Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 186South Africa
Underwriters at Lloyd's of London v Minister of Safety and Security (40975/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 186 (25 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 March 2022
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Underwriters at Lloyd's of London v Minister of Safety and Security (40975/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 186 (25 March 2022)
Underwriters at Lloyd's of London v Minister of Safety and Security (40975/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 186 (25 March 2022)
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sino date 25 March 2022
IN THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED. YES/
NO
25
MARCH 2022
CASE NO: 40975/2016
In the matter between:
UNDERWRITERS
AT LLOYD’S OF
LONDON
Plaintiff
and
THE
MINISTER OF SAFETY AND
SECURITY
Defendant
JUDGMENT
LE ROUX AJ
[1]
This matter concerns
interrelated interlocutory applications brought by the parties which
have been set down for hearing together
on the direction of Ledwaba
DJP as a special allocation.
[2]
The plaintiff’s
application comprises two parts, with the second brought in the
alternative to the first.
2.1.
Under part I, the
plaintiff applies in terms of rule 30(1), alternatively rule 30A(2)
for an order declaring that the defendant’s
notice of intention to
amend its plea dated 17 September 2021 is an irregular step because
it involves an irregular, improper (
mala
fide
) and therefore
impermissible attempt by the defendant to withdraw formal admissions
on the record in these proceedings.
2.2.
The plaintiff contends
that the defendant admitted the findings of fact and law recorded in
a judgment by Bam J dated 7 February 2018
in the case of
The
State v Petra December Nkosi and 15 others
(case number CC212/15) in the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng
Division, Eastern Circuit (Middelburg) (“the
Bam
J Judgment
”)
insofar as they concerned the complicity of two police officers,
Khubeka and Lekola, in the robbery of a high security cash depot
in
Witbank in 2014, resulting in the theft of approximately R100 million
in bank notes.
2.3.
Under part II the
plaintiff asks the court under rule 28(3) to refuse the proposed
amendment, on the same basis.
[3]
The plaintiff contends
in support of its application that:
3.1.
The defendant’s
proposed amendment involves an irregular, improper (
mala
fide
) and therefore
impermissible attempt by the defendant to withdraw formal admissions
on the record in these proceedings;
3.2.
The defendant first
made the admissions under rule 37(4) on 25 September 2019, and
thereafter repeated them in the course of
various procedural steps
taken before the trial was due to start on 7 October 2019;
3.3.
The admissions were
substantive, and resulted in the parties settling almost all the main
issues on the merits of the plaintiff’s
action for damages;
3.4.
The settlement of those
issues saved about five days’ evidence and relieved the plaintiff
of the need to call at least four witnesses,
including one expert
witness.
[4]
In both part I and part
II of the application, the plaintiff applies conditionally for an
order condoning any non-compliance with
the relevant rules.
This includes condonation if the court were to find that the
plaintiff’s objections to the defendant’s
notice to amend dated
17 September 2021 were (three days) late, as the defendant contends.
The plaintiff contends its objections
were not late, and that the
defendant’s contrary claim ignores three timeous written objections
by the plaintiff, and that it otherwise
rests on a misreading of rule
28.
The plaintiff seeks
punitive costs against the defendant on an attorney-client scale,
alternatively
de
bonis propriis
against the Office of the State Attorney for the defendant’s
attempts to withdraw its admissions and/or ascribe a different
interpretation
to the admissions made which were supported by the
judgment of Bam J and which plaintiff avers are made in bad faith and
that the
defendant’s factual claims in these applications by the
State Attorney, Mr Jan Nel, that the admissions were made in “error”,
are demonstrably false.
[5]
The underlying matter
concerns a robbery at the SBV Witbank Cash Depot on 27/28 April
2014. Several individuals were criminally
accused for their
participation in that robbery. A criminal trial was held,
commencing in October 2016 and culminating in a
judgment by Bam J,
dated 7 February 2018, in which several of the accused were
convicted.
5.1.
In May 2016, the
plaintiff in this matter launched an action against the defendant.
The action was launched due to the involvement
of two erstwhile
members of the South African Police Services, Khubeka and Lekola, who
were found to have participated in the robbery
by Bam J. As a
result, the defendant is said to be vicariously liable for the loss
caused by their conduct.
5.2.
The plaintiff also
relies upon the defendant’s representatives, such as a Warrant
Officer Holtzhausen, who was actively involved
in the investigation
and asset forfeiture proceedings resulting from the robbery, who, it
is said by the plaintiff, demonstrates
the defendant’s awareness of
the involvement of Khubeka and Lekola in the robbery and the loss
said to arise and borne by the plaintiff,
and their prosecution was
assisted by investigation by the SAPS and AFU. In addition,
Khubeka and Lekola were dishonourably
discharged from the SAPS on 9
February 2018, two days following their conviction by Bam J.
[6]
Subsequent to delivery
of plaintiff’s rule 28(3) notice, defendant filed a rule 30
notice on the basis that the late delivery
of the rule 28(3) notice
by the plaintiff is an irregular step. In this regard, the
defendant contends the following:
6.1.
The plaintiff’s rule
28(3) objection to the defendant’s proposed plea amendment was
delivered after the prescribed period of 10
(ten) days within which
an objection had to be filed, thus out of time and is therefore an
irregular step;
6.2.
The plaintiff’s rule
30 notice was delivered out of time. In addition, plaintiff
delivered the rule 30 notice after plaintiff
had taken a further step
in the cause and plaintiff is therefore barred from proceeding with
its rule 30 application;
6.3.
There are no
applications for condonation for the late filing of plaintiff’s
rule 28(3) or rule 30 notices;
6.4.
Defendant’s proposed
amendment is not an irregular step and does not involve the
withdrawal of any admissions;
6.5.
Plaintiff’s rule 30
application should be dismissed with costs; and
6.6.
The relief sought in
defendant’s rule 30 notice should be granted and defendant should
be allowed to proceed with the amendment
of its plea as per
defendant’s notice of amendment.
[7]
The plaintiff contends
that defendant’s rule 30 objection is frivolous and has no merit,
and that it ignores the plaintiff’s conditional
application to
condone any late delivery of its objection.
[8]
The defendant further
contends that:
8.1.
Its attorney, Mr JH Nel
(“
Nel
”),
employed at the State Attorney, Pretoria, stated in his answering
affidavits that the defendant does not intend to withdraw
any of the
admissions made, but the material dispute is an extensive
interpretation that the plaintiff’s legal representatives,
as
deposed to by plaintiff’s attorney, Mr A Strachan (“
Strachan
”),
attempts to attribute to the admissions. It is defendant’s
case that the admissions relating to the judgment of Bam
J were
merely to the effect that it was admitted that Bam J made the
findings and rulings in the judgment and that certain admissions
were
made by the accused during the criminal trial in which Bam J
presided. Nel unambiguously denies that the admissions were
as
contended by the plaintiff. It is further defendant’s
contention that Nel is the only person that can give factual evidence
regarding the extent of the admissions and the instructions in that
regard. The plaintiff’s only defence in that regard is
that
Nel’s evidence is “
demonstrably
false in every material respect”
.
There is no legal or factual basis for such a “defence”.
8.2.
In the alternative, the
defendant contends that should the Honourable Court find that the
extensive interpretation that the plaintiff
attempts to attribute to
the admissions can unequivocally be accepted as such, that the
defendant be granted leave to withdraw the
admissions, as it was made
bona fide
and in error and there is absolutely no trial-related or other
prejudice for the plaintiff, as confirmed under oath by Strachan.
[9]
The defendant’s
application also includes a conditional application for leave to
withdraw its admissions on the basis
inter
alia
that Mr Nel
did not hold instructions and that it was never intended by defendant
to make the admissions to the extent as contended
by plaintiff. The
plaintiff contends that the defendant has failed to establish the
grounds for such leave, including its
bona
fides
. The
plaintiff instead contends that the factual claims made by Mr Nel
in support of that application are not supported
by any evidence
other than his say so, and that his evidence is demonstrably false in
every material respect.
[10]
The relevant procedural
and factual background in summary is that:
10.1.
In June 2018, the
plaintiff made its first request for admissions in terms of rule 37
and the defendant responded to that first
request in July 2018.
10.2.
More than a year later,
in September 2019, the plaintiff filed a second request for
admissions.
10.3.
There, the plaintiff
requested the following relevant admissions from the defendant in
terms of Rule 37(6)(g) ahead of the second
pre-trial conference:
“
Rule
37(6)(g): Plaintiff’s request for admissions
25.
The plaintiff hereby requests the defendant to make the admissions
sought below concerning the issues arising in paragraphs 19,
20, 20A
and 21 of the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim (as amended) and
paragraphs 11, 12 and 13 of the Defendant’s plea.
The
requests are made to narrow the issues and to curtail the trial and
to give due consideration of the following facts and circumstances
regarding the complicity of Khubeka and Lekola in the robbery, while
they were at all relevant times members of the SAPS, with Khubeka
further being a member of the SAPS trio unit in Witbank; the judgment
by Bam J dates 7 February 2018 in
The
State v Petra December Nkosi and 15 Others
(case
number CC215/15) (the judgment) in the High Court of South Africa,
Gauteng Division, Eastern Circuit (Middelburg), (the Criminal
Court);
the findings of fact in the judgment; the rulings on the
admissibility of evidence; the admissions by the accused during
evidence; and to the further admissions recorded in paragraphs 4.3(a)
to (p) of the judgment that were made on behalf of the relevant
accused, including Lekola and Khubeka. Does the Defendant admit
that:
25.1 The robbery
was executired during the evening of 27 April 2014 and/or the morning
of 28 April 2014?
25.2 In the
course of the robbery, bank notes in the total sum of
R101 207 456.28, alternatively (according to the admission
recorded in the judgment at paragraph 4.3(a)) in the amount of
R104 440 845.60 were stolen?
25.3 The bank
notes stolen during the robbery were secured in the vault by SBV on
behalf of its banking clients and retail customers?
25.4 Khubeka,
Lekola, Accused 3, Accused 5, Accused 14 and Accused 16 were each
convicted, amongst other crimes relating to the robbery,
of robbery
with aggravating circumstances and of conspiracy to commit robbery
with aggravating circumstances?
25.5 Khubeka,
Lekola, Accused 3, Accused 5, Accused 14 participated at all relevant
time before, during and after the robbery in planning,
directing
and/or executing the robbery?
25.6 Khubeka,
Lekola, Accused 3 and Accused 14 were at all relevant times during
and immediately after the robbery, members of the
SAPS?
25.7 Khubeka and
Lekola was each on duty at any one or more time or times before,
during and after the robbery?
25.8 Khubeka was
'on standby duty' (as recorded in para 27.5 of the judgment) at
Witbank Police Station when the robbery was executed?
25.9 Khubeka came
on duty at the Witbank Police Station at 08h00 on 28 April 2014?
25.10 Khubeka
used cell phone number 0824554177 at the relevant times before,
during and after the robbery to assist in coordinating
and executing
the robbery (as recorded in paras 27.5 and 47 of the judgment) in
communications with others convicted in the judgment?
25.11 Khubeka
conspired to commit the robbery with other members of the SAPS at the
relevant times of the robbery, including Lekola,
Accused 3 and
Accused 14?
25.12 Khubeka
obstructed and prevented lawful attempts by members of the SAPS to
recover the stolen money, while he was on duty?
25.13
Khubeka conspired with other members of the SAPS to do so?
25.14 The
correctness of the finding recorded at paragraph 50 (p83) of the
judgment that Khubeka was 'actively involved in the
commission of the
robbery'?
25.15 The
admissions recorded in paragraph 4.3 of the judgment were made?
25.16 The
admissions contemplated in paragraph 24 of the judgment were made?
.
. .
”
10.4.
The defendant’s
response to this request for admissions by the plaintiff later in
September 2019 reads as follows:
“
Ad
paragraph 25 (preface) read with paragraphs 25.1 to 25.16
Insofar as the
admissions sought in these paragraphs are covered by the judgment of
Bam J the admissions are made. If they are
not so covered, the
admissions are not made.”
10.5.
A further request for
admissions was received by the plaintiff from the defendant in
October 2019, accompanied by a proposed amended
plea served on the
plaintiff on 2 October 2019. It is this proposed amendment and
its scope that is the subject of these applications.
10.6.
On 3 October 2019, the
defendant formally filed its notice of intention to amend its plea.
A second pretrial conference was
also held.
10.7.
On 3 October 2019, the
plaintiff’s attorneys, Norton Rose Fulbright SA, also wrote a
letter to the State Attorney setting out the
plaintiff’s objections
“
on at least the
grounds listed below”
to
the defendant’s notice of intention to amend its plea. The
objections then listed included that “
[t]he
proposed amendment appears to involve an impermissible attempt to
withdraw the admissions made by your client in its response
to the
plaintiff’s latest request for admissions in terms of Rule 37(4).
”
10.8.
The plaintiff recorded
in the same letter that “
[t]he
proposed amendment is objectionable for various reasons to be set out
in our formal objection.
”
Significantly for the defendant’s case in these applications, this
appears to contemplate a more formal notice of objection
to be
provided at some point in the future after the letter and it is
difficult to conclude otherwise.
10.9.
The civil trial before
Mavundla J was set down for 10 days as part of a special allocation
and was set to commence on 7 October 2019.
10.10.
The day before, 6
October 2019, the plaintiff again objected to the defendant’s
notice of intention to amend and on the morning
of day 1 of the
trial, 7 October 2019, the defendant filed yet another amended notice
of intention to amend. That same day,
the plaintiff objected to
that amended notice of intention to amend.
10.11.
The defendant’s
application for leave to amend its plea was heard by Mavundla J on 8
October 2019 in which leave was denied and
the application for leave
was dismissed with costs.
10.12.
On 14 October 2019 the
defendant applied for leave to appeal against that decision, which
was granted by Mavundla J. The appeal was
heard by the Supreme Court
of Appeal during May 2021, resulting in a judgment of the SCA
dismissing the defendant’s appeal with
costs on 8 June 2021.
10.13.
Later that month, on 28
June 2021, the trial of the matter was set down again from 18 to 22
October 2021 for a curtailed period of
5 days. The significance of
this shortened agreed duration of the civil trail will be explained
below.
10.14.
In an echo of the 2019
events set out thus far, on 15 September 2021, the defendant filed
yet another notice of its intention to amend
its plea in terms of
rule 28. A pretrial conference was held on 15 September 2021
and two days later, on 17 September 2021,
the defendant served
another notice of its intention to amend its plea.
10.15.
This occasioned yet
another exchange of correspondence between Norton Rose Fulbright and
the State Attorney on 23, 27, 29 and 30 September
and 6 October 2021,
culminating in the plaintiff filing a formal notice of objection to
the defendant’s notice on 7 October 2021.
The defendant
objected to the lateness and form of that notice in a rule 30(2)(b)
notice on 12 October 2021 and two days later, on
14 October
2021, the plaintiff filed its own application in terms of rule 30 and
rule 28(3).
10.16.
On 4 November 2021, the
defendant filed a rule 30 application against the plaintiff’s
notice of objection and it is these two related
interlocutory
applications that are now before the court for determination.
[11]
The essence of the
dispute between the parties is whether the defendant’s 17 September
2021 notice of intention to amend its plea
withdrew admissions that
the plaintiff contends the defendant made earlier regarding the
involvement of accused number 4, Lekola,
and accused number 6,
Khubeka in the April 2014 robbery. The plaintiff contends that
the defendant admitted their involvement
in the robbery and that this
admission curtailed the estimated duration of the trial. This
was because the involvement of these
former employees of the
defendant, accused number 4 and 6 in the criminal trial, would not
need to occupy the attention of the trial
court due to the admissions
said to have been made by the defendant.
[12]
For its part, the
defendant contends that all that was admitted was that Bam J made a
finding in the judgment at the end of the criminal
matter that
accused number 4, Lekola, and accused number 6, Khubeka, took part in
the robbery. In other words, the defendant
contends that it has
not admitted the fact of their involvement in the robbery, only the
fact that Bam J made that finding in the
judgment following the
criminal trial.
[13]
The defendant, through
the State Attorney, Mr Nel, who has conducted the matter on behalf of
the defendant throughout, claims that
the defendant did not intend to
make the admissions as contended for and that he held no instructions
to make that admission.
Mr Nel denies the admissions and claims
that if the admission means what the plaintiff contends they mean,
then the defendant never
intended to make them, they were made in
error and/or he had no instructions to make these admissions.
[14]
The approach for
determining whether a party should be permitted to withdraw a factual
admission is set out in
MEC
for Economic Affairs, Environment and Tourism Eastern Cape v
Kruizenga
2010(4)
SA 122 (SCA) at 126E-127B in which rule 37 was said to have been
“
.
. . introduced to shorten the length of trials to facilitate
settlements between the parties, narrow the issues and to curb
costs.
One of the methods the parties use to achieve these
objectives is to make admissions concerning the number of issues
which the pleadings
raise. Admissions of fact made at a rule 37
conference constitute sufficient proof of those facts. The
minutes of a pretrial
conference may be signed either by a party or a
representative. Rule 37 is thus of critical importance in the
litigation process.
This is why this court had held that in the
absence of any special circumstances a party is not entitled to
resile from an agreement
deliberately reached at a rule 37
conference.”
[15]
For this reason, the
leave of the court is required before admissions may be withdrawn and
it is that leave. among other relief, which
the defendant seeks in
its conditional application. Before leave may be granted, a
full explanation of the reasons for the
withdrawal to ensure its
bona
fides
is required
as well as a determination that there is no prejudice that arises as
a result.
[16]
Before dealing with
this issue, the defendant has raised several objections. The
defendant contends that the plaintiff, notwithstanding
formal notice
in terms of rule 30(2)(b) dated 13 October 2021, neglected,
alternatively, refused, to withdraw its notice of objection
within
the prescribed 10-day period, necessitating the defendant’s related
rule 30 application. The defendant complains that
the
plaintiff’s objection to the defendant’s 17 September 2021
notice of its intention to amend, which was delivered on
7 October
2021, was out of time, given that the 10-day period within which to
object to a notice to amend regulated by rule
28(2) expired on
1 October 2021. The defendant contends further that it is
being prejudiced by this irregular step taken
by the plaintiff since
the matter cannot proceed to trial until the issue about the
plaintiff’s belated objection is resolved.
The defendant
contends that the correspondence exchanged by Norton Rose Fulbright
with the State Attorney does not comply with the
requirements of the
rule that written notice of the grounds of objection must be
provided, does not satisfy the requirements of the
rule and that the
plaintiff acknowledged this in its own correspondence wherein it
indicated that a formal notice of objection would
follow the letters
addressed to the State Attorney.
[17]
The plaintiff, for its
part, contends that the rule does not require any such formality and
that its written correspondence setting
out the grounds for its
objection to the notice of intention to amend the plea, which
included its objection on the basis that the
amendments resulted in
an impermissible withdrawal of admissions previously made by the
defendant, satisfy the rule.
[18]
The defendant contends
that subrules (2) to (5) of rule 28 are relevant. These provide
that:
“
(2)
The notice referred to in subrule (1) shall state that unless written
objection to the proposed
amendment is delivered within 10 days of
delivery of the notice, the amendment will be effected.
(3)
An objection to a proposed amendment shall clearly and concisely
state the grounds
upon which the objection is founded.
(4)
If an objection which complies with subrule (3) is delivered within
the period
referred to in subrule (2), the party wishing to amend
may, within 10 days, lodge an application for leave to amend.
(5)
If no objection is delivered as contemplated in subrule (4) every
party who receives
notice of the proposed amendment shall be deemed
to have consented to the amendment and the party who gave notice of
the proposed
amendment may, within 10 days after the expiration of
the period mentioned in subrule (2) effect the amendment as
contemplated in
subrule (7).”
[19]
The defendant contents
that rule 28(2) specifically provides that a notice must be delivered
within 10 days and that delivery as defined
in rule 1 “
means
to serve copies on all parties and file the original with the
registrar.”
The defendant contends that this definition makes clear that it is
not mere correspondence that complies with the rule, since
this is
not generally filed in original form with the registrar.
[20]
In the plaintiff’s
letter dated 23 September 2021 at paragraph 7, Norton Rose Fulbright
recorded “
we trust
this clarifies why we contend that your most recent notices
contemplate withdrawing the admissions made in the 7 October
2019 amendment and are therefore plainly objectionable.
”
Its letter a week later, on 30 September 2021 at paragraph 4.1,
records that “
the
plaintiff objects to the amendments in your notice to amend of
17 September 2021 because they impermissibly aim to withdraw
the
far-reaching admissions recorded in the 2019 notice to amend.
Our notice of objection will be delivered shortly.”
[21]
On this basis, the
defendant contends that the plaintiff was aware that a formal notice,
rather than correspondence, was required,
and that the earlier
correspondence therefore did not suffice to timeously record its
objections in a form acceptable under the rule.
[22]
The plaintiff contends
that its correspondence was consistent with the grounds of objection
finally filed by it, albeit that it concedes
that this was only done
three days after the expiration of the 10-day period provided for in
the rule.
[23]
Given the prompt and
repeated repetition of the same grounds of objection in the
correspondence from the plaintiff to the defendant,
I find that the
plaintiff timeously objected, alternatively that its three-day delay
in providing the formal notice can be condoned
in an exercise of this
Court’s wide discretion to condone non-compliance with time limits
imposed by the rule.
[24]
I turn to deal with the
defendant’s withdrawal of admissions. I find that the
defendant’s response to the request for admissions
put to it cannot
be interpreted to mean only that it admitted that findings were made
in the judgment by Bam J in the criminal trial.
24.1.
Given the detailed
“preface” to the specific requests for admissions, the
contextualising of the admissions as relating to “
the
following facts and circumstances regarding the complicity of Khubeka
and Lekola in the robbery, while they were at all relevant
times
members of the SAPS, with Khubeka further being a member of the SAPS
trio unit in Witbank
”,
their announced purpose to achieve a shortened trial was clearly
explained. The “preface” also clarified that the admissions
sought related to earlier admissions made during the evidence of
Lekola and Khubeka (and the other accused). It also confirmed
that a separate source of the requested admissions were the findings
of fact made by Bam J.
24.2.
Moreover, the
formulation of the admissions themselves following the “preface”
(“
does the
defendant admit that…”
)
cannot be understood other than as a request to admit the facts then
listed, and not merely that Bam J’s judgment made certain
findings.
24.3.
Even when the requested
admissions refer to the judgment’s findings, this is done in a
manner that cannot be understood to avoid
the merits and truth of the
facts referred to, and regarding which an admission was sought.
[25]
As a result, I find
that the defendant did admit the facts listed in the requested
admissions, and not only that they are co-extensive
with the factual
findings by Bam J in the criminal trial judgment. The plain
language used cannot accommodate the interpretation
contended for by
the defendant now.
[26]
Turning to the leg of
the test that requires consideration of the reasonableness of the
explanation given for the amendment by the
defendant, I find that the
explanations given by the defendant are unsatisfactory and
unreasonable. Indeed, the defendant submits
several
explanations for its conduct – including that the admissions do not
mean what the plaintiff contends that they mean, that
they were made
in error and that they were made without instructions. This range of
explanations itself is unreasonable since they
are provided in the
alternative. The defendant ought to be aware of the reasons for
its conduct, rather than casting about
for alternative after-the-fact
explanations for it. Moreover, the affidavits provided by Mr Nel make
these bald assertions without
sufficient factual material provided to
support them as reasonable or to enable the court to choose between
them so as to identify
the actual reasonable explanation relied upon
by the defendant.
[27]
Finally, the manifest
prejudice to the future conduct of the matter if the trial becomes
protracted and the issues in dispute multiplied
as a result of the
amendment is clear and would be the direct and avoidable result of
the withdrawal of the admissions.
[28]
In light of all of
this, I find that the defendant has not satisfied the test for leave
to withdraw those admissions.
ORDER
[29]
Accordingly, the
following order is made:
29.1.
Non-compliance with the
time periods in rule 28 by the plaintiff in the filing of its notice
of objection to the defendant’s notice
of intention to amend its
plea is condoned;
29.2.
Any other
non-compliance with time periods in rule 30(2)(b) and (c) by the
parties is condoned;
29.3.
Defendant’s notice of
intention to amend dated 17 September 2021 constitutes an irregular
step and is set aside;
29.4.
Leave to amend as
contemplated in the proposed new paragraphs 11.1, 16.2, 16.3 and 16.4
of the defendant’s notice of intention to
amend dated 17 September
2021 is denied since the amendments impermissibly withdraw admissions
made by the defendant in its notice
of intention to amend of 7
October 2019 and/or paragraph 6 of the defendant’s pretrial
admissions of 25 September 2019;
and
29.5.
Costs of both parties’
applications to be paid by the defendant on an attorney and client
scale, including the costs of two counsel.
LE ROUX AJ
Acting Judge of the
High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected on 25 MARCH
2022 and is handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties/their legal representatives by e mail
and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 25 MARCH 2022.
DATE
OF HEARING:
16 MARCH
2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
25 MARCH 2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE PLAINTIFF:
M KRIEGLER SC
A KOLLOORI
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT: MM VAN ZYL SC
C SEVENSTER
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