Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 740South Africa
Molema and Another v Lethamakga Business Enterprise CC (40024/2018) [2023] ZAGPPHC 740 (29 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 August 2023
Headnotes
judgment granted against the applicant on 20 May 2021. The application is dated 16 August 2021 and was served on the respondent’s attorneys of record on 17 September 2021. The court is not provided with an explanation for why the matter was only set down for hearing on 21 August 2023. [2] The applicants submit that the summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Molema and Another v Lethamakga Business Enterprise CC (40024/2018) [2023] ZAGPPHC 740 (29 August 2023)
Molema and Another v Lethamakga Business Enterprise CC (40024/2018) [2023] ZAGPPHC 740 (29 August 2023)
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sino date 29 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 40024/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 29
August 2023
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
BOTLHALE
MOLEMA
FIRST APPLICANT
LESEDING
ACCOUNT SERVICES CC
SECOND APPLICANT
and
LETHAMAKGA
BUSINESS ENTERPRISE CC
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
and Background
[1]
This is an application for rescission of
summary judgment granted against the applicant on 20 May 2021. The
application is dated
16 August 2021 and was served on the
respondent’s attorneys of record on 17 September 2021. The
court is not provided with
an explanation for why the matter was only
set down for hearing on 21 August 2023.
[2]
The applicants submit that the summary
judgment was granted ‘in default in the absence and without the
knowledge of the applicant.’
The application is consequently
brought in terms of rule 42 of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[3]
It is common cause that the notice of set
down pertaining to the summary judgment application was served by
email on the applicant’s
attorneys of record. The first
applicant contends that it was his understanding that papers would
only be filed at his attorneys
of record’s address as indicated
in the notice of intention to defend the action and in no other way.
[4]
The first applicant explains that he was
initially represented by Morare Thobejane Inc., who filed a notice of
intention to defend.
A summary judgment application was then served
on his attorneys by hand. The summary judgment application was set
down for hearing
on 4 October 2018. Morare Thobejane Attorneys filed
a notice of withdrawal of attorneys of record on 4 October 2018. The
application
for summary judgment was, however, not entertained. The
respondent explains that this application was removed from the roll
for
non-compliance with the judge’s directive.
[5]
The application was again set down for
hearing on 22 January 2019. On 17 January 2019, the applicant caused
a notice to be filed
to record that Mthembu Sibiya Attorneys entered
the proceedings as his attorneys of record. The ‘notice of
entry as attorneys
of record’ indicates that ‘the
Defendants will use the mentioned address as address for service of
documents for the
proceedings’. The attorney’s email
address appears below the physical address, telephone and fax number.
[6]
It is not evident why the summary judgment
application did not proceed on 22 January 2019.
[7]
The summary judgment application was again
set down for hearing on 30 April 2019. The notice of set down was
served by hand on the
applicant’s attorneys. The applicant
filed an opposing affidavit on 26 April 2019. Again, the application
for summary judgment
did not proceed.
[8]
The application was then set down for
hearing on 13 January 2020. It is not apparent from the founding or
answering affidavit why
the application did not proceed on this date.
From the answering affidavit, it is apparent that the summary
judgment application
was also set down for hearing on 28 April 2020 –
but it was removed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. It was again set
down for
hearing on 10 September 2020 but was struck from the roll
because the practice note did not comply with the judge’s
directive.
[9]
The notice of set down for the proceedings
of 20 May 2021, was then served on the applicant by email. The
respondent contends that
the applicant’s attorneys of record
consented to service by email. In substantiation of this averment,
the respondent refers
to a service affidavit wherein an attorney
employed by the respondent’s attorneys of record states the
following under oath:
‘
On
the 13
th
August 2020 our firm’s messenger attempted to serve the Notice
of Set Down for the 10
th
of September on the Defendant’s Attorneys offices. He was told
to serve the Notice of Set Down by email as the Defendant’s
Attorney was not going in to the office and was working from home.
The Notice of Set Down was therefore served electronically.
Due to the fact that the
Defendant’s Attorney has therefore consented to electronic
service, the Notice of Set Down for the
20
th
of May 2021
was served electronically on the 9
th
of October 2020.’
[10]
No confirmatory affidavit by the unnamed
messenger is attached to the attorney’s service affidavit.
The respondent’s
case
[11]
The respondent raised several points
in
limine
. The respondent avers that the
application is based on hearsay, in that the applicant avers his
attorneys of record were not aware
of the hearing date, but he failed
to attach a confirmatory affidavit to support this contention. The
confirmatory affidavit was
only attached to the replying affidavit.
The respondent contends this should not be condoned because the
applicant had to make
out his case in the founding papers.
[12]
The
respondent also avers that the application for rescission is the
wrong procedure. Since the applicant filed an affidavit opposing
the
application for summary judgment, it was not granted by default. The
order cannot be rescinded. The respondent relies on
De
Beer v ABSA Bank Ltd,
[1]
where
a Full Court of this Division found that rescission of a summary
judgment cannot be claimed under Rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform
Rules
of Court when neither a defendant nor his legal representative
appeared at the hearing but had submitted an affidavit opposing
summary judgment.
Discussion
[13]
Rule 4A of the Uniform Rules of Court
stipulates that the service of subsequent documents and notices,
after the service of process
as provided for in Rule 4(1)(a) in any
proceedings, may be sent by facsimile or electronic mail to the
addresses provided. The
Rule contemplates that a litigant may, in
terms of Rules 6(5)(b), 6(5)(d), 6(5)(i), 17(3), 19(3) and 34(8),
furnish an address
at which service may take place in one or more of
the following:
i.
by hand at the physical address provided;
ii.
by registered post to the address provided;
and
iii.
by facsimile or electronic mail to the
respective addresses provided.
[14]
Rule 4A(3) provides that:
‘
Chapter
III, Part 2 of the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act,
2002 (Act 25 of 2002) (the ECTA) is applicable to service
by
facsimile or electronic mail.’
[15]
It is apposite to note that s 26 of the
ECTA determines that an acknowledgement of receipt of a data message
is not necessary to
give legal effect to that message.
[16]
Rule 4A corresponds with
s 44(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
. This section provides as follows:
‘
In
any civil proceedings, any summons, writ, warrant, rule, order,
notice, document or other process of a Superior Court, or any
other
communication which by any law, rule or agreement of parties is
required or directed to be served or executed upon any person,
who
lived at the house or place of a boat or business of any person, in
order that such person may be affected thereby, may be
transmitted by
facsimile, or by means of any other electronic medium, to the person
who must serve or execute such process or communication.’
[17]
By including a fax number and an email
address in the notice of entry of attorneys of record, the defendant
provided the e-mail
address as an address where he would receive
service of documents.
[18]
The judge considering the summary judgment
application, was aware of the fact that the notice of set down was
served by email to
the respondent’s attorney of record. It can
thus not be found that the judge was unaware of the position when he
considered
the summary judgment application.
[19]
I
am of the view that the issue at hand was definitively dealt with and
decided on in
De
Beer v ABSA Bank, supra.
Meyer J, as he then was, explained that where an opposing affidavit
was filed in a summary judgment application, the mere fact
that a
defendant/respondent and his legal representative were absent when a
summary judgment application was heard, does not mean
that the
application was granted ‘in the absence of the appellant’
within the meaning of
Rule 42.
[2]
[20]
The
court considering the application for summary judgment was obligated
to consider the opposing affidavit filed on the applicant's
behalf in
considering whether to grant summary judgment.
[3]
In
Morris
v Autoquip (Pty) Ltd,
[4]
Le Roux J said:
‘
What
is more, a court is not entitled, on the authorities quoted, to
ignore an affidavit submitted by a defendant in opposition
to an
application for summary judgment. Because of this fact it cannot, in
my view, be said that the defendant is in default when
he submitted
an affidavit opposing summary judgment although ideally, he would
have wished to have been represented by counsel.
It may even be that
council could have swayed the judge to make a different order had he
appeared on behalf of the defendant, but
this is not the test. There
is no “default” in the sense in which the word is used in
the
Katritsis
case. The matter differs
toto caelo
from that of a trial action. I therefore hold that there was no
default and that the application brought for a rescission of the
judgment is the wrong procedure.’
[21]
In
De Beer
,
Meyer JA concluded:
‘
It
can also, in my view, not be said that summary judgment was granted
in the absence of a defendant when he submitted an affidavit
opposing
summary judgment. In this instance the appellant opposed the summary
judgment application by way of an affidavit submitted
to the court on
the merits of the matter. The summary judgment granted against the
defendant is consequently final and
res
judicata
. The application brought for
the rescission of the summary judgment is, therefore, the wrong
procedure. My conclusion would have
been different had the appellant
not filed an affidavit opposing the summary judgment application. In
that event he could have
applied for the rescission of the judgment
under
rule 42
, but he would have been limited to the grounds stated
in sub-rule (1).’
[22]
In casu
,
the applicants have already, through its opposing affidavit, placed
the facts they wanted the court to consider before the court
considering the summary judgment application. In circumstances where
the notice of set down was served by email to the address
provided by
the current applicant’s then-attorneys of record,
Rule 42
does
not find application. This court cannot sit as a court of appeal. The
application stands to be dismissed.
[23]
The applicants also brought the application
in terms of the common law. On the papers as it stands, no case is
made out for rescission
in terms of the common law. The applicants do
not disclose a
bona fide
defence.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
It will be emailed to
the parties/their legal representatives as a courtesy gesture.
For the applicant:
Adv. O. Lekete
Instructed by:
KBT INCORPORATED
For the respondent:
Adv. F. F. Müller
Instructed by:
HACK, STUPEL AND
ROSS ATTORNEYS
Date of the
hearing:
23 August 2023
Date of judgment:
29 August 2023
[1]
(25071/2012)
[2016] ZAGPPHC 325.
[2]
Supra
,
para [12].
[3]
Ibid
.
[4]
1985
(4) SA 398
(W) 400.
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