan Agreement upon which the
Plaintiff based its cause of
action in that the Defendants now intend
to plead that various of the material terms of the agreement,
according to the Defendants,
were agreed upon by the Defendants
pursuant to a negligent misrepresentation by the Plaintiff
alternatively on the basis that it
does not reflect the true
intention of the parties.
[6]
For purposes of the judgment, I deem it not necessary to deal
comprehensively with
the nature of the amendment sought, and I also
do not deem it necessary to decide whether a
bona fide
defence
is disclosed in the intended amendment for the reasons as will appear
infra
.
[7]
The Court’s approach in an application for postponement was the
subject of an
oft quoted judgment of Mahomed AJA (as he then was)
[1]
and on p. 314 (f) to p.315 (j) in such judgment the legal principles
applicable to an application for postponement are set out.
[8]
Considering the principles as set out in the judgment referred to
supra
, I am of the view that the following background facts as
set out hereunder relating to the history of the litigation between
the
parties are relevant for purposes of exercising a discretion on
the issue whether the matter should be postponed as prayed for by
the
Defendants in the application.
HISTORY
OF LITIGATION:
[9]
After the Plaintiff instituted action against the Defendants on 8
August 2017, the
Defendants filed a Notice of Intention to Defend on
18 August 2017 which resulted in the Plaintiff applying for Summary
Judgment
on 17 September 2017. The Defendants filed an Opposing
Affidavit in the Summary Judgment application on 25 October 2017
whereafter
the Summary Judgment application was argued in this Court
on 9 January 2018 and the Defendants were granted leave to defend the
action.
[10]
Plaintiff thereafter filed its Declaration on 13 September 2018 and
the Defendants filed a Plea
on 31 October 2018. The Plea filed
by the Defendants consisted of two paragraphs, the first whereof
serves to admit the particulars
regarding the parties together with a
blanket denial and the second paragraph of the Defendants’ Plea
pleads that the National
Credit Act does not apply, an admission that
the Plaintiff is a registered credit provider, and the Defendants
thereafter “
jointly deny the contents of this paragraph”
.
From a perusal of this “
Plea”
it appears that the
Defendants erroneously pleaded to the Plaintiff’s Summons and
not the Declaration that was filed after
the application for Summary
Judgment resulted in the Defendants being granted leave to defend the
action.
[11]
On 8 December 2018 a pre-trial conference was convened. The
Plaintiff obtained a signed
copy of the pre-trial minutes from the
Defendants’ attorneys on 10 December 2018, wherein it was
agreed that the matter is
ready to proceed to trial and application
for a trial date was made during December 2018 whereafter the
Registrar of this Court
allocated a trial date for 19 May 2020.
Due notice of this trial date was given to the Defendants in December
2018.
[12]
Plaintiff thereafter applied for an order to compel the Defendants to
discover in terms of Rule
35(1) during March 2019 and was successful
in that the Defendants consented to an order and tendered the wasted
costs incurred
by the Plaintiff resulting in the interlocutory
application being removed from the roll. The matter did not
proceed on trial
on 19 May 2020 due to the Covid19 pandemic and the
parties agreed that a new trial date be obtained.
[13]
A further pre-trial conference was scheduled on 11 November 2020
during which the parties again
agreed that the matter is ready to
proceed on trial whereafter the Plaintiff re-applied for a trial date
during February 2021 and
which resulted in the Registrar of this
Court allocating the 11
th
of November 2021 as a date of
the trial. Shortly before the trial which would have taken
place on 11 November 2021 the Defendants
indicated in correspondence
that they intended to amend their Plea and this resulted in the
matter being removed from the roll
by agreement between the parties
at the costs of the Defendants. The Defendants thereafter
delivered a Notice of Intention
to amend its Plea and counterclaim
dated 23 November 2021 which resulted in the Plaintiff filing a
Notice of Objection to the Defendants’
Notice of Amendment and
which objection was filed on 7 December 2021.
[14]
After the 7
th
of December 2021 Defendants failed to act in
accordance with their Notice of Intention to Amend and took no
further steps which
would have enabled the Defendants to be prepared
to continue with the trial.
[15]
The Plaintiff’s Answering Affidavit in the application for
postponement sets out detailed
averments illustrating that various
correspondence was addressed to the Defendants’ attorneys of
record regarding the issue
of the amendment which had not yet been
finalised, and it is clear that the Plaintiff’s attorney of
record went to substantial
lengths to encourage the Defendants’
attorney of record to ensure that the Defendants would be ready to
proceed on trial.
Defendants failed to take any further procedural
steps thereafter.
[16]
On 24 January 2022 Plaintiff served a fresh application for trial
date on the Defendants, and
on 10 March 2022 the Plaintiff served a
Notice of Set-down for the trial to be held on 11 May 2023 on the
Defendants. During
April 2022 Plaintiff’s attorneys of
record again transmitted correspondence to the Defendants’
attorneys of record
reminding them about the trial date for 11 May
2023 and placing on record that the issue regarding the Defendants’
intended
amendment of their Plea was not finalised.
[17]
During February 2023 Plaintiff’s attorneys of record again
informed the Defendants’
attorneys of record by way of
correspondence of the trial that was set down for 11 May 2023 and
required that a further pre-trial
conference be scheduled for 16
February 2023. Defendants failed to respond to this letter resulting
in the Plaintiff’s attorneys
of record addressing
correspondence to the Deputy Judge President of this Court,
complaining about the Defendants’ lack of
co-operation in
attending a pre-trial conference and which correspondence was
simultaneously also sent to the Defendants’
attorneys of
record. This correspondence also did not have any effect on the
Defendants.
REFUSAL
OF APPLICATION FOR POSTPONEMENT:
[18]
Considering the history of the litigation between the parties as it
is recorded in the Plaintiff’s
Answering Affidavit to the
application for postponement, I can find no reason why I should
exercise a discretion in favour of the
Defendants and accede to the
request for postponement. The reasons follow hereunder.
[19]
The true reason for the Defendants’ failure to pursue the
intended amendment is not explained
at all, except for a cursory
averment that the Defendants were not financially able to pursue the
amendment but now, shortly before
the commencement of this trial,
they apparently are able to do so. No particular facts are
placed before Court to substantiate
this averment and considering the
fact that the Defendants are seeking an indulgence under the
circumstances as set out
supra
, I am of the view that the
Defendants’ failure to provide adequate information in the
application for postponement in order
to enable the Court to duly
consider the Defendants alleged lack of means is a material omission.
[20]
The application for postponement was not made timeously. The
Defendants have been aware of the
trial date since 10 March 2022 as
set out in paragraph [16]
supra
and notwithstanding requests
from the Plaintiff to attend a pre-trial conference, simply did
nothing.
At the proverbial eve of the
trial, the application for postponement is launched.
[21]
Defendants’ Counsel argued that Plaintiff’s prejudice can
be compensated by an appropriate
order for costs. I regard this
as a simplistic approach for the reason that the Plaintiff conducts
business in the sphere
of the provision of loans, is a State-owned
company, and it is in the interest of the Plaintiff and the public at
large that loan
agreements entered into between Plaintiff and other
parties be honoured. Plaintiff is prejudiced in its commercial
operations by
the postponement. Any prejudice which the Defendants
may suffer is directly attributable to their failure to take any
reasonable
timeous steps to advance their case and Plaintiff has not
caused any prejudice to Defendants.
[22]
Counsel for Defendants argued that it is in the interest of justice
that the Defendants be awarded
an opportunity to place their defence
before this Court. The same consideration namely the interest of
justice also dictates that
a litigant be afforded the opportunity to
finalise litigation instituted in a Court of law, and the interest of
justice further
requires litigation to be disposed of speedily. This
matter has been enrolled in this Court on two previous occasions
resulting
in other matters being crowded out, only then to be removed
from the roll and re-enrolled. I am therefore of the view that the
Defendants cannot call on the interest of justice to advance the
merits of their application for postponement where they have acted
in
a dilatory manner
contra
the interests of justice. There is in
my view a limit to where a Court should allow a litigant to delay
justice and in this matter
I am of the view that such limit has been
exceeded. The delay of this matter does not only affect the parties
to this matter but
also the administration of this court and other
parties who have an expectation to present their matters to court and
who are prevented
to do so by this matter being enrolled repeatedly.
[23]
Considering the dilatory approach adopted by the Defendants in this
matter, the lack of properly
motivated reasons advanced in the
application for postponement why the Defendants did not timeously and
diligently pursue the intended
amendment of their Plea, the
considerations of prejudice and the interest of justice as set out
supra
, I dismissed the application for postponement with costs
and the legal representatives acting on behalf of the Defendants
thereafter
withdrew from the matter.
CONCLUSION:
[24]
The Defendants’ legal representatives having withdrawn from the
matter, Plaintiff’s
counsel moved for judgment in terms of a
draft order prepared by Counsel acting on behalf of the Plaintiff.
The Plaintiff’s
claim is a liquidated claim based on an written
agreement supported by a certificate of the outstanding balance as
provided for
in the agreement and I am satisfied that the Plaintiff
is entitled to the relief as claimed and which is embodied in the
draft
order which I have marked “X, dated and signed, and
which order is made an order of Court.
P
A
VAN NIEKERK AJ.
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
CASE
NUMBER:
54791/2017
HEARD
ON:
11
May 2023
FOR
THE PLAINTIFF:
ADV.
J. VAN DER MERWE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Tim
du Toit & Co Inc.
FOR
THE DEFENDANT:
ADV.
J. PRINSLOO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Waldick
Jansen van Rensburg Inc.
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
15
May 2023
[1]
Myburgh
Transport v Botha t/a S A Truck Bodies
1991 (3) SA 310
(NmS)
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