Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 546South Africa
Member of the Executive Council, Gauteng Department of Roads and Transport v F.A and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 546; 50025/2020 (11 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
11 July 2023
Headnotes
“[i]t is axiomatic that condoning a party's non-compliance with the rules of court or directions is an indulgence. The court seized with the matter has a discretion whether to grant condonation.” ‘[2]
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Member of the Executive Council, Gauteng Department of Roads and Transport v F.A and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 546; 50025/2020 (11 July 2023)
Member of the Executive Council, Gauteng Department of Roads and Transport v F.A and Others [2023] ZAGPPHC 546; 50025/2020 (11 July 2023)
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sino date 11 July 2023
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 50025/2020
1) REPORTABLE: NO
2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
3) REVISED.
DATE :11 July 2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
THE MEMBER OF THE
EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL, GAUTENG
DEPARTMENT OF
ROADS
AND TRANSPORT
Applicant
And
F[...]
A[...]
First Respondent
M[...]
A[...]
Second Respondent
R[...]
A[...]
Third Respondent
JUDGEMENT
THIS
JUDGEMENT HAS BEEN HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO
THE PARTIES BY WAY OF EMAIL / UPLOADING ON CASELINES. THE
DATE OF
HAND DOWN SHALL BE DEEMED TO BE 11 JULY 2023
BAM
J
A.
Introduction
1.
This is an opposed application for
rescission of a default judgement granted by this court, per Vuma AJ,
on 8 September 2021. The
application is brought in terms of Rule 42
(1), alternatively, Rule 31 (2) (b) and in terms of Rule 27 to uplift
the bar placed
on the applicant in respect of filing its plea.
B. Parties
2.
The applicant is the Member of the
Executive Council responsible for Roads and Transport in Gauteng
Province. The applicant’s
address is cited as 4[...] C[...]
Street, Johannesburg, Gauteng. The first respondent is F[...]
A[...], an adult female born
on 3 September 1981, who resides at
5[...] L[...] Street, Pietermaritzburg. The second respondent is
M[...] A[...], an adult female
born on 31 July 2002 and daughter of
the first respondent. The third respondent is R[...] A[...], a boy
born on 11 September 2011,
the first respondent's son. The second and
third respondents reside with the first respondent.
C. Background
3.
The background facts may be summarised as
follows: The respondents brought a claim for delictual damages in the
amount of R 13 772
000.00 against the applicant, arising out of a
motor vehicle accident in which the driver, who is alleged to have
been the husband
of the first respondent, and father to the second
and third respondents was killed. It is also alleged in the
particulars of claim
that a third child lost his life in the same
accident. The amount claimed is made up of general damages, future
medical expenses,
past and future loss of income, and loss of
support.
4.
In their particulars of claim, the
respondents alleged that on 30 March 2019, they were travelling in a
vehicle driven by the deceased,
along the Provincial Road described
as R101, between Pretoria and Johannesburg. Somewhere around the
vicinity of Trichardt Road
intersection, it is claimed that the road
had an unexpected sharp bend to the right merging into a single lane.
The layout of the
road created an impression that it continued
straight in the direction of a dead end and without warning it
deviated to the right.
It is claimed that the deceased, in the
absence of road signs, drove straight and as a consequence, the
vehicle rolled a number
of times, killing the deceased and the third
child and left the respondents injured. The respondents alleged that
the applicant,
as the Member of the Executive responsible for
maintaining roads was negligent in that it, inter alia, created a
false road and
failed to warn motorists and other road users of the
danger.
D. The Law
5.
Rule 31 (2) (b), which deals with
rescission of default judgement reads:
‘
A
defendant may within 20 days after he has knowledge of such judgment
apply to court upon notice to the plaintiff to set aside
such
judgment and the court may, upon good cause shown, set aside the
default judgment on such terms as to it seems meet.’
6.
Our courts have shied away from defining
good cause. They have however, provided basic principles from which
courts may infer good
cause. In
Grant v
Plumbers
, the court alluded to the
following:
“
(a)
He must give a reasonable explanation of his default. If it appears
that his default was wilful or that it was due to gross
negligence
the Court should not come to his assistance.
(b)
His application must be bona fide and not made with the intention of
merely delaying plaintiff's claim.
(c)
He must show that he has a bona fide defence to plaintiff's claim. It
is sufficient if he makes out a prima facie defence in
the sense of
setting out averments which, if established at the trial, would
entitle him to the relief asked for. He need not deal
fully with the
merits of the case and produce evidence that the probabilities are
actually in his favour.”
[1]
7.
In
The
Occupiers, Shulana Court, 11 Hendon Road, Yeoville, Johannesburg
v
Steele
(102/09)
[2010] ZASCA 28
;
2010 (9) BCLR 911
(SCA) ;
[2010] 4 All SA 54
(SCA)
(25 March 2010), paragraph 4, it was said that
‘…
It
is trite that in terms of the common law, an applicant, in order to
be successful in an application for rescission, is required
to show
good cause. Generally, an applicant will establish good cause by
giving a reasonable explanation for his or her default
and by showing
that he or she has a
bona fide
defence to the plaintiff's claim which prima facie has some prospect
of success.’
8.
In
Steenkamp
and Others
v
Edcon
Limited
:
‘
The
principle is firmly established in our law that where time limits are
set, whether statutory or in terms of the rules of court,
a court has
an inherent discretion to grant condonation where the interests of
justice demand it and where the reasons for non-compliance
with the
time limits have been explained to the satisfaction of the court. In
Grootboom this Court held that
“
[i]t
is axiomatic that condoning a party's non-compliance with the rules
of court or directions is an indulgence. The court seized
with the
matter has a discretion whether to grant condonation.” ‘
[2]
E. Merits
9.
The undisputed facts reveal that the
summons was served on 7 October 2020 and the Notice of intention to
defend was filed on 20
October 2020. The applicant was placed under
bar on 20 November 2020. The application for default judgement
together with the Notice
of Set Down was served on the applicant via
email on 26 May 2021 and by sheriff on 27 May 2021. The court order
was served upon
the applicant on 13 September, and the affidavit to
the present application was deposed to on 11 October 2021 while the
respondents’
notice to opposed was filed on 18 September.
Good cause
10.
The applicant’s founding affidavit
was deposed to by a Mr Mosito, a senior attorney in the State
Attorney’s office.
Mr Mosito explains that the application was
filed during the height of the COVID restrictions with most staff
operating from home.
Mr Mosito further says he had not received any
communication from the respondents. In their answering affidavit, the
respondents
dealt with the timeline from the time the applicant had
filed its Notice of Intention to Defend and detailed their efforts in
prompting
the applicant to file its Plea. In this regard, the
respondents referred to several e-mails and telephone calls made the
State
attorney, including e-mails directed to Mr Mosito, using the
designated e-mail address furnished by him. For the record, Mr Mosito
denied having received e-mails from the respondents’ attorneys.
The respondents submit that the applicant simply ignored
their
efforts and did nothing.
11.
The respondents further pointed to the
absence of necessary detail in the founding affidavit including the
applicant’s failure
to fully account for its default. It urged
the court to refuse the rescission. It is indeed correct that
the application
was launched when the country was under lock down due
to the restrictions placed to manage the spread of COVID. Having said
that,
the explanation fails to properly account for default and this
includes the entire period of the default, from the time the
applicant
filed its Notice of Intention to Defend.
12.
To illustrate the point, Mr Mosito does not
say whether the e-mail service had stopped completely at the State
Attorney nor does
he state whether the personnel at the State
Attorney had no access to computers. It is unacceptable that the
court is left to figure
out on its own the real reasons the rules
were not adhered to. The applicant has been very conservative in
explaining the default.
This is just one part of the onus that the
applicant must discharge. I now proceed to look at whether the
applicants have a
bona fide
defence.
Bona fide defence
13.
The
applicant says that an inspection
in
loco
conducted in the presence of the respondents’ attorneys
established that the accident occurred in Thaba Tshwane, in Pretoria,
where the presence of road signage was confirmed. It further says
there was no admissible evidence before the court and the default
judgment was granted on the basis of newspaper articles. Finally, the
applicant submits, correctly so, that the respondents are
precluded
from claiming damages arising from the driving of a motor vehicle
directly from it and that it their claim lies with
the Road Accident
Fund (RAF), which was established precisely for that purpose. Section
17 (1) of the Road Accident Fund Act
[3]
,
deals with the fund’s liability. It provides:
‘
The
Fund or an agent shall-
(a)
subject to this Act, in the case of a claim
for compensation under this section arising from the driving of a
motor vehicle where
the identity of the owner or the driver thereof
has been established;
(b)
…
be obliged to compensate any
person (the third party) for any loss or damage which the third party
has suffered as a result of any
bodily injury to himself or herself
or the death of or any bodily injury to any other person, caused by
or arising from the driving
of a motor vehicle by any person at any
place within the Republic, if the injury or death is due to the
negligence or other wrongful
act of the driver or of the owner of the
motor vehicle or of his or her employee in the performance of the
employee's duties as
employee….’
14.
The point was made clear in
Septoo
obo Septoo and Another
v
Road
Accident Fund
:
‘
The
object of the Fund shall be the payment of compensation in accordance
with this Act for loss or damage wrongfully caused by
the driving of
motor vehicles….[6] In Aetna Insurance Co v Minister of
Justice this Court said that the purpose of motor
vehicle insurance
legislation was to remedy the evil ‘that members of the public
who are injured, and the dependants of those
who are killed, through
the negligent driving of motor vehicles may find themselves without
redress against the wrongdoer. If the
driver of the motor vehicle or
his master is without means and is uninsured, the person who has been
injured or his dependants,
if he has been killed, are in fact
remediless and are compelled to bear the loss themselves. To remedy
that evil, the Act provides
a system of compulsory insurance.’’
‘
[4]
F. Discussion and
Conclusion
15.
While I readily agree that the applicant’s
affidavit is seriously lacking in explaining the default, the
ratio
in Septoo with regard to where the respondents’ claim lies, is
decisive of the matter. It is to the Fund that the respondents
should
have looked to for compensation for their damages, not the applicant.
The State has created full a machinery dealing with
the
establishment, financing, and administering the Fund through fuel
levies solely for the purpose of compensating victims of
road
accidents who may have a claim for injuries or death arising from
negligent driving of motor vehicles. On this basis, I am
inclined to
allow the rescission so that the applicant has the opportunity to put
its case before the court. It is also clear to
me that the details
pertaining to liability appear to be way too contentious and the
applicant must be allowed to defend the case.
16.
On the question of prejudice, one cannot
gainsay the financial prejudice that the respondents have been put
through. Firstly, they
have had to contend with legal costs in
applying for default judgement. Secondly, it is more than four years
since the day of the
accident and they still have no answer to their
claim. They will now be compelled to go back to the starting line and
place their
case afresh before the court. The law says the applicant
must show good cause, which requires a cogent explanation for the
default
and demonstration of a bona fide defence. Although a bona
fide defence with prospects of success may shore up a poor or weak
account
for the default, a poor account or explanation for the
default may be considered by the court when exercising its discretion
on
the question of costs. I am persuaded that in allowing the
rescission an appropriate cost order will be an effective tool to
place
the parties in the position they were before the default
judgement was granted. The respondents should not be left out of
pocket
because of conduct that cannot even be properly explained by
its own author.
G. Order
17.
The application for rescission succeeds and
the order granted by this court on 8 September 2021 is hereby set
aside.
17.1 The applicant must
pay the respondents’ costs on a scale between attorney and
client.
NN
BAM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing
:
08 May 2023
Date
of Judgement:
11 July 2023
Appearances:
Applicant’s
Counsel
:
Adv
M Vimbi
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
Respondents
'
Counsel:
Adv
F Ras SC
Adv
A Ras
Instructed
by:
Johan
Oberholzer & Co
c/o
Dyason Inc
Pretoria
[1]
1949(2)
SA 470 (TPD) at 476.
[2]
(CCT29/18)
[2019] ZACC 17
;
2019 (7) BCLR 826
(CC); (2019) 40 ILJ 1731 (CC);
[2019] 11 BLLR 1189
(CC) (30 April 2019), paragraph 26.
[3]
56
of 1996.
[4]
(058/2017)
[2017] ZASCA 164
(29 November 2017), paragraphs 3, 6.
sino noindex
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