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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2023] ZAGPPHC 1192
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## Road Accident Fund v Newnet Properties (Pty) Ltd t/a Sunshine Hospital [Manzhini] (32351/2020)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1192 (15 September 2023)
Road Accident Fund v Newnet Properties (Pty) Ltd t/a Sunshine Hospital [Manzhini] (32351/2020)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1192 (15 September 2023)
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sino date 15 September 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTH GAUTENG HIGH
COURT)
Case number: 32351/2020
Date : 15 September 2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST
TO OTHERS JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 15/09/2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
Applicant
And
NEWNET PROPERTIES
(PTY) LTD T/A
SUNSHINE
HOSPITAL [MANZHINI]
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MINNAAR AJ,
[1]
The applicant seeks an order in the
following terms:
1.
Condoning the late filing of the rescission
application;
2.
Rescinding the order of this court dated 9
December 2020; and
3.
Costs in the event of opposition.
[2]
On 9 December 2020, as per the order by
Motha AJ, the respondent obtained judgment against the applicant in
the following terms:
1.
Judgment in the amount of R1 544 091.44;
2.
Interest in [sic] in the amount of 7% per
annum from the 14th day after judgment to date of final payment;
3.
Costs of suit to be taxed.
[3]
The order was granted by default as the
applicant failed to defend the action or to ensure appearance on 9
December 2020.
[4]
The application is premised on the
provisions of Rule 42(1) of the Uniform Rules of Court (‘the
Rules’), section 173
of the Constitution of the Republic of
South Africa, Act No. 108 of 1996 (‘the Constitution’)
and the common law relating
to the rescission of judgment.
[5]
At the commencement of proceedings the
applicant’s counsel indicated that the applicant is not
persisting with reliance on
section 173 of the Constitution.
[6]
Before the applicant can enter the fray of
the rescission application, the applicant need to convince this court
that the applicant
is entitled to the condonation sought in prayer 1
of the notice of motion.
[7]
From the answering affidavit it is evident
that, following an urgent application brought by the applicant under
case number 60330/2021
against the respondent, the parties came to an
agreement, and this agreement was then recorded in an order of this
court on 3 December
2021.
[8]
Of relevance hereto, the court order,
granted on 3 December 2021, provided that the applicant will file, by
no later than 18 January
2022, applications for the rescission of any
of the judgments relevant to the urgent application insofar as the
applicant disputes
liability on such orders.
[9]
It is common cause that the judgment the
applicant is seeking to rescind herein, was one of the judgments
referred to in the order
dated 3 December 2021.
[10]
Applicant therefore knew, since 3 December
2021, that condonation herein should be applied for by no later than
18 January 2022.
[11]
In the answering affidavit the respondent
took the applicant to task for its failure to apply for condonation
in terms of the 3
December 2021 order.
[12]
Apart from praying for condonation, the
applicant failed to make any avernments in support of condonation in
the founding affidavit.
The founding affidavit in this rescission
application was deposed to on 27 January 2022 by Me Mmalemoko Sejeng,
a manager: post
settlement in the employ of the applicant. The
founding affidavit in support of the Rule 27(1) application was
deposed to by Me
Sunelle Eloff, an attorney and director of the
applicant’s attorney, on 18 January 2022. It is inconceivable
that knowledge
of the pending Rule 27(1) was not available on 27
January 2022 when the founding affidavit herein was deposed to. The
election
to omit same from the founding affidavit, raises serious
questions with this court as to how serious the applicant is to
correct
the alleged wrongs it complains about.
[13]
Having had full knowledge that there is a
pending Rule 27(1) application, which outcome would have a direct
bearing on the rescission
application, the applicant nonetheless
proceeded with the rescission application and merely asked for
condonation without any evidence
in support of same in the founding
affidavit.
[14]
It is only in the replying affidavit that
the applicant addressed the order of 3 December 2021. This was done
to answer to the allegations
contained in the answering affidavit.
According to the applicant, an extension of time was sought from the
respondent, but the
respondent was not amenable to accomodate the
applicant with the indulgence sought. The applicant then proceeded to
deliver a formal
application in terms of the provisions of Rule 27(1)
for condonation, but that application is still pending.
[15]
In terms of the provisions of Rule 27 of
the Rules, and in the absence of agreement between the parties, the
court may, upon application
on notice, and on good cause shown, make
an order extending or abridging any time prescribed by the rules or
by an order of court
or fixed by an order extending or abridging any
time for doing any act or taking any steps in connection with any
proceedings of
any nature whatsoever upon such terms as to it seems
meet.
[16]
In terms of section 173 of the
Constitution, this court has the inherent powers to protect and
regulate its own process, taking
into account the interests of
justice. I am of the opinion that the provisions of Rule 27(1) cannot
interfere with such inherent
powers bestowed on this court.
[17]
Having regard to the aforesaid, and
applying the principle of interest of justice, it still follows that
the applicant had to make
out its case for condonation in the
founding affidavit. Applicant failed in this regard.
[18]
Even if the trite principle, that all
necessary allegations upon which the applicant relies must appear in
its founding affidavit
is ignored, and shifting the focus to the
contents of the replying affidavit, the applicant still fails to make
out a case for
the condonation sought.
[19]
In
Ferris v
Firstrand Bank Ltd
2014 (3) SA 39
(CC)
at 43G to 44A it was stated that condonation cannot be had for the
mere asking. In
Bertie van
Zyl (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister for Safety and Security and
Others
2010 (2) SA 181
(CC) at
paragraph 14, the Constitutional Court held that lateness is not the
only consideration in determining whether condonation
may be granted.
It held further that the test for condonation is whether it is in the
interests of justice to grant it. As the
interests-of-justice test is
a requirement for condonation, the applicant's prospects of success
and the importance of the issue
to be determined are relevant
factors. I pause to state that the facts of this rescission
application are not complicated and as
such cannot be regarded as
‘important issues to be determined’. On the prospects of
success, the applicant however
faces an uphill battle.
[20]
Summons of the action was served on 27 July
2020 and the applicant failed to defend the action. On 9 November
2020 the notice of
set down was served and the set down date of 9
December 2020 was thus brought to the attention of the applicant. All
of this is
common cause.
[21]
Despite
having had full knowledge of the action, the applicant elected not to
defend same. The reason behind the election not to
partake in the
proceedings, and to place reliance on the court’s judicial
oversight are exactly the same as those enunciated
in the judgment by
Michau AJ in the unreported case of
Road
Accident Fund v Dhekiswe Janet Ngobeni obo Phelela
[1]
.
This judgment was handed up in court by counsel for the applicant. I
am in agreement with Michau AJ
[2]
that the applicant’s actions (or lack thereof) leads one to the
ineluctable conclusion that there still was a deliberate
decision not
to attend court.
[22]
In
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Comission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture,Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including
Organs of State and Others
[2021] ZACC
28
, at paragraph 25, the Constitutional Court stated:
“
Our
jurisprudence is clear: where a litigant, given notice of the case
against them and given suifficient opportunities to participate,
elects to be absent, this absence does not fall within the scope of
the requirement of rule 42(1)(a). And, it clearly cannot have
the
effect of turning the order granted in absentia, into one erroneously
granted.”
[23]
By these ascertions the applicant still has
not reached the pinacle of the hill as the applicant made substantial
payment of the
default judgment amount and, in doing so
acquiesced to the judgment. In the applicant’s own words, in
paragraph 23.5
of the founding affidavit, it is stated:
“
Consequently,
the non-attendance by the applicant at any court proceedings is not
wilful or an abuse of the process nor is it aimed
at frustrating the
fair, reasonable, and just settlement of any claim. It is for this
reason that the applicant has paid a portion
of the claim, which was
fair, reasonable and statutorily compliant.”
[24]
In
Lodhi 2
Property Investments CC v Bondev Developments
2007(6) SA 87 at paragraph 27 the following is stated:
“
Similarly,
in a case where a plaintiff is procedurally entitled to judgment in
the absence of the defendant, the judgment if granted
cannot be said
to have been granted erroneously in the light of a subsequently
disclosed defence. A Court which grants a judgment
by default like
the judgments we are presently concerned with, does not grant the
judgment on the basis that the defendant does
not have a defence: it
grants the judgment on the basis that the defendant has been notified
of the plaintiff's claim as required
by the Rules, that the
defendant, not having given notice of an intention to defend, is not
defending the matter and that the plaintiff
is in terms of the Rules
entitled to the order sought. The existence or non-existence of a
defence on the merits is an irrelevant
consideration and, if
subsequently disclosed, cannot transform a validly obtained judgment
into an erroneous judgment.”
[25]
The defences relied on by the applicant was
at the applicant’s disposal at the time the default judgment
was granted and as
such same cannot now, subsequently be disclosed
and relied upon. Applicant has no prospects of success should it be
permitted to
defend the action.
[26]
I cannot find any support in the
applicant’s case that the judgment was erroneously sought
and/or granted in its absence and
as such the provisions of Rule 42
does not prevail herein.
[27]
Equally
so, the applicable principles in the common law does not assist the
applicant at all. Insofar as the application is considered
on common
law grounds, the applicant must show sufficient cause to rescind the
judgment. This means that there must be a reasonable
explanation for
the default,
[3]
and the
applicant must show that the applicant has a
bona
fide
defence that exists, which
prima
facie
has some prospects of success.
[4]
The applicant failed to meet these requirements.
[28]
Respondent is seeking punitive costs
against the applicant. The manner in which the applicant approached
this application for rescission
is frowned upon, as the rescission
application was pursued without having complied with the order to
apply for condonation. Applicant
further has elected not to defend
the action despite proper service and has no prospects of success in
defending the action. As
such, there is no basis why punitive costs
should not be ordered.
[29]
Consequently, I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs on the scale as between
attorney and
client.
Minnaar AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Heard
on:
4
September 2023
For
the Applicant / Plaintiff:
Adv.
C Rip
Instructed
by:
Malatji
& Co Attorneys
For
the Defendant:
Adv.
M van Rooyen
Instructed
by:
Kritzinger
Attorneys
Date
of Judgment:
15
September 2023
[1]
[1]
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria, case no 35926/2017
[2]
Paragraph
16 of the judgment
[3]
De Wet
v Western Bank Ltd
1972(2) SA 1031 (A);
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003
(6) SA 1 (SCA)
[4]
Grant
Plumbers (Pty) Ltd
1949
(2) SA 470
(O) at 476
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