Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1821South Africa
Mosuwe v Minister of Police and Another (18229/2011) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1821 (23 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
11 August 2021
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mosuwe v Minister of Police and Another (18229/2011) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1821 (23 October 2023)
Mosuwe v Minister of Police and Another (18229/2011) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1821 (23 October 2023)
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sino date 23 October 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 18229/2011
Date:
23 October 2023
(1) REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES / NO
(3) REVISED
DATE: 2023/10/23
In the matter between:
MALESELA
FRANS MOSUWE
Applicant
and
MINISTER OF POLICE
First
Respondent
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL Second
Respondent
SERVICES
JUDGMENT
MABUSE J
[1] This matter conflates
two applications. The first one is an application to condone the
Applicant’s failure to comply with
rule 49(1)(b) of the Uniform
Rules of Court (the rules) regarding the order and judgment (the
judgment) of this court handed down
on 11 August 2021 within the
period set forth in that rule. The second one is an application for
leave to appeal to either the
Full Court of the Gauteng Division or
the Supreme Court of Appeal against a refusal by this Court to
condone the Applicant’s
late service of a notice and for
non-compliance with the provisions of section 3(1)(a) of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings
Against Certain Organs of State Act
40 of 2002 (the Act) and for leave to pursue his claim against the
Respondents with pleadings
already filed. Both these applications are
opposed by the Respondents.
[2] By agreement between
the parties the two applications were heard together. The parties
informed the court that it could made
determinations on the
applications as it pleased. It was made clear to the parties that if
the application for condonation was
unsuccessful, the application for
leave to appeal would automatically fail.
[3] In its consideration
of the application of the condonation, the court will have regard to,
inter alia, the following factors:
[3.1] the explanation
tendered for the delay.
[3.2] the degree of
noncompliance.
[3.3] the prospect of
success.
[3.4] I the importance of
the case.
[4] It is unnecessary to
set out the reasons for this Court’s judgment both on the
merits of the judgment and the order of
the Court in which it refused
the Applicant’s condonation application. The facts which led to
this application for condonation
appear from the founding affidavit
of Mr Sello Isaac Makhafola (Mr Makhafola), the Applicant’s
attorney of record. But there
are certain allegations by the said
attorney which should be dealt with. These facts disclose not only
ignorance of the Rules of
Court but an incredible degree of
negligence by an attorney in the prosecution of an appeal of the
Applicant.
[5] In his founding
affidavit, Mr Makhafola testified that he received the judgment on 11
August 2021. Upon receipt of the judgment
and, believing that counsel
would attend to the brief within the time limits set out by the
rules, he emailed it immediately to
his counsel with instructions
that counsel should proceed to prepare an application for leave to
appeal. In terms of rule 49(1)(b)
the said application for leave to
appeal was supposed to be lodged within 15 court days reckoned from
12 August 2021, failing which
the Applicant’s attorneys would
be obliged, in terms of rule 27, to lodge an application for
condonation.
[6] He was in court on 30
August 2021. He was busy attending to trials for the whole month of
August 2021. As a result, he was only
able to consider the judgment
after August 2021, which means only in September 2021.
[7] On 1 September 2021
he called counsel to find out if counsel had emailed to him the
application for leave to appeal and, if
not, how far he was with its
preparation. There is no indication in his testimony whether he was
able, on this occasion, to speak
to counsel. After 1 September 2021,
he made several calls to counsel, without any success. Counsel was
not available. His testimony
is silent on this aspect. One can only
surmise that he did not speak to counsel for the whole of September
2021, until the first
week of October 2021.
[8] In the first week of
October 2021, by which time the period mentioned in rule 49(1)(b)
would have passed and during a pre-trial
conference, he enquired from
counsel whether he had prepared the application for leave to appeal.
Counsel only promised to forward
to him the draft of the application
on that evening. Counsel never did. Nowhere in his affidavit does he
state that he had advised
counsel that the matter was urgent. He also
does not state that he advised counsel that the time for lodging the
application for
leave to appeal had expired. Quite obviously he did
not put any pressure on counsel to expedite the preparation of the
application
for leave to appeal. He certainly did not regard this
matter as urgent. He called counsel again on subsequent days, but
counsel
was not available. So, counsel never returned his calls.
There is no evidence in this regard.
[9] On 21 October 2021 he
briefed another counsel to prepare the application for leave to
appeal. This new counsel, Adv Kwinda,
provided him with a draft
application for leave to appeal on 13 November 2021, even then only
for the purposes of perusal and discussion.
It is difficult to fathom
out what exactly took counsel so long, from 21 October 2021 to 13
November 2021, to prepare a draft for
purposes of perusal and
discussion. No explanation has been furnished in this regard. It was
while he was perusing the draft application
for leave to appeal that
it dawned on him that an application for condonation was necessary.
The impression that the attorney has
given as to when it dawned upon
him that an application for condonation was required, constitutes a
convincing indication that
the attorney was not even aware of the
provisions of rule 49(1)(b) or, if he was aware of those provisions,
he simply ignored them.
[10] On 26 January 2022,
his counsel provided him with the final application for leave to
appeal and having done so, requested him
to proceed with an
application for condonation. He could only complete the preparation
of the application for condonation on 30
January 2022. That is the
current application before court. Still, no explanation has been
furnished why it took his second counsel
so long to prepare an
application for condonation, from 13 November 2021 to 26 January
2022.
[11] He submits, based on
the aforegoing, that:
[11.1] he has done
everything to comply with the rules of this court but was only
disappointed; by his first counsel;
[11.2] the Applicant was
aware of the need to deliver an application for condonation and that
he would proceed with same when time
came;
[11.3] the delay was
caused by his previous counsel who had undertaken to prepare the
application for leave to appeal but who failed
to do so.
[12] Eventually Mr
Makhafola failed not only to comply with the requirements of rule
49(1)(b) but also to deliver the application
for leave to appeal
within a reasonable time of 1 September 2021. He attributes the delay
to the conduct of his first counsel and
his busy schedule as an
attorney.
[13] According to Mr
Makhafola, on 11 August 2021 he emailed immediately a copy of the
judgment to counsel with instructions to
counsel to proceed with the
preparation of the application for leave to appeal
[14] Mr Makhafola states
further that: “
I submit that I believed that counsel on
brief will attend to prepare leave to appeal in order for us to
submit same within the
prescribed time limit, however it turned out
not to be the case.”
No reasons have been
furnished in his evidence why he believed that counsel on brief would
prepare the application for leave to
appeal on time. The buck stops
with the attorney. An attorney does not brief counsel to do something
and thereafter adopt a supine
attitude with the hope that counsel
will do the necessary, without being followed up by the attorney. It
behoved the attorney to
make a follow up. If he failed to do so, then
he is negligent. He is guilty of dereliction of duty.
[15] On the last day, in
other words, the 1st of September 2021, he called counsel to
establish how far counsel was with the preparation
of the application
for leave to appeal. He does not disclose what was said or what
happened during this conversation, if there
ever was a conversation,
whether he spoke to counsel or not or whether he did not find
counsel. But the 1st of September 2021,
being the last day on which
the applicant had to deliver his application for leave to appeal,
still the attorney did nothing even
when he was aware that he did not
have any assurance that the application for leave to appeal would be
delivered on that date.
Once he realised that he had some
difficulties with complying with the time frames set out in the rules
of court, he had the following
options to take:
[15.1] firstly, without
delay, he could have approached the other side, in terms of rule
27(1), and requested their consent to the
late filing of the
application for leave to appeal; or, if the other side refused,
[15.2] secondly, he could
have approached the Court urgently on notice for an extension of an
order extending or abridging any time
prescribed by rule 49(1)(b). An
application for extension of time may be entertained by a single
judge and not only by the court
hearing the appeal.
[16] Mr Makhafola did not
follow either of the two avenues open to him. The founding affidavit
hardly contains an explanation why
he did not utilise the provisions
of rule 27(1) of the rules of court or the provisions of Rule
49(1)(b) when he was aware that
once the 1st of September 2021
passed, so would the 15 days set out in Rule 49(1)(b). Quite clearly,
this application for condonation
asked for is based on the attorney’s
ignorance of the Rules that provide for applications for leave to
appeal. One would
have thought that the attorney would have taken the
trouble to study the Rules of this Court regarding appeals and
condonations,
which are only two. So, this court is of the view that
the attorney’s explanation is unsatisfactory. There are no bona
fide
errors or omissions. In my view, it is inevitable that the delay
was entirely due to the neglect of the Applicant’s attorney.
While this court accepts that courts are reluctant to penalise a
litigant for the conduct of such litigant’s attorney, it
accepts, at the same time, that there are limits through which a
litigant cannot escape the result of the lawyer's lack of diligence.
This was demonstrated in
Saloojee and Another, NNO v Minister of
Community Development 1965 (2) 135 (A.D.)
In this judgement it is
stated that
:
“
Condonation
of the non-observance of the Rules of the Appellate Division is by no
means a mere formality. It is for the applicant
to satisfy that
Division that there is sufficient cause for excusing him from
compliance, and the fact that the respondent has
no objection,
although not irrelevant, is by no means an overriding consideration.
An appellant should, whenever he realises that
he has not complied
with a Rule of Court, apply for condonation without delay.
”
In this case, the
attorney waited for 152 days, which includes weekends, to launch an
application for condonation. This, in my view,
is an inordinate
delay. There is no explanation as to why he did not realize
immediately that an application for condonation was
required.
[17] In his heads of
argument counsel for the Respondents referred the court to paragraph
[39] of the judgment of
Minister of Agriculture and Land Affairs v
C.J. Rance 2010 (4) SA109 (SCA),
where the court had following to
say:
“
Condonation
must be applied for as soon as the party concerned realises that it
is required. The onus to satisfy the court that
all requirements
under section 4(b) of the Act have been met is on the Applicant.”
This matter deals with an
issue relating to whether the Respondent, C J Rance, had satisfied
the requirements of s 3(4)(b) of the
Act. Prescription was not an
issue. It found that the court below had granted condonation for the
late delivery of the notice in
terms of rule 3(1)(a) in circumstances
where the Respondent had not satisfied the requirements of section
3(4)(ii) and (iii).
In Saloojee’s
judgment above, the court stated at p. 141C-E that:
“
There
is a limit beyond which a litigant cannot escape the results of his
attorney’s lack of diligence, or the insufficiency
of the
explanation tendered. To hold otherwise might have a disastrous
effect upon the observance of the Rules of this Court. Considerations
ad misericordiam should not be allowed to become an invitation to
laxity. In fact, this court has lately been burdened with an
undue
and increasing number of applications for condonation in which the
failure to comply with the Rules of this Court was due
to neglect on
the part of the attorney. The attorney, after, is the representative
whom the litigant has chosen for himself, and
there is little reason
why, in regard to condemnation of a failure to comply with a Rule of
Court, the litigant should be absolved
from the normal consequences
of such relationship, no matter what the circumstances of the failure
are.”
[18] Where a litigant
relies on the ineptitude or negligence of his lawyer, he should show
that it is not to be imputed to him.
See in this regard,
Louw v
Louw 1965(3) SA 750 [E.C.D.]
In this application, the Applicant
has, unfortunately, not filed any affidavit in which he attributes
the failure to comply with
the Rules of Court to his attorney.
[19] Rules of Court, or
some of them, set out time limits within which litigants, or some of
them, are obliged to take certain steps.
Litigants are, for purposes
of progress, fairness, and expedience, obliged to always obey the
rules under which they operate In
this regard, see paragraph [14] of
the judgment of
Minister of Agriculture and Land Affairs v C J
Rance 2010(4) SA 109 page 113
in which the court cited with
approval paragraph [9] of the judgment of
Mohlomi v Minister of
Defence 1997(1) SA 124 (CC).
In terms of the provisions of Rule
27(3) of the Rules of Court, the Court may, on good cause shown,
condone any non-compliance
with these rules. Certain factors are
usually relevant. The weight to be given to such factors depends on
the circumstances of
each case. These factors are not individually
decisive. They must be weighed the one against the other. The courts
have a discretion
that must be exercised judicially upon a
consideration of the facts of each case. In essence it is a matter of
fairness to both
sides.
Considering the evidence
of Mr Makhafola that he was busy with trials the whole of August
2021, I am of the view that the following
observation by Rumpff J.A.
in
Kgobane and Another v Minister of Justice and Another 1969(3)
SA 365 [A.D] at p.369A-C
is apposite: “
The attorney for
the applicants attributed his neglect to observe the Rules of this
Court and to ensure that his instructions were
carried out to his
working under pressure and being away from his office. When an
attorney tells this Court, in effect, that he
is too busy to study
the Rules of this Court and to supervise the prosecution of an
appeal, his explanation is quite unacceptable.
In my view this is one
of the worst cases of disregard of the Rules of this Court that have
come before it. Not only was there
an appalling remissness by the
attorney’s assistant in prosecuting the appeal but a persistent
failure on the part of the
attorney to acquaint himself with Rules of
this Court, even after he had become aware that did not know them.
The result of this
gross negligence of the attorney and his assistant
was an inordinate delay.”
Accordingly, this court finds
that the explanation given by Mr Makhafola is unacceptable. Over and
above it lacks essential details.
[20] It is of paramount
importance to point out the reason, or one of the reasons, why a
client would approach a particular attorney
for legal assistance.
This is crucial because it demonstrates the confidence that a client
has in the skills with which an attorney
performs his duties. Your
client comes to you because, in his view, you are a specialist in a
particular field. In fact, as far
as he is concerned, you are
supposed to be: “
a man of affairs
”. If it were not
for that, your client would not have come to you.
[21] In his application
for admission as an attorney, an applicant, such as Mr Makhafola,
will often state in his founding affidavit
that during training or
during his tenure as a candidate attorney, he was taught, among
others, the Rules of Court and how they
operate. He will declare that
he knows how such rules operate. The attorneys’ duties include,
inter alia, not only to read
the Rules of Court but to learn them and
to know how they operate. Therefore, this court must accept that the
attorney had learned
rule 49 of the Rules of Court and that he knows
how it operates. In
Moaki v Reckitt and Coleman (Africa) Ltd and
Another 1968 (3) 98 A.D. at page 101
, the court had the following
to say about the elementary obligation of an attorney to know the
rules under which he operates:
“
An
attorney who is instructed to prosecute an appeal is in duty bound to
acquaint himself with the procedure prescribed by the Rules
of Court
to which a matter is being taken on appeal
.”
He therefore knew or should have known that leave to appeal against
the judgment or order of the court was required and
that, where such
leave was not applied for at the time of the judgment or order, such
leave to appeal had to be applied for within
15 days after the date
of the order or judgement appealed against.
[22] Legal Practitioners
in this country have a reasonable standard of care that is expected
from them and to which they strive
as a profession. Once such care is
below that standard and causes harm to a client, the attorney opens
himself up to a claim by
his client on the basis that his claim
prescribed while it was in his hands. The Applicant’s attorney
was obliged to pursue
the Applicant’s claim with reasonable
care, skill, and diligence. Mokgoatlheng J. as he then was, cited
with approval,
in Ramonyai v L P Molope Attorneys (2010/29310)
[2014] ZAGPJHC 65 (257 Feruary 2014),
the following passage from
Honey & Blanckenberg v Law 1966(2) SA 43 (R) at p.46E-G:
“
An
attorney’s liability arises out of contract and his exact duty
towards his client depends on what he is employed to do……………
In the performance of his duty or mandate, as attorney holds himself
out to his clients as possessing adequate skill, knowledge
and
learning for the purpose of conducting all business that he
undertakes. If, therefore, he causes loss or damage to his client
owing to a want of such knowledge as he ought to possess, or the want
of such care he ought to exercise, he
is
guilty of negligence giving rise to an action for damages by his
client.”
In conclusion on this
aspect, I am of the view that the Applicant has not satisfied this
Court that good cause exists for the granting
of condonation in this
application.
[23] I now turn to the
prospects of the applicant’s appeal. To succeed with his
application for coordination it is important
that the applicant
should show the prospects of success of the appeal, if the
application for leave is granted. The judgment dealt
with all the
relevant issues and, in all fairness to the reader of these
documents, I do not intend repeating in this judgment
what is already
stated regarding the prospects of success in the judgment that is
sought to be appealed against. I do however,
respectfully refer to
that judgment for the exposition of those issues in Annexure “SM2”
to the founding affidavit
of Mr Makhafola. Those issues demonstrate
conclusively, in my view, that if granted leave to appeal, the
applicant will not have
any prospect of success. For instance, in his
amended particulars of claim (poc) and in his counsel’s heads
of argument,
the Applicant’s cause of action is based on the
events that took place on or about July 2003 at Polokwane. In his
argument
in the application for condonation for the Applicant’s
late service of the s 3(1)(a) notice of the Act, counsel contended
that the Applicant’s cause of action did not arise in July 2003
but did so in October 2008 when he received the court order
in which
he was notified of the success of his appeal. Now in his current
application for leave to appeal, counsel contends that
the Applicant
acquired knowledge of the debt on 2nd December 2009. This was never
the Applicant’s initial case that the Respondents
had to meet.
This aspect was dealt with in paragraph [23] of the judgment. Be that
as it may, as I already have indicated, I have
dealt with this issue
in the judgement. I dealt with the Applicant’s failure to
comply with the provisions of s 3(1)(a) of
the Act and with the
circumstances under which, in terms of s 3(4)(b)(i) of the Act, a
court may not grant condonation (see paragraphs
[21] and [22] of the
judgment). I am satisfied that the Applicant has no prospects of
success, if granted leave to appeal. The
judgment dealt with other
factors which show clearly that it will serve no useful purpose to
grant the Applicant’s application
for condonation. In my view,
the appeal lacks merit and therefore, condonation ought to be
refused. See in this regard
Marco Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Germfarm
Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2003] 4 All SA 614
(C) at paras 31-33
,
where the Court per Van Reenen J had the following to say:
“
[31]
It is generally
accepted that there are two primary requirements for the favourable
exercise by a court of its discretion as regards
the granting of
condonation. The first is that the party requiring condonation must
provide an explanation of how the default came
about in sufficient
detail to enable the court to assess his/her/its conduct and motives.
(Silber v Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
1954(2) SA 345 (A) at 353(A).
The second is that the
party seeking condonation must satisfy the court that he/she/it has a
bona fide cause of action. (See Promedia
Drukkers en Uitgewers (Edms)
Bpk v Kaimowitz and Others
1996 (4) SA 411
(C) at 418C or defence.
(See: Chetty v Law Society Transvaal
1985 (2) SA 756
(A) at 765B-C
which prima facie carries some prospects of success. These
requirements are not individually decisive but interrelated
and are
weighed the one against the other as well as against an additional
requirement namely, the absence of prejudice that cannot
be cured by
an appropriate order of costs.
[32] …..
[33] I have already
found that Gemfarm’s affidavits of 11 February 2003 and 13
February 2003 constitute an abuse of the process
of this court and
would fall to be struck out admitted. That being the case, the
application for condonation fails on two grounds.
The first is the
inadequacy of the explanation for the default affidavits in question
timeously and the second is the same practical
and policy
considerations that prompt courts to refuse an indulgence in respect
of
proceedings that lack merit
. (
My own underlining
)
(See Bloemfontein Board Nominees Ltd v Maloney’s Eye Properties
BK en n’ Ander 1993(3) SA 4742 (O) at 446L-447B.”
But there is another
aspect that militates against the granting of the application for
condonation. The Applicant’s attention
has been drawn to that
aspect, but no steps have been taken on behalf of the Applicant to
remedy the situation. That aspect is
a plea of non-joinder (see
paragraph [24] of the judgment) of the Minister of Constitutional
Development, who is responsible for
the actions of judicial officers.
This special plea is not dismissive of the Applicant’s claim
but nevertheless it is a plea
that has been taken on the papers and
which this court must consider.
[24] There are, however,
other reasons why the application could be dismissed. Included in
those reasons is the fact that the Applicant’s
attorneys lacked
candour in failing to inform the appeal court that:
“
The
matter went on appeal on the 6
th
of October 2008 before the Transvaal Provincial Division under case
number A545/2005 and the said appeal was successful. Our client
was
therefore released.
This is what was stated
in the Applicant’s attorney’s letter dated 2 December
2009. That is how the matter of the Applicant’s
appeal was
placed before the court. This information was of paramount
importance, and I have stated the reason for its importance
in
paragraph [19] of the judgment.
In conclusion on this
point, I am of the view that there are no prospects of success and
the application for condonation should
be refused, on this point
alone. There are no merits in the application for leave to appeal.
[25] Finally, it is the
conduct of the Applicant’s legal team that determines whether
they regarded the matter as important.
From the analysis of the
evidence adduced, it is quiet plain that the Applicant’s legal
team did not regard this matter as
important. This is demonstrated in
the nonchalant and lackadaisical way in which they handled a simple
application for leave to
appeal; the lengthy periods it took them
just to prepare the application and to lodge it and their complete
disdain of the Rues
of Court.
[26] In the light of the
order I contemplate making in this application for condonation, I
deem it unnecessary to deal with the
application for leave to appeal.
The Order I make consequently is as follows:
The Application for
Condonation is hereby refused.
P M MABUSE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Appearances
Counsel for the
Applicant: Adv
T
C Kwinda
Instructed by:
Makhafola
& Verster Inc;
Counsel for the
Respondents: Adv
F Phamba
Instructed by:
The
State Attorney
Date of hearing:
14
June 2023
Date of Judgment:
23
October 2023.
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