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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## E.L v Verster-Roos Incorporated (Pty) Ltd (25888/2021)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 634 (31 July 2023)
E.L v Verster-Roos Incorporated (Pty) Ltd (25888/2021)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 634 (31 July 2023)
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sino date 31 July 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 25888/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE:
31/7/2023
E[...]
L[...]
Plaintiff / Respondent
AND
VERSTER-ROOS
INCORPORATED (PTY) LTD
Defendant / Excipient
JUDGMENT
H
G A SNYMAN AJ
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an exception by the defendant /
excipient (“
the excipient
”)
against the plaintiff’s particulars of claim on the basis that
it does not disclose a cause of action.
[2]
The excipient is the plaintiff’s
former attorney of record in her divorce action against her husband.
It is common cause that
the plaintiff is still married in community
of property with her husband and that the divorce action has not been
finalised.
[3]
The plaintiff issued summons against the
excipient on 26 May 2021. She claims damages from the excipient in
the amount of R1,317,515
plus interest and costs on the attorney and
client scale.
# THE PLAINTIFF’S
PARTICULARS OF CLAIM
THE PLAINTIFF’S
PARTICULARS OF CLAIM
[4]
The plaintiff’s claim is based
thereon that she on or about 15 April 2018 entered a partially oral,
partially written agreement
with the excipient. In terms of this
agreement, the plaintiff would render legal services to the plaintiff
in respect of her divorce
matter and the excipient would at all
material times act in the best interest of the plaintiff.
[5]
The plaintiff alleges that the excipient
failed and or neglected and or refused to attend to the plaintiff’s
matter in terms
of the agreement and is in breach of the contract.
The basis for this is that she allegedly informed the excipient that
her husband
would be retiring and drawing his pension fund “
soon
”
and that she would be entitled to half of the capital amount of this
pension as a result of the marriage in community of
property.
Moreover that she “
might
”
forfeit same as soon as the benefit is paid out before the divorce
was finalised. Plaintiff requested the excipient to “
act
and inform the pension fund of the position
”.
The excipient allegedly breached the legal services agreement in that
the excipient failed, refused and or neglected to
inform the pension
fund of the position. In the alternative, the excipient failed to
bring the necessary application to have the
pension fund frozen until
such time that the divorce was finalised. As a result of the breach,
the plaintiff allegedly suffered
damages in that the pension fund
moneys were paid out to her husband prior to finalisation of the
divorce matter.
[6]
The plaintiff pleads that the pension fund paid
out an amount of R754,010.92 to her husband, being one third of the
capital amount.
It is pleaded that although the capital amount cannot
at this stage be calculated exactly, the reasonable inference
to be
drawn is that the total capital amount at the time of the
“
exit”
would have been three times the amount paid out. It is pleaded that
fifty present of that would be R1,317,515.00. This is the damage
that
the plaintiff allegedly suffered. In the plaintiff’s rule 23(1)
notice, the excipient joined issue with the plaintiff’s
calculations. Excipient stated that
if one third payment is
R754,010.92 and it is assumed that this is one third of the pension,
the full amount of the pension would
be R2,262,032.76. Half of this
is R1,131,016.38, not
R1,317,515.00. This issue
was, however, not raised as part of the exception and is therefore
not before this court.
# THE LAW IN RELATION TO
EXCEPTIONS AGAINST PLEADINGS ON THE BASIS THAT THEY DO NOT SUSTAIN A
CAUSE OF ACTION
THE LAW IN RELATION TO
EXCEPTIONS AGAINST PLEADINGS ON THE BASIS THAT THEY DO NOT SUSTAIN A
CAUSE OF ACTION
[7]
The legal principles applicable to
exceptions based on the grounds that a pleading fails to sustain a
cause of action, is trite.
[8]
In the matter of
Kahn
v Stewart and others
it
was held that:
“
In
my view, it is the duty of the Court, when an exception is taken to a
pleading, first to see if there is a point of law to be
decided which
will dispose of the case in whole or in part. If there is not, then
it must see if there is any embarrassment, which
is real and such as
cannot be met by the asking of particulars, as the result of the
faults in pleading to which exception is taken.
And, unless the
excipient can satisfy the Court that there is such a point of law or
such real embarrassment, then the exception
should be dismissed.
”
[1]
[9]
In
Jugwanth
v Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd
,
[2]
Gorvin JA held that:
“
[3]
The approach to an exception that a pleading does not disclose a
cause of action was reiterated
by Marais JA in Vermeulen v Goose
Valley Investments (Pty) Ltd:
‘
It
is trite law that an exception that a cause of action is not
disclosed by a pleading cannot succeed unless it is shown that
ex
facie
the allegations made by a
plaintiff and any document upon which his or her cause of action may
be based, the claim is (not may be)
bad in law.’
An
exception sets out why the excipient says that the facts pleaded by a
plaintiff are insufficient. Only if the facts pleaded by
a plaintiff
could not, on any basis, as a matter of law, result in a judgment
being granted against the cited defendant, can an
exception succeed.
Only those facts alleged in the particulars of claim and any other
facts agreed to by the parties can be taken
into account.
”
# THE
EXCIPIENT’S GROUNDS OF EXCEPTION
THE
EXCIPIENT’S GROUNDS OF EXCEPTION
[10]
The excipient raised two grounds of
exception, both on the basis that the plaintiff’s particulars
of claim do not disclose
a cause of action.
[11]
The first of exception is that the
plaintiff suffered no damages. This is based on section 7(7)(a) of
the Divorce Act 70 of 1979
(“
the
Divorce Act
”) which provides
that:
“
In
determination of the patrimonial benefits to which the parties to any
divorce action may be entitled, the pension interest of
a party
shall, subject to paragraphs (b) and (c), be deemed to be part of his
assets.
”
[12]
The argument is that the value of the
defendant’s pension fund would therefore be included as an
asset in the joint estate
for purposes of determining the value of
the estate on divorce. Based on the authority of
De
Kock v Jacobsen and another
1999
(4) SA 346 (W) at 349G-H
, it was argued
that the accrued right to the pension forms part of the joint estate
of spouses married in community of property.
Under the circumstances,
the accrued pension benefit is an asset in the joint estate, just as
the pension interest was deemed to
be an asset in the joint estate.
There was therefore no loss to the plaintiff and accordingly no
damages when a portion of the
pension was paid out. The excipient
argues that a cause of action founded on damages as a result of
breach of contract can never
be sustained (on any interpretation)
without damages. It is in this regard common cause that there is no
allegation in the particulars
of claim that the pension benefit has
been unlawfully alienated since it was paid out.
[13]
The excipient also relies on sections 37D
of the Pension Funds Act 24 of 1956 (“
the
Pension Funds Act
”), which
provides that a registered fund may deduct from a member’s
pension interest any amount assigned from such benefit
to a
non-member spouse in terms of a decree of divorce granted under
section 7(8)(a)
of the
Divorce Act. It
was in this regard argued that
entitlement of a spouse to payment of a portion of a member’s
pension interest by a pension
fund requires three things, namely: The
existence of a pension interest; A determination by the divorce court
that the non-member
spouse is entitled to the assignment of a portion
of the pension interest; and a decree of divorce.
[14]
It was argued that none of these factors
are present in this instance. The pension interest has been converted
to a pension benefit,
which has accrued to the joint estate as an
asset therein. The excipient therefore concludes that the plaintiff
has suffered no
damages based on the interpretation of the
particulars of claim and that the first ground of exception ought to
be upheld.
[15]
The second ground of exception is that the
plaintiff’s cause of action is premised on the fact that the
excipient was negligent
in executing of its obligations under the
legal services agreement. The plaintiff alleges that the excipient
breached the legal
services agreement by neglecting to bring an
application to have the pension fund frozen, pending finalisation of
the divorce.
The plaintiff argues in this regard that the existence
of a marriage in community of property, in itself, does not entitle
the
plaintiff to a portion of her husband’s pension fund
interest, or to the “
freezing of
the pension fund
”. To do so would
have amounted to interdictory relief as part of which any applicant
had to plead and satisfy the requirements
of an interim interdict,
namely that the applicant has a
prima
facie
right, a well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief is not
granted, that the balance of convenience is
in favour of granting of
the interim relief, and that there is no other satisfactory remedy.
[16]
The excipient excepts to the particulars of
claim on the basis that the plaintiff does not plead any facts, which
gave rise to a
prima facie
right for the freezing of the husband’s pension fund, or any of
the other requirements for interdictory relief. In addition,
that on
the plaintiff’s version only a portion of the pension fund has
been paid out and no basis is laid for the assertion
that the pension
benefit is payable to the full extent, entitling the plaintiff to
half of the proceeds of the “
capital
amount
”.
[17]
Under the circumstances it was submitted
that on any interpretation of the particulars of claim, the plaintiff
has not made out
a case for breach of the legal services agreement,
or for negligence.
# ARGUMENTS
ON BEHALF OF THE PLAINTIFF
ARGUMENTS
ON BEHALF OF THE PLAINTIFF
[18]
It was submitted on behalf of the plaintiff
that the exception was instituted as an abuse of process to have the
merits heard before
the matter proceed to trial, in an attempt to
discourage the plaintiff from pursuing the case due to the financial
implications
it may have. It was done to try and force the plaintiff
to drop the case on the basis that she cannot litigate on equal
footing
with the excipient who can afford to bring “
vexatious
exceptions to the pleadings in hopes of dragging the matter out as
long as possible”
and once again,
as in the past, act to the detriment of the plaintiff’s
financial position.
[19]
The plaintiff therefore asks that the
exception be set aside and that punitive costs on a scale of attorney
and client be awarded
against the excipient.
[20]
There are, however, no facts before this
court based upon which the above submissions can be made. This court
will therefore not
entertain them.
[21]
In any event, even if plaintiff’s
unfounded suspicions, and I do not put it any higher than that, are
correct, they have no
relevance for the present inquiry. As Schreiner
JA held in
Tsose v Minister of Justice and Others
1951 (3) SA 10
(A) at 17G-H
: “
For just as the best
motive will not cure an otherwise illegal arrest so the worst motive
will not render an otherwise legal arrest
illegal.”
In my
view this equally applies to the present matter.
The
exception is either good or bad, whatever the excipients motive was
in bringing it.
[22]
The plaintiff’s argument
is further
that the particulars of claim set out the material facts so
sufficiently and with particularity that the excipient “
is
completely aware of exactly the case it is to meet
”.
Moreover, that the exception strikes at the heart of the
facta
probantia
, which the excipient alleges
would not be sufficient to sustain a cause of action. In this regard
the plaintiff relies on the difference
between the
facta
probanda
and the
facta
probantia
, with reference to the
well-known authority of
Jowell v
Bramwell-Jones and others
1988
(1) SA 836
(W) at 93A-B
where it was
held that:
“
A
distinction must be drawn between the
facta
probanda,
or primary factual allegations
which every plaintiff must make, and the
facta
probantia,
which are the secondary
allegations upon which the plaintiff will rely in support of his
primary factual allegations. Generally
speaking, the latter are
matters for particulars for trial and even then are limited. For the
rest, they are matters for evidence.
”
[23]
The plaintiff argues that the excipient has
failed to dispose of the onus which it bears by limiting itself to a
single interpretation
of the particulars of claim, as well as not
addressing the cause of action but rather the facts which should
sustain the cause
of action.
[24]
In so far as the damages are concerned, the
plaintiff argues that the excipient’s exception that an
alienation is not pleaded
is patently incorrect. This is because, so
the argument goes, in action proceedings the plaintiff is not
strictly bound to the
allegations made in the particulars of claim,
but is at liberty to lead oral evidence in the main action, “
which
will of course prove the fact that alienation has already occurred
”.
It is submitted this will come out in the trial stage of the action,
and is not to be adjudicated upon at the pleading
stage.
[25]
The plaintiff’s criticism is further
that the excipient is essentially telling the court that in its view
there are no prospects
of success and accordingly the exception
should stand, rather than making out a case that the pleadings
disclose no cause of action.
[26]
It is also argued in the heads of argument
on behalf of the plaintiff that since the exception was brought
approximately three and
a half months after the summons was duly
served, it was “
greatly out of
time
”. Since no condonation was
sought, the excipient is not properly before court and this court
accordingly cannot be vested
with jurisdiction to hear this matter.
This argument was correctly not pursued in oral argument before this
court. It is trite
that an exception is a pleading and, in the case
of an exception to a declaration or combined summons, a notice of bar
in terms
of rule 26 is required before the plaintiff can object to
the exception on the ground that it was delivered out of time.
# DISCUSSION
DISCUSSION
[27]
I agree with the excipient that the
particulars of claim fail to disclose a cause of action. The case as
pleaded is that the plaintiff
suffered damages because one third of
the pension was allowed to be paid out and the fact that the
excipient did not take steps
to freeze the remainder of the pension
fund. I agree with the submissions on behalf of the excipient that
the mere fact that the
pension benefit was paid out does not mean
that the plaintiff suffered damages in view of the provisions of the
Divorce Act referred
to. What happened is that this “
asset
”
was merely taken out of the joint estate’s one pocket and put
into the other.
[28]
Based on the facts as pleaded, the joint
estate was not diminished by this being done. The arguments on behalf
of the plaintiff
cannot be sustained that this is merely the
facta
probantia
and not the
facta
probanda
. The argument that it will be
shown at the trial by the evidence that there was indeed an
alienation subsequent to the amount being
paid out cannot be upheld.
This will be an entirely different cause of action than the one now
pleaded. The excipient will accordingly
be entitled to raise an
objection if such evidence is presented.
[29]
In so far as the remaining capital of the
pension fund is concerned also in that regard no valid cause of
action is pleaded, which
shows that the plaintiff has suffered
damages. On the facts as pleaded the pension is still held by the
pension fund and without
more it cannot be said that the plaintiff
suffered damages since that amount has not been frozen. In any event,
no facts are pleaded,
which shows that there were grounds for the
interdict that the plaintiff pleads the excipient ought to have
applied for.
[30]
In the result, only taking into account the
facts alleged in the particulars of claim and the other facts agreed
to by the parties,
as I must, I find that the pleaded case could not,
on any basis, as a matter of law, result in a judgment being granted
against
the plaintiff against the excipient. Both grounds of
exception are therefore upheld.
# COSTS
COSTS
[31]
I see no reason in this matter for the
costs not to follow the event.
[32]
In the result, the following order is made.
# ORDER
ORDER
1.
The exception is upheld;
2.
The plaintiff is afforded ten days within
which to file amended particulars of claim that address and cure the
grounds of exception,
failing which the plaintiff’s claim
against the defendant is dismissed;
3.
In the event that the amended particulars
of claim fails to address or cure the grounds of exception, the
defendant is entitled
to approach the court on the same papers, duly
supplemented with the amended particulars of claim, for an order that
the action
against the defendant be dismissed;
4.
The plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs
of the exception;
5.
In the event that the action is dismissed,
the plaintiff is ordered to pay the costs of the action.
H
G A SNYMAN
Acting
Judge of the High Court of
South
Africa, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Heard
in open court: 5 June 2023
Delivered
and uploaded to CaseLines: 31 July 2023
Appearances:
For
the plaintiff / respondent:
Adv XT van Niekerk
Instructed
by Riana Brown Attorneys
For the defendant /
excipient:
Adv T Odendaal
Instructed
by Savage Jooste & Adams Inc
[1]
1942
(CPD) 386 and 391
.
[2]
2021
JDR 2056 (SCA) at paragraph [3]
.
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