Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1972South Africa
S.M.P v P.M and Another (084568/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1972 (27 November 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
27 November 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## S.M.P v P.M and Another (084568/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1972 (27 November 2023)
S.M.P v P.M and Another (084568/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1972 (27 November 2023)
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sino date 27 November 2023
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NR: 084568/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
DATE:
27 November 2023
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
S[...]
M[...] P[...]
APPLICANT
and
P[...]
M[...]
FIRST
RESPONDENT
FIRST RAND
BANK
SECOND RESPONDENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Acting Judge whose name is reflected and is handed
down
electronically by circulation to the Parties / their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic
file
of this matter on CaseLines. The date of the judgment is deemed to be
27 November 2023.
JUDGMENT
MARUMOAGAE AJ
A
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This matter is quite unusual. The actual applicant before the court
is the first respondent
who brought a reconsideration application of
an order that was granted on 5 September 2023. This application was
placed on an urgent
court’s roll. Attached to this application
is an answering affidavit to the applicant’s urgent application
for an interim
interdict that was heard on 5 September 2023.
[2]
The reconsideration application effectively calls upon the applicant
to demonstrate
why his application, part of which was heard on 5
September 2023 is urgent. The first respondent seeks to demonstrate
that the
applicant’s application is or was not urgent.
[3]
The confusion arises from the fact that the applicant successfully
applied for an
interim interdict, and in terms of the order granted
by Pistorius J, can only approach the court for a final order once he
has
prosecuted his variation/rescission application which is also
pending before this court.
[4]
This essentially means that the applicant cannot bring an application
for the final
interdict before the finalisation of the
variation/rescission application. Rightly so, the applicant did not
bring his application
for the final interdict to be considered by the
urgent court. The matter was brought to the urgent court by the first
respondent
who seeks the reconsideration of Pistorius J’s
order.
[5]
The issue before the court is not whether the applicant’s
application, be it
the interim or final interdict, is urgent. The
applicant’s application is not before the court. The only issue
before this
court is whether the first respondent’s application
for reconsideration, which has been placed in an urgent court, is
urgent
and should be dealt with by the urgent court. It is only when
it is found that the first respondent’s application for
reconsideration
is urgent that the merits of this application can be
entertained.
B
BACKGROUND
[6]
On 3 October 2018, the first respondent instituted divorce
proceedings against the
applicant in this court. While there are
disagreements with respect to the issues relating to service between
the parties, it appears
that a plea was filed on behalf of the
applicant on 29 April 2019.
[7]
On 15 July 2019, a decree of divorce was granted by this court. There
are accusations
and counter-accusations with respect to the way in
which this decree of divorce was obtained. On 26 August 2019, the
applicant
brought an application to vary/rescind this divorce decree.
The rescission/variation application is yet to be heard and
finalised.
[8]
On 26 June 2023, the first respondent obtained an order against the
applicant for
the attachment of an emolument on the strength of the
disputed divorce decree. This led the applicant to approach this
court on
an urgent basis to stay the execution of an order for the
attachment of emoluments against him pending the finalization of his
application to vary/rescind the disputed divorce order, which was
granted by Pistorius J on 5 September 2023.
[9]
On 26 September 2023, the first respondent responded by serving and
filing an application
for reconsideration. Attached to this
application is the answering affidavit to the applicant’s
application to stay the execution
of an order for the attachment of
emoluments against him. Part A of the applicant’s application
had already been heard and
an interim interdict was granted.
[10]
The first respondent’s application for reconsideration was
served and filed after the interim
interdict was granted. It is this
order that the first respondent applied for this court to reconsider
on an urgent basis. Thus,
the onus is on the first respondent to
establish urgency, not the applicant. The applicant is the respondent
in this matter.
C
URGENCY
i)
Overview
[11]
Unfortunately, the better part of the oral hearing was
consumed with arguments relating to whether the applicant’s
application
was/is urgent. It was correctly submitted on behalf of
the applicant that the applicant neither applied for a hearing date
for
its application for the final interdict to be heard nor set this
matter down on the urgent roll. In other words, the applicant did
not
bring an application on an urgent basis to dispose of Part B of its
application.
[12]
It was correctly argued that the applicant was not clothed with the
burden of establishing urgency
in this matter, as it was when Part A
of its application was heard by Pistorius J in an urgent court.
Further, it is the first
respondent who should satisfy the court that
its application for reconsideration is urgent. It is the first
respondent who placed
its application for reconsideration on an
urgent roll. I agree with this submission.
ii) Test for
urgency
[13]
Urgent applications must be determined against the background of Rule
6(12) of the Uniform Rules
of Court. In these applications, those who
wish their applications to jump the queue and be heard before other
matters that were
enrolled before theirs are heard should persuade
the court that their non-compliance with the ordinary rules of court
is justified
having regard to the facts upon which their alleged
urgency is based. They should in the main, demonstrate to the court
that they
will suffer real loss or damage if they were to be required
to join the queue and utilise the normal court processes.
[1]
[14]
For the court to exercise its discretion in favour of those who
desire that their cases be heard
urgently, they must explicitly set
out the circumstances that render their matters urgent to justify the
curtailment of the Rules,
procedures, and time periods adopted. To
succeed, they are also obliged to demonstrate that there will be a
loss of substantial
redress, if not heard on the basis chosen.
[2]
iii)
Factors relied on for urgency
[15]
The first respondent in his affidavit starts by attacking the
applicant’s application,
particularly Part A thereof. According
to the first respondent, the applicant’s application was
brought on a contrived urgent
basis. She states that this application
was neither served on her nor her legal representatives. She argues
that the applicant
was not entitled to an order granted by Pretorius
J because his application was not urgent, the urgency was
self-created, and he
had another remedy in the form of the
maintenance court.
[16]
Unfortunately, the first respondent in his answering affidavit
addresses all other issues except
why his application for
reconsideration is urgent. In other words, the first respondent does
not provide a sense of why there was
a need to place his application
for consideration on an urgent roll to justify the ordinary rules of
the court being dispensed
with.
[17]
This is the first hurdle that the first respondent must overcome
before this court can entertain
the substance of his application for
reconsideration. It seems like the first respondent took it for
granted that all that she
had to do was to attack the applicant’s
application without justifying why her own application for
reconsideration should
be heard on an urgent basis.
[18]
The first respondent’s heads of argument are also silent on why
this court should entertain
her application on an urgent basis. In
her heads of argument, as was done during oral hearing, there was an
attempt to convince
the court that the applicant’s application
is not urgent. There was no corresponding effort to convince the
court that the
first respondent was properly placed in an urgent roll
and the matter is so urgent that the Rules should be dispensed with
to entertain
the merits of her reconsideration application.
D
FURTHER AFFIDAVITS
[19]
Despite the matter being enrolled in an urgent court’s roll,
the parties managed to find
time to file supplementary affidavits
which have nothing to do with the actual application before the
court. None of these supplementary
affidavits provide any insight as
to why the matter that is actually before this court is either urgent
or lacking in urgency.
The only matter before this court is the first
respondent’s application for reconsideration. The applicant
filed his supplementary
replying affidavit. This triggered the first
respondent to also file a supplementary affidavit.
[20]
In his supplementary replying affidavit, the applicant also brought
an application for condonation
where he sought an indulgence of the
court to file this affidavit. I did not find the contents of this
affidavit useful with respect
to what I am required to decide.
[21]
In her supplementary affidavit, without any explanation of what
rendered the reconsideration
application to be placed on an urgent
roll on 3 October 2023, the first respondent simply proceeded to
explain why the matter was
not heard on that day. The first
respondent provided an explanation of what led to the matter not
being heard on 03 October 2023.
It appears that with this affidavit,
the first respondent also sought to justify why she deviated from the
practice directive requiring
urgent applications to be placed on
Thursday before noon or on the following Tuesday. However, this
affidavit does not appear to
be properly before the court.
[22]
Apart from the difficulty the first respondent is facing with respect
to urgency, unlike the
applicant’s supplementary affidavit
which is accompanied by an application for condonation, the first
respondent did not
apply for condonation for the court’s
indulgence to file her supplementary affidavit.
[23]
It is trite, as was pointed out in
Mabizela v Minister of Police
and Another
(2020/24049) [2022] ZAGPJHC 170 (11 March 2022) para
17, that ‘
[a]ny additional affidavits may only be filed with
the leave of the Court’
. An additional affidavit refers to
any affidavit outside the normal sequence of affidavits: founding,
answering/opposing, and replying.
In other words, any party that
wishes to file and serve either a supplementary affidavit or further
affidavit must make an application
with a view to seeking leave of
the court to allow the filing of the intended additional affidavit.
Such an affidavit is not filed
as of right.
[24]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Hano
Trading CC v J R 209 Investments (Pty) Ltd,
[3]
accepted and endorsed the following principles:
[24.1] Where an
affidavit is tendered in motion proceedings both late and out of its
ordinary sequence, the party tendering
it is seeking, not a right,
but an indulgence from the Court.
[24.2] The litigant
who wishes to file a further affidavit must make a formal application
for leave to do so. It cannot simply
slip the affidavit into the
Court file, otherwise, such an affidavit falls to be regarded as
pro
non scripto
.
[25]
In
Standard Bank of SA v Sewpersadth and Another
, it was
stated that:
‘
for a court to
exercise its discretion in favour of a litigant who applies for leave
to introduce an affidavit outside of the rules
relating to the number
of sets of affidavits and the sequence thereof, such litigant must
put forward special circumstances explaining
its failure to deal with
the allegations therein within the parameters of the applicable
rules’.
[4]
[26]
It is clear that the court can only consider a further affidavit when
there is an application
for condonation where the court’s
indulgence has been sought.
E
EVALUATION
[27]
The Applicant successfully brought an urgent application to obtain an
interim interdict against
the first respondent. This application is
constituted of Part A and Part B. Part A is the interim interdict
whereas Part B is the
Final Interdict. Pistorius J only dealt with
Part A and ordered the stay of the execution of the first
respondent’s order
for the attachment of emoluments against the
applicant.
[28]
Following Pistorius J’s order, the applicant was entitled to
re-enrol the matter once the
application for the variation of the
divorce order between the parties had been finalized. It appears that
the first respondent
desires that the applicant should satisfy this
court that generally its application is urgent, despite the applicant
not yet having
brought Part B to the court. In terms of Pistorius J’s
order, Part B could only be brought once the variation (or
rescission)
application of the divorce order has been finalised. The
variation (or rescission) of the divorce order has not yet been heard
and finalised.
[29]
If however, the first respondent desires that the applicant should
demonstrate that his application
for interim interdict was urgent,
surely the horse has bolted on that score. The application has
already been heard and decided.
The only issue that can be determined
at this stage is whether the applicant was entitled to be granted an
interim interdict. On
this score, there is no need to discuss urgency
with respect to the applicant’s application for an interim
interdict.
[30]
With her application for reconsideration, the first respondent
desires to have an order granted
by Pistorius J rescinded and set it
aside. It is not clear why the first respondent formulated a view
that the urgent court was
the most appropriate court to deal with her
application. Was it because the applicant’s application for an
interim interdict
was heard by an urgent court and the first
respondent automatically thought that her reconsideration application
should automatically
also be placed in the urgent court’s roll?
If this was the thinking behind bringing the application for
reconsideration in
an urgent court, this approach is incorrect. This
matter ought to have been placed on an ordinary court’s roll,
unless of
course it is shown to be urgent.
[31]
The application for reconsideration or even rescission of Pistorius
J’s order is an independent
application that can only be
brought on an urgent court in line with Rule 6(12) of the Uniform
Rules of Court. The first respondent
was obliged to satisfy the test
of urgency and provide to the court the circumstances that rendered
this application urgent. The
first respondent failed to do so.
Instead, she incorrectly focused on demonstrating why the applicant’s
application is/was
not urgent.
[32]
This court is not seized with the applicant’s application.
There is no reason why the court
should require the applicant to
comply with the requirements of Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules of
Court. The applicant did not
bring any application before the urgent
court after Pistorius J granted his order. In terms of Pistorius J’s
order, Part
B of the applicant’s application can only be heard
once his application for the variation (or rescission) of the divorce
order has been finalised.
F
CONCLUSION
[33]
The first respondent set the matter down in an urgent court for
hearing. The applicant’s
application cannot be before this
court because of Pistorius J’s order. This order made it very
clear that the applicant
can only bring Part B of his application to
court after the finalisation of his variation (or rescission).
[34]
This means that for Pistorius J’s order not to be complied
with, the first respondent’s
application for reconsideration
must be heard and finalised. However, this application cannot be
finalised by the urgent court
because the first respondent did not
satisfy the test of urgency.
The duty to establish
urgency fell on the first respondent who is the actual applicant in
this matter. I am of the view that the
first respondent failed to
discharge this duty.
ORDER
[35]
In the result, I make the following order:
1
The first respondent’s application for the reconsideration of
Pistorius
J’s order is struck of the roll for want of urgency.
2
The applicant’s application is not before this court.
3
The first respondent is ordered to pay the wasted costs as a result
of this
matter being struck from the roll.
C MARUMOAGAE
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ADV
CID BENNETT
INSTRUCTED
BY:
McTAGGART
EKSTEEN INC
ATTORNEY
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
MR
MARWESHE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MARWESHE
ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
17
October 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
27
November 2023
[1]
Tekoa
Engineers (Pty) Ltd v Alfred Nzo Municipality and Others
(1284/20) [2022] ZAECMKHC 84 (25 October 2022) para 28.
[2]
See East Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite
(Pty) Ltd and Others (11/33767) [2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September
2011) para 6 where it was stated that ‘More importantly, the
Applicant must state the reasons why he claims that he cannot
be
afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course. The
question of whether a matter is sufficiently urgent to be enrolled
and heard as an urgent application is underpinned by the issue of
absence of substantial redress in an application in due course.
The
rules allow the court to come to the assistance of a litigant
because if the latter were to wait for the normal course laid
down
by the rules it will not obtain substantial redress’.
[3]
2013 (1) SA 161
(SCA);
[2013] 1 All SA 142
(SCA) para 12.
[4]
2005 (4) SA 148
(C),
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