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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2023] ZAGPPHC 421
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## Jeanru Konstruksie (Pty) Ltd v Botes (A304/2021)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 421;
2023 (6) SA 305 (GP) (30 May 2023)
Jeanru Konstruksie (Pty) Ltd v Botes (A304/2021)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 421;
2023 (6) SA 305 (GP) (30 May 2023)
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sino date 30 May 2023
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: A304/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
30 MAY 2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
JEANRU
KONSTRUKSIE (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
JACO
STEFAN BOTES
Respondent
Summary
:
Rule 49(13) obliges an appellant to
furnish security for the costs of the respondent in an appeal.
If the requirement to furnish
security is not waived by the
respondent, the appellant may obtain a release from the obligation to
furnish such security from
the court which had granted leave to
appeal. The appellant had failed to do so and contended that
the Rule was invalid.
Found:
that the Rule was procedural in nature and sourced in the High
Court’s common law and Constitutional powers to regulate its
own processes. It was accordingly not promulgated ultra vires the
Rules Board’s powers and the appellant’s failure
to
provide the requisite security rendered the prosecution of his
appeal, in particular the obtaining of a date for the hearing
of the
appeal, irregular.
ORDERS
1.
The application by the respondent in this
application (the appellant in the appeal in case no: A304/21) for a
date for hearing of
the appeal, is set aside as being irregular.
2.
The respondent is ordered to pay the costs
of the application.
JUDGMENT
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The facts
pertaining to this application are reasonably simple. It
concerns an appellant’s failure to furnish “good
and
sufficient” security for the respondent’s costs in a
pending appeal in terms of Rule 49(13). After a number
of
skirmishes, the appellant’s ultimate defence was the claim that
the relevant Rule was invalid.
Relevant
facts
[2]
As the matter
concerns a pending appeal, it shall be more convenient to refer to
the parties as in the appeal itself.
[3]
The respondent
in the appeal is Jeanru Konstruksie (Pty) Ltd, a construction
company. On 21 January 2020 the respondent instituted
action
against the appellant, J. S. Botes, for payment of R 872 095,65
for services rendered in terms of a written building
contract.
[4]
The appellant
had opposed the action but on 8 June 2020 this court, per Pretorius
AJ, granted summary judgment against the appellant.
[5]
After leave to
appeal was refused by the court of first instance, the Supreme Court
of Appeal granted the requisite leave to a full
court of this
Division on 31 March 2021.
[6]
A notice of
appeal had been delivered on 28 April 2021 and the appellant
proceeded to prosecute the appeal by delivering the record
and
thereafter applying for a date of hearing of the appeal.
[7]
The appellant
had not furnished the requisite security for the respondent’s
costs of the appeal and neither had he obtained
a release from his
obligation to do so from the court which had granted him leave to
appeal.
[8]
Thereupon the
respondent launched an application in terms of Rule 30, claiming that
the prosecution of the appeal, in particular
the obtaining of a date
for the hearing of the appeal (and consequentially the set down
thereof) constituted irregular proceedings
in the absence of the
necessary security having been furnished.
[9]
After various
issues regarding dates of set down, erroneous assumptions about the
appeal date allocated and the like had all been
dealt with, the
matter finally came before this court as an opposed motion on 21
April 2023. Insofar as condonation had been
necessary for the
various deliveries of documents and processes, these were not opposed
and condonation was consequently granted.
The appeal has been
set down for hearing on 31 May 2023.
[10]
At
the hearing of the application, the consequence thereof, if
successful, was debated with counsel. The consequence of a
finding of an irregular step having been taken by the appellant would
result therein that the appeal would have to be removed from
the roll
or run the risk of being struck off. This is what has happened
in numerous other cases where an appellant had been
found to have
been in default of having furnished the required security
[1]
.
There was no satisfactory answer produced as to why an alternate
avenue, such as applying to the Supreme Court of Appeal
for release
of the obligation to furnish security or simply the furnishing of
security itself (in an amount determined by the Registrar
in the
event of a dispute) had or could not have been explored. It is
against this backdrop that I proceed to deal with the
contentions
raised by the appellant.
The
legal position
[11]
Rule 49 (13)
previously read as follows:
“
Unless
the respondent waives his right to security, the appellant shall,
before lodging copies of the record on appeal with the
Registrar,
enter into good and sufficient security for the respondent’s
costs of appeal. In the event of failure
by the parties
to agree on the mount of security, the Registrar shall fix the amount
and his decision shall be final
”.
[12]
After
a substantive analysis of the Rule and the issue of whether poverty
of a litigant may create a bar to him proceeding with
litigation, the
formulation of the Rule was found to be unconstitutional to the
extent that it did not vest in the Court a discretion
to exempt
wholly or in part an appellant from compliance with his obligation to
furnish security
[2]
.
[13]
Consequently
the Rule was amended on 29 October 1999 to now read as follows (the
inserted amendment is underlined):
“
(a)
Unless the respondent waives his or her right to security
or
the court in granting leave to appeal or subsequently on application
to it, has released the appellant wholly or partially from
that
obligation,
the appellant shall,
before lodging copies of the record on appeal with the Registrar,
enter into good and sufficient security
for the respondent’s
costs of appeal.
(b)
In the event of failure by the parties to agree on the amount of
security ….”.
[14]
Applying
the (amended) Rule to the facts of this case there can be no doubt
that the appellant, had he desired to be absolved or
released from
his obligation to furnish security, had to apply for such release to
the court which had granted leave to appeal,
in this case the Supreme
Court of Appeal
[3]
. This
had not been done.
The
appellant’s contention
[15]
The appellant
accepted the legal position to be as set out above, but contended
that the Rule was invalid. The argument in
respect of
invalidity was this: Section 6(1)(m) of the Rules Board for Courts of
Law Act 107 of 1995 provides that the Rules Board
may make rules
regulating “…
the
manner of determining the amount of security in any case
where
it is required
that security shall be given, and the form and manner in which
security may be given
”
(the underlined portion is what the appellant sought to emphasise).
The argument was then further that rules made
by the Rules Board may
not stipulate “where security is required” and that the
source for such obligation must be found
elsewhere, such as in a
statutory provision or the common law. The appellant contended
that as neither the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
nor the common law
vested the High Courts, the Supreme Court of Appeal or the
Constitutional Court (collectively referred to as
the High Courts for
sake of convenience) with a discretionary power to require security
for costs when any of these courts granted
leave to appeal, there was
no such source. The appellant consequently contended that the
promulgation of
Rule 49(13)
was ultra vires (i.e beyond the powers of
the Rules Board) and therefore invalid.
Evaluation
[16]
Some
support for the appellant’s contentions can be found in
comments expressed by Engelbrecht AJ in
Dr
Maureen Allem Inc v Baard
[4]
(
Dr
Allem
).
Although these views were strongly expressed, they did not form the
basis of the order granted in that case and should therefore
be
regarded as obiter. The comments did rely to an extent on
similar obiter views expressed in
FirstRand
Bank Ltd v Van der Merwe and Another
[5]
.
[17]
The
question of the validity of the current formulation of
Rule 49(13)
had however squarely been considered and decided a month after the
judgment of Engelbrecht AJ by Roelofse (then AJ) in
Freedom
Stationary (Pty) Ltd v Palm Stationary Manufacturers (Pty) Ltd and
Mveli Data Solutions (Pty) Ltd (Joint Venture) and Others
[6]
(
Freedom
Stationary
).
The attack on the validity of the Rule was the same as in the case in
Dr
Allem
.
[18]
In
Freedom
Stationary
the sometimes ill-defined distinction between substantive and
procedural law has been examined, starting with a quotation from
Jeremy Bentham (1747 – 1842)
[7]
.
The learned judge, after referring to
section 13
of the now
repealed Companies Act 13 of 1973 and
Systems
Applications Consultants (Pty) Ltd t/a Securinfo v Systems
Applications Products AG and Others
[8]
(
Systems
),
concluded that security for costs is an integral part of procedural
law and, as such, fell within the powers of the Rules
Board.
[19]
For
many years since the amendment of Rule 49(13) in October 1999 which,
as already mentioned, had remedied its previous unconstitutional
formulation, the High Courts, including full courts of various
Divisions, have held that “…
it
is the right of a respondent on appeal to go into an appeal secured,
at least to the extent provided for by the Rules, against
the
inability of the appellant to pay the costs if the appeal is
unsuccessful
[9]
”.
[20]
Engelbrecht AJ
argued in
Dr
Allem
that
most of these judgments pre-dated the promulgation of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
. The relevance of this argument is that
the Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959 had provided in Section 20(5)(b)
that if leave to
appeal was granted against a judgment or order of a
provisional division in any civil proceedings given
on
appeal
to
it, the court granting leave could, in its discretion order the
appellant to furnish security for the respondent’s costs
of the
appeal. The argument proceeded that now that the Supreme Court Act
has been repealed, the statutory source for requiring
security for
costs has fallen away, but this is incorrect. The
repealed section 20(5)(b) only dealt with appeals against
orders made
in respect of appeals to a high court as court of appeal (e.g such as
an appeal from a magistrates court). Rule
49(13) however also
covers, and always have covered, appeals against orders by high
courts sitting as courts of first instance.
Its source could
therefore never have been limited to Section 20(5)(b) instances
only. The argument that once Section 20(5)(b)
was repealed, the
“source” of the Rule 49(13) requirement for furnishing
security fell away, incorrectly assumed that
Section 20(5)(b) was the
actual or only “source” of the requirement.
[21]
The
finding by Roelofse AJ that the requirement to furnish security is
“sourced” in procedural rather than substantive
law, is
in my view fortified by the following dictum by O’Regan J in
Giddey
NO v JC Barnard and Partners
[10]
(
Giddey
):
“
But
for the courts to function fairly, they must have rules to regulate
their proceedings.
Those
rules will often require parties to take certain steps on pain of
being prevented from proceeding with a claim or defence
…. Of course, all these rules must be complaint with the
Constitution. To the extent that they do constitute
a
limitation on a right of access to court, that limitation must be
justifiable in terms of section 36 of the Constitution, if
the
limitation ceased by the rule is justifiable, then as long as the
rules are properly applied, there can be no cause for constitutional
complaint …
”.
(my emphasis)
[22]
In
the present instance, there is no Constitutional attack by the
appellant on Rule 49(13) based on its limitation of an appellant’s
right to exercise his right of access to a court to prosecute his or
her appeal. Any limitation on such right has already
been
ameliorated by the amendment of the Rule following on the judgment in
O’Neill
[11]
.
[23]
In
Boost
Sport Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African Breweries (Pty) Ltd
[12]
(
Boost
)
the Supreme Court of Appeal had cause to embark on a similar exercise
as that required from this court by the appellant.
In that case
a defendant sought to compel a suspected impecunious plaintiff to
furnish security for its costs. The application
was made in terms of
Rule 47(1), which the court found dealt with procedural and not
substantive law
[13]
. In
terms of the common law, a court could order a peregrinus (be it a
company or a natural person) to furnish security,
but not order an
incola to do so. Section 13 of the repealed Companies Act 61 of 1973
however, created an exception to the common
law and was wide enough
to include incola plaintiff companies. The court, after having
examined some historical development
on the subject, considered the
position now that this statutory exception had been repealed (as the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
contains no similar provision) and pointed
out that the High Courts have an inherent power to regulate their own
processes and
develop the common law
[14]
.
The source for this power is also now expressly provided for in
section 173 of the Constitution
[15]
.
The court went on to find that, since the repeal of aforementioned
section 13, there was no “…
legitimate
basis for differentiating between an incola company and incola
natural person
”.
A court could then order a plaintiff incola company, absent said
section 13, to furnish security
[16]
.
[24]
This
approach accords with the Supreme Court of Appeal’s own later
dictum in
Systems
[17]
where it held “
It
is of significance that the Constitutional Court in Giddey NO v JC
Barnard and Partners (Giddey) made the illuminating observation
that
ordering security for costs is a procedural matter incidental to
civil proceedings and that when a court makes an order for
security,
it exercises its power to regulate its own process
”.
[25]
Applying the
above dicta, I therefore find that although the appellant is correct
that a source must exist outside the subordinate
legislation
comprised of the Rule for the requirement that an appellant must
furnish security for the costs of the respondent on
appeal, such a
source indeed exists in the common law authority that the High Courts
may regulate their own processes, which authority
has since the
advent of Democracy been expressly provided for in section 173 of the
Constitution.
[26]
In
Boost
the
Supreme Court of Appeal had found that, in the case where security
for costs is ordered against a plaintiff it should only do
so in
instances where the litigation is vexatious or reckless or otherwise
amounts to an abuse. That is of course the position
in the context of
when a litigant approaches a court for the first time, thereby
exercising his Constitutional rights
[18]
.
The approach is understandably different in instances where a court
has already found against a party who wishes to proceed as
an
appellant. Such an appellant has nothing to lose in taking an adverse
finding on appeal and might do so opportunistically or
frivolously,
even though not necessary vexatiously or recklessly. Recent
experience in our courts has shown that this happens with
increasing
frequency. In addition to the powers to regulate its own processes,
High Courts also, again with reference to section
173 of the
Constitution, have the power to protect itself (and other litigants,
such as respondents in appeals) from abuse of its
processes.
The High Courts have, as a default position consistently applied the
protective measure of requiring security
for costs on appeal for more
than 50 years. These powers are separate from the hurdle of
having to obtain leave to appeal
and deals with safeguards on a more
practical and again, procedural level.
[27]
Having
established that the determination of the requirement to furnish
security for costs is a procedural matter falling within
the ambit of
a court’s discretion, all that Rule 47(13) does, is to regulate
how that procedural matter is to be dealt with.
If the amount of
security is in dispute and cannot be agreed on, the Registrar will
determine it. If an appellant cannot
obtain a release from his
obligation from the respondent, the court granting leave to appeal
can order it, taking all relevant
factors into consideration and
exercising a judicial discretion. This will include the
consideration of whether an appellant
should be released from the
default protective measure referred to above or not. This has
already found to be a Constitutionally
compliant regime
[19]
.
This approach is also not a novel one and has, for example,
recently been applied in another Constitutional democracy, Canada
[20]
and even in Africa
[21]
.
[28]
Section
6(1)(a) of the Rules Board Act provides that the Rules Board has the
authority “…
to
review, amend, make and repeal rules regulating the practice and
procedure in connection with litigation…
”.
In
Freedom
Stationery
it has, in my view correctly, been found that “litigation”
encompasses appeal processes.
[29]
I therefore
find that Rule 47(13) was not promulgated outside the powers of the
Rules Board. It is a sound example of the procedural
requirements to
which O’Regan J has referred to in
Giddey
which a
party is called upon to take “…
on
pain of being prevented from proceeding…
”
with litigation and it regulates the application of the High Court’s
common law and Constitutional powers pertaining
to appeals.
[30]
It must follow
that the appeal has irregularly been prosecuted. This includes the
application for and the obtaining of a date for
hearing pursuant to
the delivery of the record and the subsequent set down of the appeal.
The application must therefore succeed
and I find no cogent reason
why costs should not follow the event.
Orders
[31]
In the
circumstances the following order is made:
1.
The
application by the respondent in this application (the appellant in
the appeal in case no: A304/21) for a date for hearing of
the appeal,
is set aside as being irregular.
2.
The respondent
is ordered to pay the costs of the application.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 21 April 2023
Order
granted: 26 May 2023
Reasons
furnished: 30 May 2023
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:
Adv R. M Venter
Attorney for the
Applicant:
Enslin & Fourie
Attorneys, Bela-Bela
c/o Wiese &
Wiese Attorneys, Pretoria
For the Respondent:
Adv B. S Steyn
Attorney for the
Respondent:
JC Scheepers
Attorneys, Pretoria
[1]
See
the cases referred to in par 19 hereunder and listed in footnote 9
as well as
Boland
Konstruksiemaatskappy
(Edms)
Bpk v Petlen Properties (Edms) Bpk
1974 (4) SA 291 (C).
[2]
Shepherd
v O’Neill and Others
2000
(2) SA 1066
(NPD) (
O’Neill
),
the order being at 1073 I – J, delivered on 30 August 1999.
[3]
Strouthos
v Shear
2003
(4) SA 137 (T).
[4]
2022
(3) SA 207
(GJ).
[5]
[2002]
ZAECHC 23
(7 October 20002).
[6]
[2021]
ZAMPMBHC 42 (15 September 2021).
[7]
At
par [3].
[8]
[2015]
ZASCA 93
(1 June 2015).
[9]
Cape
Diem Explorations (Pty) Ltd v Kasimira Trading 82 (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2016]
ZAGPPHC 1099 (14 December 2016);
Kama
and others v Kama and Another
[2007] ZAECHV 115 (6 September 2007) (a full court);
Jyoti
Structures Africa (Pty) Ltd v KRB Electrical Engineers
2011 (3) SA 231
(GSJ) and
TR
Eagle Air (Pty) Ltd v Thompson
[2020] ZAGPPHC 801.
[10]
[2006] ZACC 13
;
2007 (5) SA 525
(CC) at par 16.
[11]
At
footnote 2 above.
[12]
2015
(5) SA 38 (SCA).
[13]
At
par 5. See also Van Loggerenberg,
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
,
2
nd
Ed at D1-633.
[14]
At
par 13.
[15]
Section
173 “
The
Constitution Court, Supreme Court of Appeal and High Courts have the
inherent power to protect and regulate their own processes
and to
develop the common law, taking into account the interests of
justice
”.
[16]
At
par 16.
[17]
At
footnote 8 above.
[18]
As
enshrined in Section 34 of the Constitution, guaranteeing everyone a
right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the
application of
law decided in a public hearing before court. See also the
considerations applied in such an instance in
MTV
Service (Pty) Ltd v Afro Call (Pty) Ltd
2007 (6) SA 620
(A).
[19]
O’Nell
above
[20]
Rule 61.06 of Ontario’s
Rules
of Civil Procedure
R.R.O. 1990, Reg 194 and
Richardson
v Arsenor
2022 ONCA 137
, applying
Yaiguaje
v Chevron Corporation
2017 ONCA 827.
[21]
See Westmont Holdings SDN BHD v Central Bank of Kenya [Petition No16
(EO23) of 2021].
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