Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 460South Africa
Slaughter and Others v Municipal Infrastructure Support Agent and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 460; 36596/2016 (13 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 June 2023
Headnotes
on 30 July 2015 and the tender bids were submitted on 11 August 2015.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Slaughter and Others v Municipal Infrastructure Support Agent and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 460; 36596/2016 (13 June 2023)
Slaughter and Others v Municipal Infrastructure Support Agent and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 460; 36596/2016 (13 June 2023)
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sino date 13 June 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No: 36596/2016
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
13/06/2023
In
the matter between:
ROBERT
SLAUGHTER
First
Applicant
SHAHIT
WADVALLA
Second
Applicant
REGINALD
LEGOABE
Third
Applicant
STEVEN
NJIIRI
Fourth
Applicant
and
MUNICIPAL
INFRASTRUCTURE SUPPORT
AGENT
First
Respondent
THE
SHERIFF: PRETORIA EAST
Second
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e-mail. The date for
the handing down of the
judgment shall be deemed to be 13 June 2023.
JUDGMENT
LG
KILMARTIN, AJ:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The first
application before me is an opposed application in terms of Rule 45A
(“the stay application”) to stay execution
and set aside
a Writ of Execution dated 24 January 2019 (“the Writ of
Execution”) issued in respect of the Third Applicant
to the
First Respondent, pending the outcome of an opposed judicial review
application brought by the First to Fourth Applicants
(hereinafter
referred collectively as “the Applicants”) under case no.
36596/2016 (“the main review application”).
[2]
The Applicants
seek the following relief in the stay application:
[2.1]
that the Writ
of Execution be declared irregular, unlawful and be set aside;
[2.2]
that an
interim order be granted interdicting the First and Second
Respondents and staying the execution of any cost order under
case
no. 36596/2016, pending the outcome of the main review application;
[2.3]
that the First
Respondent be ordered to comply with its written undertaking of 20
August 2018 (“the undertaking”) to
stay execution of all
cost orders under case no. 3616/2016 and case no. 39077/2016, pending
the outcome and determination of costs
in the main review
application; and
[2.4]
that the First
Respondent be ordered to pay the costs of the stay application.
[3]
The second
application before me is an application which was brought by the
First Respondent for an order directing the Applicants
to provide the
First Respondent,
alternatively
,
its legal representatives with “
the
correct details of [
the
Applicants’]
physical
addresses and residential addresses within one (1) day of the order
”,
failing which the First Respondent be allowed to approach the Court
on the same papers, duly supplemented, for an order
declaring the
Applicants to be in contempt of court. The First Respondent also
seeks that the costs of this application be paid
on an attorney and
own client scale. This application is referred to below as “the
First Respondent’s application to
compel”.
[4]
Before dealing
with the relevant legal provisions and authorities applicable in
these applications, it is necessary to consider
the relevant
background facts as this provides the backdrop against which the
matters before me are to be adjudicated. As will
be apparent from
what is set out below, this matter has a lengthy and complicated
history and the dispute between the parties has
enjoyed the attention
of at least 12 judges (including two Supreme Court of Appeal judges)
since 2016. The litigation has thus
been ongoing for 7 years.
RELEVANT
BACKGROUND FACTS
(a)
Relationship
between the Applicants and the First Respondent
[5]
The Applicants
were initially employees of the Development Bank of Southern Africa
(“DBSA”) and were transferred to
the employ of the First
Respondent between 1 April 2012 to 30 September 2012. Between 1
October 2012 to 30 September 2015, the
Applicants were re-contracted
by the First Respondent as specialist consultants through specialist
consultancy contracts.
[6]
Pending the
end of the Applicants’ contracts, the First Respondent
published a request for public tender proposals under tenders
PPM[....]5 and CE[....]5 to contract specialist consultants
(Programme Managers under tender PPM[....]15 and Civil Engineers
under
tender CE[....]5) through public tender, in respect of which
the Applicants did bid in line with their then-existing specialist
consultancy contracts.
[7]
The tender
briefing session for the respective tenders was held on 30 July
2015 and the tender bids were submitted on 11 August
2015.
[8]
On 30
September 2015, the First Respondent disqualified the Applicants’
tender bids due to the Applicants allegedly possessing
no relevant
work experience or academic qualifications.
[9]
The
Applicants’ specialist consultancy contracts were terminated on
30 September 2015.
(b)
The
main review application and litigation stemming therefrom
[10]
The main
review application is based on Rule 53 and the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
and was
launched on 6 May 2016. In the main review application, the
Applicants seek the review and setting aside of the administrative
actions of the First Respondent in relation to tenders PPM[....]5 and
CE[....]5 as well as compensation.
[11]
On 21 June
2016, a default order against the First Respondent (the Respondent in
that application) was granted in the main review
application on an
unopposed basis by Botes AJ, which read as follows:
“
1.
The Respondent is ordered to settle the full expected contract value
of the Applicants as Consultants in terms of the Tender
Bid
PPM[....]5 and Bid CE[....]5 respectively.
2.
The Respondent is ordered to settle the outstanding professional fees
of the Applicants for the 3 months contract
extension period granted
by the Respondent from 1 October 2015 to 31 December 2015.
3.
The Respondent is ordered to settle the Applicants unpaid
accumulative leave days.
4.
The Respondent is ordered to settle the costs of this application.
”
(sic).
[12]
On 25 July
2016, the First Respondent launched a rescission application against
the default order granted by Botes AJ. That recission
application was
set down for hearing on 15 June 2018 and 18 September 2018 before
Fourie J who granted the recission and granted
the First Respondent
leave to file opposing papers in the main review application.
[13]
On 30 May
2019, the main review application came before Jacobs AJ in the
opposed motion court. Jacobs AJ,
inter
alia
,
granted the Applicants leave to amend their founding papers in terms
of Rule 53 and to file a supplementary founding affidavit.
[14]
The main
review application was subsequently set down for hearing on 14
February 2020 as a special motion before Coppin J who
mero
motu
ordered that all successful bidders be duly enjoined as interested
parties in the matter. Coppin J ordered that the Applicants
pay the
wasted costs of the hearing of 14 February 2020.
[15]
On 18 August
2021, the Office of the State Attorney, Pretoria (“the State
Attorney”) filed a bill of costs on behalf
of the First
Respondent, incorporating the wasted costs of 14 February 2020 as
ordered by Coppin J.
[16]
The
application for taxation was opposed and a Rule 30 notice was filed
by the Applicants as they alleged that the First Respondent
was
irregularly attempting to claim cost items which took place prior to
the State Attorney coming on record on 29 August
2018.
[17]
A notice of
set down of the taxation was filed by the First Respondent’s
tax consultants on 18 May 2022, setting the matter
down on the
taxation roll of 20 June 2022. The Taxing Master did not proceed on
that day due to the objections by the Applicants.
[18]
On 22 June
2022, the taxation proceedings were postponed
sine
die
by the
Taxing Master for purposes of allowing the First Respondent’s
taxing consultant to amend its bill of costs.
[19]
It is clear
from the above that, at the time that the stay application was
brought, there were no taxed costs in respect of the
main review
application. It was only on 22 August 2022 that the first valid
taxation order in respect of the main review application
was granted.
(c)
Litigation
stemming from the Applicants’ PAIA request
[20]
On 28 October
2015, the Applicants submitted an information request to the First
Respondent in terms of the Promotion of Access
to Information Act, 2
of 2000 (“PAIA”) in terms of which,
inter
alia
, all
bid evaluation and adjudication records relating to tender bids
CE[....]5 and PPM[....]5 were requested.
[21]
The Applicants
allege that the First Respondent failed to fully comply with the PAIA
request of the Applicants and refused to hand
over the minutes and
attendance registers of its Bid Committee meetings and
curricula
vitae
of
all appointees and its officials who participated in tender bids
PPM[....]5 and CE[....]5.
[22]
As a result,
the Applicants launched an urgent application on 2 November 2015 in
this Court under case no. 95285/2015 (“the
urgent interdict
application”) in an attempt to prevent the First Respondent
from proceeding with the process of appointing
successful bidders The
urgent interdict application was dismissed by Pretorius J.
[23]
On 19 January
2016, the Applicants brought an application to compel in this Court
under case no. 3616/2016 (“the application
to compel”)
and sought orders compelling the First Respondent to: (i) provide
written reasons in terms of the PAJA; and (ii)
hand over all tender
records. On 4 March 2016, the application to compel was granted by
Nobanda AJ on an unopposed basis. According
to the Applicants,
notwithstanding the order of Nobanda AJ, the First Respondent failed
to fully comply with the order to hand
over the documentation
requested.
[24]
On 13 May
2016, the First Respondent instituted a recission application against
Nobanda AJ’s order. That rescission application
was set down
for hearing on 19 February 2018 and was dismissed with costs by
Peterson AJ on 23 February 2018, thus upholding
and reinstating the
initial order to compel granted by Nobanda AJ on 4 March 2016.
[25]
According to
the Applicants, the First Respondent only produced records relating
to the
curricula
vitae
of
its tender bidders, Supply Chain Management officials, Bid Committee
members and written reasons on 5 March 2018, after the Applicants
caused a complaint letter to be lodged with the office of the Deputy
Judge President of this Court.
[26]
After the
finalisation of the First Respondent’s rescission application,
the Applicants filed a Notice of Taxation incorporating
a bill of
costs for the application to compel under case no. 3616/2016. The
opposed taxation was set down for 31 July 2018 before
the Taxing
Master who handed down two cost orders in the quantum of R59 849.50
(annexure “RS3” to the founding
affidavit) and R43 080.73
(annexure “RS4” to the founding affidavit) with a total
quantum of R102 930.38
against the First Respondent.
[27]
The Applicants
therefore have two cost orders with a combined value of R102 930.38
against the First Respondent which they
allege have not been executed
based on the “
mutual
agreement
”
concluded with the First Respondent on 20 August 2018.
[28]
On 30 May
2016, the Applicants instituted an application for contempt of court
against the First Respondent and its key officials
under case no.
39077/2016 (“the contempt application”). The contempt
application was heard and granted by Baqwa J on
30 June 2016 on an
unopposed basis. According to the First Respondent, the contempt
application was enrolled for hearing on 15
July 2016 but, for reasons
unknown to it, the matter was set down and heard on the unopposed
roll of 30 June 2016, without
notice to the First Respondent.
[29]
The First
Respondent then launched an urgent application to rescind the order
of Baqwa J on 30 June 2016. On 13 July 2016, Swartz
AJ granted an
order rescinding Baqwa J’s order in the absence of the
Applicants.
[30]
The Applicants
filed an application for leave to appeal the order of Swartz AJ but
this was dismissed on 29 November 2017 by Tonjeni
AJ, who also
granted costs in favour of the First Respondent. The Applicants then
petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal (“the
SCA”) for
leave to appeal the decision of Swartz AJ, but this petition was also
subsequently dismissed with costs.
[31]
On 14 August
2018, pursuant to an opposed taxation, the Taxing Master taxed costs
in favour of the First Respondent in the amount
of R220 216.98.
It is evident from the taxed bill of costs attached to the founding
affidavit as annexure “RS6C”
that they related to case
no. 39077/2016 and there can be no doubt that it was these taxed
costs upon which the Writ of Execution
was issued, albeit that the
incorrect case no. 36596/2016 was used on the Writ of Execution, an
aspect which I deal with below.
[32]
In August
2018, the Applicants responded by launching an urgent application
under case no. 58991/2018 (“the urgent stay application”),
which was enrolled for hearing on 21 August 2018, wherein they
sought,
inter
alia
, that
the First Respondent be ordered to stay its execution of judgment
under case no. 39077/2016 pending the determination of
the
Applicants’ leave to appeal and/or appeal to the SCA under case
no. 719/2018, in compliance with
section 18(1)
of the
Superior Courts
Act, 10 of 2013
, and further that any Writ of Execution granted in
favour of the First Respondent under case no. 39077/2016, including
costs arising
therefrom, be set aside.
[33]
After the
launching of the urgent stay application, the First Respondent,
through its erstwhile attorneys of record, Ngeno &
Mteto Inc,
addressed a letter to the Applicants’ erstwhile attorneys,
Ramatshosa Attorneys, on 20 August 2018, which reads
as follows:
“
RE.
MUNICIPAL INFRASTRUCTURE
SUPPORT AGENT // ROBERT SLAUGHTER & OTHERS 58991/2018
1.
We
refer to the above matter and your urgent application set-down on
Tuesday the 21
st
of August 2018.
2.
As you
are aware, your urgent application does not comply with the Practice
Directive relating to the set-down of urgent applications
and thus
falls to be struck off the roll.
3.
Our
client has not even issued a warrant of execution in respect of the
cost order awarded to it and consequently your urgent application
is
premature and burdening the court unnecessarily
.
4.
Notwithstanding
your non-compliance with the Practice Directive and without prejudice
to any of our client’s rights,
our
client has taken a decision and hereby undertakes not to execute the
cost order pending the finalisation of your client’s
appeal at
the SCA
.
5.
Should
you persist with your urgent application in circumstances where our
client has given an undertaking our client will seek
a cost order
against you.
6.
Kindly
but urgently let us have your undertaking before 17.00 today the 20
th
of August 2018 that you will not proceed with the urgent application
failing which we will have no choice but to brief counsel.
Should
this be the case we will seek costs against your client on a punitive
scale.
”
(Emphasis
added).
[34]
Based on the
undertaking in paragraph 4 of the letter, the Applicants removed the
urgent stay application from the roll of 20 August
2018.
[35]
The very next
day, 21 August 2018, the SCA dismissed the Applicants’
application for leave to appeal the order of Swartz AJ.
(d)
Ambit
of the undertaking of 20 August 2018
[36]
The question
that now arises is what was meant by the undertaking in the letter of
20 August 2018 and when it would fall away.
[37]
In paragraph
6.33 of the founding affidavit the following was stated by the
Applicants about the duration of the undertaking:
“
6.33
On the 20
th
August 2018, First Respondent’s then attorneys of record gave
written undertaking
not to
execute the above costs order pending the finalization of all pending
matters and related appeals and final adjudication
of costs
.
”
(Emphasis added).
[38]
Furthermore,
in paragraph 8.10 of the founding affidavit, the following is stated:
“
8.10
At all material times, it has always been the understanding of the
Applicants, based on the First Respondent’s
written undertaking
that notwithstanding the taxation of mutual costs orders,
no
execution of mutual costs order will take place pending the final
outcome of the main review application on the Special Motion
roll
.
”
(Emphasis added).
[39]
Having regard
to the clear wording of the undertaking, I agree with the First
Respondent that the Applicants’ interpretation
of the
undertaking is distorted. It is, in my view, clear from the
undertaking that it was limited to not executing the costs order
“
pending
the finalization of
[the
Applicants]
appeal
at the SCA
”.
The appeal that was being referred to was one which would have
proceeded had the Applicants obtained leave to appeal the
decision of
Swartz AJ from the SCA, but that did not happen. Hence, the
undertaking came to an end when the application for leave
to appeal
to the SCA was dismissed on 21 August 2018. There was clearly no
undertaking not to execute the relevant cost order pending
the
“
finalization
of all pending matters and related appeals and final adjudication of
costs
”
or “
pending
the final outcome of the main review application on the Special
Motion roll”
as contended by the Applicants.
[40]
There is no
dispute that the bill of costs in respect of case no. 39077/2016 was
taxed on 14 August 2018 in the amount of R220 216.98
and that
the Applicants are indebted to the First Respondent in that amount,
including interest. The Applicants fail to challenge
the taxed bill
by way of a review application and it was represented during the
opposed taxation.
[41]
That being
said, the only aspect that remains is that the Writ of Execution was
issued under the incorrect case number, an error
which could
subsequently be rectified by the Registrar of the Court. In this
regard, the First Respondent referred to the fact
that a further Writ
of Execution dated 15 February 2022 (“the 2022 Writ of
Execution”) was subsequently issued under
the correct case
number and that the Writ of Execution which the Applicants seek to
have set aside “
has
fallen away following the rectification of the case number by the
issuing of the
[2022 Writ of Execution].” Upon closer scrutiny, however, it
appears that the Writ of Execution was issued in respect of
the Third
Applicant and the 2022 Writ of Execution was issued in respect of the
Fourth Applicant. I therefore do not agree that
the 2022 Writ of
Execution could be considered a “
rectification
”
of the Writ of Execution. Be that as it may, I also do not believe
that the use of the incorrect case number renders the
Writ of
Execution irregular, unlawful or liable to be set aside.
[42]
In relation to
the 2022 Writ of Execution, it is alleged in (the second, incorrectly
numbered) paragraph 6.4 of the Applicants’
heads of argument,
that:
“…
it
is clear that the First Respondent is attempting to mislead the
Honourable Court through fraudulent malfeasance and deceit since
a
second unsigned self-crafted alleged writ of execution dated 22
nd
February 2022 is annexed to First Respondent’s Opposing
affidavit (
Annexure LS11, Page
44, First Respondent’s opposing affidavit
) which
differs markedly from the impugned writ of execution issued on the
21
st
January 2019”
.
[43]
The statements
in the paragraph of the Applicants’ heads of argument go far
beyond the response to the existence of the 2022
Writ of Execution in
the replying affidavit. All that was stated in the replying affidavit
is that: (i) annexure “LS11”
had never been served on the
Applicants or their attorneys of record; (ii) the date of issue of
annexure “LS11”, namely
22 February 2022, serves to
confirm that there has been a period of 6 years since the Applicants
commenced review proceedings in
2016 and 4 years have elapsed since
the undertaking not to execute, “
but
[the First
Respondent]
has
only commenced execution of costs only in 2022 in order to
maliciously impede Applicants ability to prosecute the main review
application
”
(sic). Nothing in the papers before me indicates that the 2022 Writ
of Execution was: (i) an attempt to mislead the Court
through
“
fraudulent
malfeasance and deceit
”;
and/or (ii) was “
self-crafted
”.
RELEVANT
LEGAL PROVISIONS AND AUTHORITIES IN RESPECT OF STAY APPLICATION
[44]
Rule 45A
reads
as follows:
“
45A
Suspension of orders by the court
The
court may, on application, suspend the operation and execution of any
order for such period as it may deem fit: Provided that
in the case
of appeal, such suspension is in compliance with section 18 of the
Act.
”
[45]
In
the matter of
Stoffberg
NO and Another v Capital Harvest (Pty) Ltd
[1]
(“
Stoffberg
”)
Binns-Ward J stated the following regarding Rule 45A:
[2]
“
[26]
The broad and unrestricting wording of rule 45A suggests that it was
intended to be a restatement of the courts'
common law discretionary
power. The particular power is an instance of the courts' authority
to regulate its own process. Being
a judicial power, it falls to be
exercised judicially. Its exercise will therefore be fact specific
and the guiding principle will
be that
execution
will be suspended where real and substantial justice requires that.
'Real and substantial justice' is a concept that defies
precise
definition, rather like 'good cause' or 'substantial reason'.
It is for the court to decide on the facts of each given case whether
considerations of real and substantial justice are sufficiently
engaged to warrant suspending the execution of a judgment; and, if
they are, on what terms any suspension it might be persuaded
to allow
should be granted.
” (My
emphasis).
[46]
In
Stoffberg
,
Binns-Ward J also dealt with the principles for a grant of a stay in
execution as follows:
[3]
“
[15]
Mr White, who appeared for the respondent, relied on the
judgment of Davis J in Firm Mortgage Solutions (Pty) Ltd
and
Another v Absa Bank Ltd and Another
2014 (1) SA 168
(WCC), to
argue that unless there was a basis to believe that there might be an
inherent flaw in the judgment that was being executed
or the 'causa'
of the respondent's claim, the court lacked any authority under rule
45A to suspend the execution of the judgment.
It would appear that
Davis J proceeded on an acceptance that 'the basic principles
for a grant of a stay in execution' were
expressed in the
judgment of Waglay J in Gois t/a Shakespeare's Pub v Van Zyl and
Others
2011 (1) SA 148
(LC) at para 37, where the learned judge
held:
The
general principles for the granting of a stay in execution may
therefore be summarised as follows:
(a)
A court will grant a stay of execution where real and
substantial justice requires it or where injustice would
otherwise
result.
(b)
The court will be guided by considering the factors
usually applicable to interim interdicts,
except where the
applicant is not asserting a right, but attempting to avert
injustice
.
(c)
The court must be satisfied that:
(i)
the applicant has a well-grounded apprehension that the
execution is taking place at the instance of the respondent(s);
and
(ii)
irreparable harm will result if execution is not stayed
and the applicant ultimately succeeds in establishing
a clear right.
(d)
Irreparable harm will invariably result if there is a
possibility that the underlying causa may ultimately be removed,
ie
where the underlying causa is the subject-matter of an ongoing
dispute between the parties.
(e)
The court is not concerned with the merits of the
underlying dispute - the sole enquiry is simply whether the causa
is
in dispute.
”
[47]
In
Van
Rensburg and Another NNO v Naidoo and Others NNO; Naidoo and Others
NNO v Van Rensburg NO and Others
,
[4]
(“
Van
Rensburg
”)
Navsa JA stated the following:
[5]
“
[51]
Apart from the provisions of Uniform Rule 45A, a court has
inherent jurisdiction, in appropriate circumstances, to order
a stay
of execution or to suspend an order. It might, for example, stay a
sale in execution or suspend an ejectment order. Such
discretion must
be exercised judicially. As a general rule, a court will only do so
where injustice will otherwise ensue.
[52]
A court will grant a stay of execution in terms of
Uniform Rule 45A where the underlying causa of a
judgment
debt is being disputed, or no longer exists, or when an attempt is
made to use the levying of execution for ulterior purposes.
As a
general rule, courts acting in terms of this rule will suspend the
execution of an order where real and substantial justice
compels such
action.
”
MERITS
OF THE STAY APPLICATION
[48]
The Applicants
allege that real and substantial prejudice requires stay of execution
in this matter for the following reasons:
[48.1]
the First
Respondent failed to comply with “
an
earlier mutual undertaking not to execute mutual costs pending the
hearing of the main review application.
”
[For the reasons explained above, the undertaking cannot be
interpreted in the manner contended for by the Applicants.];
[48.2]
the underlying
regularity, lawfulness and authenticity of the First Respondent’s
Writ of Execution is disputed. [The mere
fact that the Writ of
Execution bore the incorrect case number, i.e. the case number of the
main review application does not, in
my view, render it irregular,
unlawful and inauthentic. The Writ of Execution could have been
amended to reflect the correct case
number.];
[48.3]
the First
Respondent has maliciously, irregularly and unlawfully levied
execution through deceit, malice and unlawful means by executing
the
Writ of Execution where no underlying taxed costs order had been
granted under case no. 36596/2016 (being the case number reflected
on
the first page of the Writ of Execution). [The Court was advised that
the First Respondent only obtained a valid taxation order
on 22
August 2022 under case no. 36596/2016. There is, in my view, no basis
to allege any malice, irregularity or unlawfulness
in respect of the
Writ of Execution.]; and
[48.4]
the execution
of the Writ of Execution is aimed at the attainment of a malicious
ulterior motive namely to mislead the court and
to deny justice to
the Applicants. [There is, again, in my view, no basis to make these
serious allegations].
[49]
As stated
above, in my view the undertaking did not go beyond an undertaking
not to execute the cost order pending the outcome of
the petition to
the SCA which was dismissed on 21 August 2018. Thereafter, the
undertaking fell away.
[50]
I am further
of the view that the main review application is entirely separate
from the cost order which formed the basis of the
Writ of Execution
(and the 2022 Writ of Execution).
[51]
From the
papers before me and the arguments that were presented to me I find
that there is no basis to grant a stay of execution
in this instance.
In this regard:
[52.1]
no real and substantial justice requires it and no injustice will
result;
[52.2]
I am not satisfied
that the Applicants have shown that irreparable harm will result if
the execution is not stayed; and
[52.3]
there is no possibility that the underlying
causa
for the cost
orders upon which the Writ of Execution was issued will be changed or
removed.
[52]
In the
circumstances, the stay application falls to be dismissed.
[53]
As
far as the issue of costs is concerned, I was referred by the
Applicants to
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Generic Resources and Others
[6]
(“
Biowatch
”)
where the Constitutional Court stated the following:
“
[43]
As stated above the general rule for an award of costs in
constitutional litigation between a private party and the State is
that if the private party is successful, it should have its costs
paid by the State, and if unsuccessful, each party should pay
its own
costs. In the present matter, Biowatch achieved substantial success.
Not only did it manage to rebut a number of preliminary
objections
aimed at keeping the case out of court altogether, it also succeeded
in getting a favourable response from the court
to eight of the
eleven categories of information it sought. In these circumstances
the 'misconduct' of Biowatch would need to have
been of a compelling
order indeed to justify a failure to award costs against the State.
The reasons advanced by the High Court
for making no award of costs
do not, however, persuade.
”
[54]
The Applicants
further submitted that the Court must, in deciding whether a party
must be awarded costs, take into consideration
that this matter
raises important constitutional issues and, the general rule is that
in constitutional litigation the successful
party must be awarded the
costs.
[55]
The
First Respondent acknowledged the
Biowatch
principle that seeks to shield unsuccessful litigants from the
obligation of paying costs to the State in litigation between the
Government and a private party seeking to assert a constitutional
right. However, it was pointed out that this rule was subject
to
exceptions which were formulated in the matter of
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Another
,
[7]
where the court stated the following in paragraph [139]:
“
[139]
In awarding costs against the applicants, the High Court noted
that the applicants were not indigent persons. In addition,
it noted
that they were 'in a position to finance the litigation which they
pursued ''with vigour'''. While accepting that as a
general matter an
unsuccessful litigant in constitutional litigation should not be
ordered to pay costs, the Court concluded that
in the circumstances
of this case it would not be unfair to order the applicants to
pay costs. The Court was no doubt influenced
by both the vigour with
which they pursued the litigation and their perceived ability to pay.
The Court erred in this regard. The
Court did not pay sufficient
account to the general rule in constitutional litigation referred to
above. The fact that the litigant
has pursued litigation with
vigour is not a material consideration. Nor is the ability to finance
the litigation a relevant
consideration. This litigation cannot be
described as vexatious or frivolous. On this basis alone the order
for costs made by the
High Court ought to be set aside. But there is
the further reason why it should be set aside, namely that the
applicants have been
partially successful.
”
[56]
The First
Respondent submits that in the event of the Honourable Court granting
an order to set the Writ of Execution aside, the
Applicants would
still need to launch a different application to set aside the 2022
Writ of Execution. This is so.
[57]
The First
Respondent further points out that:
[57.1]
several cost
orders have been granted against the Applicants in the amount of more
than R600 000.00 and the First Respondent
has been struggling to
execute the cost orders;
[57.2]
the First
Respondent has been dragged to court on several occasions for
frivolous litigation and it is an organ state and relies
on the
public purse to fund its litigation;
[57.3]
the Applicants
knew and were well aware of the costs order against them when they
brought the application and were also aware that
the Writ of
Execution was not issued for an ulterior motive since it was based on
an order rightfully granted by the court;
[57.4]
the Applicants
knew or ought to have known that the court case number depicted in
the Writ of Execution was merely erroneous but
continued with this
litigation none the less. The Applicants further elected to
misinterpret the undertaking given by the First
Respondent in order
to mislead the court; and
[57.5]
since 2015,
the Applicants have brought numerous applications, some of which were
frivolous, and costs were awarded against them.
In the matter in
question, the Applicants sought to rescind an order of recission
granted in favour of the First Respondent. They
were unsuccessful but
again, despite all warnings by the First Respondent, they went ahead
to bring a petition to the SCA which
was also unsuccessful.
[58]
In the
circumstances, the First Respondent argued that this application
warrants a deviation from the
Biowatch
principle.
[59]
Having regard
to the factors mentioned by the First Respondent, I agree that the
facts of this matter warrant a deviation from the
Biowatch
principle. In particular, it should have been obvious to the First
Respondent that the use of the main review application case
number on
the Writ of Execution was an error as the amount referred to therein
was clearly the amount awarded by the taxing order
under case no.
39077/16. In addition, the allegations of “
fraudulent
malfeasance and deceit”
are
entirely unsubstantiated. Furthermore, I also do not believe that the
wording of the undertaking could, on any conceivable basis,
be
interpreted as contended for by the Applicants. The stay application
is, in my view, frivolous and vexatious and was aimed at
preventing
the First Respondent from executing in respect of the cost orders
granted to it (which were unchallenged and have not
been set aside).
THE
FIRST RESPONDENT’S APPLICATION TO COMPEL
[60]
On 1 July
2022, the State Attorney addressed a letter to the Applicants’
attorneys which reads as follows:
“
RE:
ROBERT SLAUGHTER &
OTHERS /// MUNICIPAL INFRASTRUCTURE SUPPORT AGENT PRETORIA HIGH COURT
1.
With
reference to a number of cost orders which have been granted against
your client in favour of our client, we have been trying
to execute
these costs orders against your client, however, the Sheriff is
unable to execute them and in all these addresses, your
clients are
unknown.
2.
Kindly
provide us with the correct addresses of your clients, apart from the
ones that are used in the pleadings that, according
to the Sheriff,
seem to be incorrect within a period of five (5) days. Should you
fail to do so, we intend to approach the court
to request security
for cost.
3.
We
urgently await to hear from you with the correct addresses.
”
(sic)
[61]
On 4 July
2022, the Applicants’ attorneys directed correspondence to the
State Attorney, requesting that they be furnished
with the Writ of
Execution and taxation order allegedly served on the Applicants as
referred to in the letter of the State Attorney.
This was followed up
by further email requests and telephonic enquiries to the State
Attorney and the taxing consultant for the
First Respondent, Lawrence
Sepua (“Mr Sepua”) of Sepua Cost Consultants.
[62]
On 5 July
2022, Mr Sepua furnished the Applicants’ attorneys with the
Writ of Execution which the Applicants describe as an
“
irregular
Writ of Execution dated 21
st
January 2019
incorporating
the date stamp of the Registrar of the Court dated 24
th
January 2019
”.
[63]
Annexed to the
Writ of Execution were three non-returns of service from the Sheriff
of the Court for the District: Pretoria East
(the Second Respondent)
dated 12 March 2019; 18 February 2022 and 10 March 2022 (all in
respect of the Third Applicant). It is
clear from these returns that
attempts were made to serve at the incorrect address, namely 19 Ponda
Rosa, Equestria, as opposed
to 29 Ponda Rosa, being the address
furnished in the founding affidavit and the list of the Applicants’
last known addresses
furnished by the Applicants on 21 July 2022 (a
month before the First Respondent’s application to compel was
launched). It
also appears that the Trace and Locate report attached
to the First Respondent’s application to compel provided the
incorrect
address for the Third Respondent. The Applicants allege
that these returns of service indicate that “
the
First Respondent had irregularly attempted to execute a self-crafted
and fraudulent Writ of Execution under Case No 36596/2016
without the
existence of any taxated costs order signed by the Taxing Master
under Case No 36596/2016 (the main review application)
currently on
the special motion roll of the above Honourable Court.
”
(sic).
[64]
Although the
Writ of Execution bore the incorrect case number, if one has regard
to the content thereof, it is clear that the cost
order upon which it
was based was a valid one and related to case no. 39077/2016. This
cost order was never challenged further
and is final. It must have
been evident to the Applicants that the use of the incorrect case
number on the Writ of Execution was
an error. As a matter of logic,
there would have been no reason for the First Respondent to
deliberately use the incorrect case
number as, on the Applicants’
version, the “
mutual
agreement
”
would, in any event, have precluded execution in respect of any cost
orders (even those granted under case no. 36596/2016)
pending the
outcome of the main review application and a determination of costs
in that application.
[65]
As mentioned
above, the 2022 Writ of Execution was issued in respect of the Fourth
Applicant with the correct case number. There
is only one return on
record in respect of an attempt to serve at the address identified by
the Trace and Locate report, but it
is not the address which was
provided in the list of last known addresses dated 21 July 2022,
namely 44 Kleynbosch, Muisvoel Street,
Kempton Park, Gauteng
Province. It is also not the address provided for the Fourth
Respondent in the founding affidavit.
[66]
The First
Respondent’s application to compel the provision of the
addresses of the Applicants was not pursued with any vigour
at the
hearing and the answering papers contain serious allegations about
infringement of Constitutional rights.
[67]
The Applicants
allege that the First Respondent failed to serve any of the writs of
execution on the Applicants’ attorney
of record and that it has
been harassing them and their families through malicious service of
fraudulent writs.
[68]
The last known
addresses of the Applicants were furnished to the First Respondent on
21 July 2022 and the First Respondent’s
application to compel
was brought on 22 August 2022 (i.e. a month later). During the
hearing, counsel for the Applicants indicated
that:
[68.1]
there had
never been any attempt to serve on the First Applicant. [In this
regard, in the founding affidavit and in the list of
addresses
produced, his address is provided as 161 Gezina, Kruger Street,
Pongola];
[68.2]
the Second
Applicant works in Zimbabwe but stays at the same address that has
been provided. [There is no evidence of any attempt
to serve on the
Second Applicant whose address is provided in the founding affidavit
and the list of addresses produced as 21 De
Havilland, Helderkruin,
Roodepoort, Gauteng.];
[68.3]
in respect of
the Third Applicant, the attempts that were made to serve the Writ of
Execution were made at the wrong address, namely
19 Ponda Rosa as
opposed to 29 Ponda Rosa;
[68.4]
as far as the
Fourth Respondent is concerned, it was confirmed that he is Kenyan
and does not live in South Africa and is still
out of the country. [I
note that there is no evidence of any attempt to serve on the Fourth
Respondent at the address referred
to in the founding affidavit,
namely 2 Hawk Street, Montana Park, Pretoria North or the address in
the list of addresses, namely
44 Kleynbosch, Muisvoel Street, Kempton
Park, Gauteng Province.].
[69]
In my view,
the First Respondent has clearly not “
exhausted
all the remedies
”
insofar as tracing and attempting to execute the writs of execution
is concerned.
[70]
In the
circumstances, I am not inclined to grant the relief referred to in
the counter-application.
[71]
Insofar as the
issue of costs is concerned, the Applicants argued that the First
Respondent’s application constitutes an abuse
of the Court
process and I was requested to grant a punitive cost order against
it.
[72]
The failure of
the First Respondent to exhaust all avenues available to it before
bringing its application and the failure to attempt
service after
receiving the list of last known addresses and before its application
was brought warrants a cost order being granted
against it. Litigants
should be discouraged from prematurely bringing applications where
there is no basis for the relief sought,
thereby resulting in it
being necessary for the other party to oppose the application and to
incur unnecessary costs in doing so.
Having said that, I am not
inclined to grant punitive costs.
ORDER
In
the circumstances, I make the following order:
1.
The Applicants’ application to
stay execution is dismissed;
2.
The Applicants are ordered, jointly and
severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, to pay the costs
of the First Respondent
in the application to stay execution;
3.
The First Respondent’s application
to compel is dismissed; and
4.
The First Respondent is ordered to pay
the costs of the Applicants in the First Respondent’s
application to compel.
LG
KILMARTIN
ACTING
Judge of the High Court
Pretoria
Dates
of hearing:
15 March 2023
Date
of judgment:
13 June 2023
For
the Applicants: Adv
V Makofane
Instructed
by: Serepong
Attorneys
For
the First Respondent: Adv
MH Mhambi
Instructed
by: The
State Attorney, Pretoria
[1]
2021
JDR 1644 (WCC).
[2]
Stoffberg
at para [26].
[3]
Stoffberg
,
at para [15].
[4]
2011
(4) SA 149 (SCA).
[5]
Van
Rensburg
at paras [51] and [52].
[6]
2009
(6) SA 232
(CC) at para [43].
[7]
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006
(3) SA 247
(CC).
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