Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 172South Africa
K Malao Inc and Others v Minister of Transport and Others (43422/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 172 (31 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 March 2022
Headnotes
in her judgment: The applicant is a firm of attorneys and not a
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## K Malao Inc and Others v Minister of Transport and Others (43422/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 172 (31 March 2022)
K Malao Inc and Others v Minister of Transport and Others (43422/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 172 (31 March 2022)
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sino date 31 March 2022
IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
Date:
31 MARCH 2022
CASE NO: 43422/20
In the matter between:
K
MALAO
INC
First Applicant
KOTSOKOANE
ATTORNEYS
Second Applicant
SENNE
INC
Third Applicant
MABUSE
ATTORNEYS
Fourth Applicant
MATUVHATSHINDI
ATTORNEYS
Fifth Applicant
NDOU
INC
Sixth Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF
TRANSPORT
First Respondent
THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE BOARD:
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Second Respondent
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT
FUND
Third Respondent
MR
COLLINS
LETSOALO
Fourth Respondent
NEUKIRCHER J
:
1]
This is an application to set aside the appointment of the fourth
respondent (Letsoalo) as the Chief
Executive Officer (CEO) of the
third respondent (the RAF). It is brought by various firms of
attorneys
[1]
who state:
“
10.
The applicants specialise in motor Vehicle Accident litigation
wherein they represent plaintiffs from various parts
of the country
in claims for compensation against the fourth respondent, the Road
Accident Fund. Each applicant acts for a number
of plaintiffs in
pending and unresolved matters against the Road Accident Fund, for
compensation.
11.
The applicants act in these proceedings in their own interest to
protect their constitutional right to obtain
effective legal redress
for victims of road accidents with valid claims against the Road
Accident Fund. They assert their Section
22 right to act as attorneys
for their clients in proceedings against the RAF. They also act in
the interests of their clients who
have a Section 34 constitutional
right of access to the courts to determine legal disputes with the
RAF.”
2]
The applicants further state that in the majority of matters where
they are the plaintiffs’ attorneys
of record, they have entered
into Contingency Fee Agreements
[2]
with their clients who are often destitute and who require access to
courts under s34 of the Constitution
[3]
.
They state that they and their clients therefore have an interest in
a RAF which is competently run and managed and that the appointment
of Letsoalo by the first respondent (the Minister) “
poses
a threat to the proper functioning of the Road Accident Fund and as a
result, the resolution and payment of plaintiffs’ claims.”
3]
The applicants have thus, in argument before me, relied on s38 of the
Constitution which provides:
“
38.
Enforcement of rights
.-
Anyone listed in this section has the right to approach a competent
court, alleging that a right in the Bill of Rights has been
infringed
or threatened, and the court may grant appropriate relief, including
a declaration of rights. The persons who may approach
a court are-
(a) anyone acting
in their own interest;
(b) anyone acting
on behalf of another person who cannot act in
their own name;
(c) anyone acting
as a member of, or in the interest of, a group or class of persons;
(d) anyone acting
in the public interest; and
(e) an
association acting in the interest of its members.”
[4]
4]
In seeking their relief, the applicants then proceed to attack the
grounds upon which Letsoalo was
appointed by the Minister.
THE LOCUS
STANDI ISSUE
5]
Prior to the hearing, I notified that parties that I required
submissions on the issue of the applicants’
locus standi
. In
particular, the question posed by me was the following:
“
An
attorney’s mandate to litigate is derived directly from the
client’s instruction. This would include any agreements re the
payment of fees and the fee structure. The fact that an attorney
“bankrolls” a client’s litigation does not detract from this.
The right to claim costs of litigation is that of the client and not
the attorney. It is the plaintiff who is entitled to be reimbursed
his/her costs of litigation when suing RAF (pursuant to our
adversarial system where generally costs follow the result). If the
RAF
defaults on a costs payment, it is not the attorney who sues the
RAF in his/her own name, but obo the successful plaintiff. And
similarly,
if the attorney is not paid, it/he does not sue the RAF
but would sue the client pursuant to the fee agreement.
Pars
11,12 and 13 of the founding affidavit notwithstanding, the parties
are invited to consider this issue. Should they wish to file
further
affidavits and heads of argument, same will be discussed at 09h30 on
Friday 15 October 2021.”
6]
The applicants as well as the second, third
[5]
and fourth
[6]
respondents all
filed further heads of argument
[7]
on the issue. On 15 November 2021 the applicants then emailed a copy
of what they termed “relevant case law” to me - this being
the
matter of
The
Trustees for the time being of the Legacy Body Corporate v Bae
Estates and Escapes (Pty) Ltd and Another (Bae Estates)
[8]
- where a point of
locus
standi
was taken for the first time on appeal.
7]
In writing for a unanimous court, Makgoka JA stated:
“
[35]
Significantly,
this point
[9]
was not even pleaded. In paras 8-10 above, I have set out fairly
comprehensively, the points in the trustees’ answering affidavit
upon which they rested their defence to the application. This was not
one of them. The point was raised for the first time in the
application for leave to appeal. Ordinarily, a point of lack of locus
standi should have been pertinently raised in the answering
affidavit
to enable Bae Estates to meet it, and for the high court to pronounce
on it.
[36]
It is so that the mere fact that a point of law is raised for the
first time on appeal is not in itself a sufficient
reason for
refusing to consider it. If the point is covered by the pleadings,
and if its consideration on appeal involves no unfairness
to the
other party against whom it is directed, a court may in the exercise
of its discretion consider the point. It would be unfair
to the other
party if the point of law and all its ramifications were not
canvassed and investigated at trial. In this case, the
point was
neither covered in the affidavits, nor was it canvassed and
investigated in the high court. It is, therefore, patently
unfair to
Bae Estates to have to be confronted with the point for the first
time on appeal. For this reason alone, the locus standi
point must be
dismissed. But, in any event, as I show below, there is no merit to
the point.”
8]
But this case is not apposite. In the matter to hand, I raised the
issue of
locus standi
prior to the hearing; I gave the parties
time to file heads of argument and, if they wished to do so, further
affidavits on this
point and I also gave them an opportunity to file
further heads of argument after the hearing if they wished to do so.
9]
The principle emphasized in
Bae Estates
is an age-old one and
that is that no party should be ambushed at trial. However, where the
point raised is covered by the pleadings
and its consideration
involves no unfairness to the party against whom it is raised, a
court may in the exercise of its discretion
consider the point. This
does not only apply to appeals, but to all matters.
10]
It is trite that the applicants are required to establish their locus
standi in their founding papers
[10]
.
The question is whether they have done so.
The s34, as
read with s38(c) argument
11]
In
Khorommbi
Mabuli Incorporated v Road Accident Fund and Others
[11]
,
Thlapi J dealt with a contempt of court application, brought by the
applicant attorneys firm, on behalf of its client. She stated:
“
[29]
According to Mr Lazarus the applicants had demonstrated that they had
a substantial interest in the order, hence
the launch of the
application on behalf of their clients. I do not find that such
direct and substantial interest, in their capacity
as attorneys for
the judgement creditors had been established or properly articulated.
Alternatively, a further complication is that
no confirmatory
affidavits from the judgement creditors have been obtained and
annexed to the papers.”
12]
Not long after, and in the second contempt of court application in
Khorommbi
Mabuli Incorporated v Road Accident Fund and Others
[12]
Basson J stated:
“
[10]
This time the applicant argues that it had been authorised by the
claimants (the judgment creditors) to bring the
contempt application
on their behalf and referred the court to the confirmatory affidavits
by the judgment creditors attached to
the papers.
[11]
I am in agreement with what Tlhapi, J held in her judgment: The
applicant is a firm of attorneys and not a
judgment creditor.
It is the judgment creditor that has a direct and substantial
interest in the application. A third party
cannot bring an
application for contempt of court…
[12]
None of the individual claimants, who are all judgment creditors
against the RAF, and who have a direct and
substantial interest in
the outcome of this application, have been joined in this contempt
application. In this regard I am
in agreement with the
submission that the applicant does not have the necessary locus
standi to bring the application on behalf of
the judgment creditors
and the application for contempt against the 1
st
, 2
nd
,
3
rd
and 4
th
respondents should be dismissed on
this ground alone. “
13]
In the matter before me, the applicants have not stated why their
clients are not the applicants. They have
failed to join any of their
clients to these proceedings, and they have failed to attach any
power of attorneys or confirmatory affidavits
by any of their clients
authorising them to act on their behalf in this particular matter. It
must be borne in mind that the applicants
are all attorneys firms.
Whilst they profess to act in this matter on behalf of their clients
in order to obtain effective legal
redress for them, they cannot do
so unless authorised. The applicants do not state that they have any
mandate from their clients
other than to institute claims against the
RAF – this is clear from the statement that “
[e]ach applicant
acts for a number of plaintiffs
in pending and unresolved
matters against the Road Accident Fund
for
compensation
.”
. Thus it is clear that their mandate
is limited to that.
14]
In this regard it is important to note that the claim against the RAF
remains that of the applicants’ respective
clients and it is this
claim that must be adjudicated and finalised.
15]
In
Road
Accident Fund v Legal Practice Council and Others
[13]
the following was said:
“
[27]
Most of the opposing respondents argue that the relief which the RAF
seeks in this application is unconstitutional, essentially
since it
will infringe the successful claimants’ constitutional rights to
equal protection and benefit of the law and access to
courts.
The RAF, on the other hand, argues that the relief it seeks - either
in terms of r 45A of the Uniform Rules of Court
or the common law or
s 173 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 - is
to prevent a constitutional crisis from
occurring if it can no longer
fulfil its constitutional obligations to provide social security and
access to healthcare services.
[28]
Section 9(1) of the Constitution provides that ‘[e]veryone is equal
before the law and has the right to equal
protection and benefit of
the law’. Section 34 affords everyone ‘the right to have
any dispute that can be resolved by
the application of law decided in
a fair public hearing before a court’. The right to execute
an order is incidental to the
rights afforded by s 34. As was
said by Mokgoro J in Chief Lesapo v North West Agricultural Bank and
another
[1999] ZACC 16
;
2000 (1) SA 409
(CC) para 13:
‘
An important purpose of s
34 is to guarantee the protection of the judicial process to persons
who have disputes that can be resolved
by law. Execution is a
means of enforcing a judgment or order of court and is incidental to
the judicial process. It
is regulated by statute and the Rules
of Court and is subject to the supervision of the court which has an
inherent jurisdiction
to stay the execution if the interests of
justice so require.’
(Footnotes
omitted.)
And Jafta J put
it as follows in Mieni v Minister of Health and Welfare, Eastern Cape
2000 (4) SA 446
(Tk) at 452G-H and 453C-D:
‘
The constitutional right of
access to courts would remain an illusion unless orders made by
courts are capable of being enforced by
those in whose favour such
orders were made. The process of adjudication and the
resolution of disputes in courts of law is
not an end in itself but
only a means thereto; the end being the enforcement of rights or
obligations defined in the court order.’
“
16]
The respondents have argued that even after the applicants filed a
Rule 16A notice, no other party and no judgment
creditor applied to
be joined in this application to state that their rights have been
impacted by Letsoalo’s appointment. They
argue that the only
parties who wish to review the decision to appoint Letsoalo are the
applicants.
17]
As has already been stated, an attorney derives his mandate from his
client. He obtains his instructions from
his client. Most, if not
all, attorneys have a fee agreement with their client and, in matters
involving the RAF, many attorneys
act on contingency. But this does
not mean that the attorney derives an interest in the litigation –
to the contrary, the right
remains at all times that of the client.
It is the client whose case is asserted in a court, it is the client
who (if successful)
obtains judgment in his name and becomes the
‘judgment creditor’. The costs of the litigation are also payable
to the client
as part of his successful suit. If the judgment debt
(and costs) are not paid, a warrant of execution and attachment may
be issued
– but this is in the name of the plaintiff. Our courts
have also stated that contempt of court proceedings cannot be bought
by
attorneys as they have no direct or substantial interest in the
application -they must be in the name of the judgment
creditor/plaintiff.
18]
In seeking to assert the s34 rights of their clients, the applicants’
complaints do not go far enough to demonstrate
that any of their
clients have either been denied access to the court or access to
justice – they have pointed to not one matter
in which a claim has
not been resolved, nor one matter in which payment has not been
received.
[14]
19]
In fact, the complaint appears to be based on the following passages
in the Founding Affidavit itself:
“
14.
The applicants bring this application because the appointment of the
fourth respondent by the first respondent as
the CEO of the Road
Accident Fund poses a threat to the proper functioning of the Road
Accident Fund and as a result, the resolution
and payment of
plaintiff’s claims. This apprehension is not speculative but is
based on empirical evidence.
15.
The resolution of plaintiff’s claims is jeopardised by the
appointment of the CEO in the following respects:
15.1
He already has a track record of destabilising the RAF. This includes
suspending senior officials, making new appointments
who report
directly to him despite being junior to middle and/or senior
managers. He has forbidden claims handlers to communicate
with panel
attorneys despite matters being on trial. He has taken decisions on
matters on which he has no powers since they fall
within the Board’s
remit. This includes dispensing with panel attorneys and cancelling
the tender for appointment of a new panel.
Since June 2020 the legal
representation of the RAF in Court proceedings in pending trials has
been a perplexing mess that, due to
the intransigence of Mr Letsoalo
remains unresolved. He has shown no leadership in this regard and has
been responsible for the largest
litigation crisis in all divisions
of the High Court;
15.2
He is taking steps aimed at entrenching delays in payment of road
accident fund victims whose claims have been finalised
either through
settlement or litigation. He is instructing banks not to cooperate
with sheriffs who wish to attach RAF assets for
non-payment of
judgment debts. He is seeking to interdict sheriffs in court
proceedings in August 2020 from attaching Fund assets;
15.3
He has turned his back on the lawful system of procuring legal
services from panel attorneys duly appointed after
a public
procurement process. No attorney representing the RAF in court
proceedings since June can give the assurance to the Court
that he
has bene properly appointed by the RAF, on the one hand, or that he
still holds instructions to represent the RAF, on the
other hand.
This affects the validity of legal representation of the RAF in Court
proceedings and therefore affects the validity
of the legal process
for compensation of such plaintiffs;
15.4
He is vindictive and takes reprisals against attorneys who take him
to Court. This is demonstrated by this conduct
against those panel
attorneys who challenged him in Court proceedings regarding the
decision dispensing with panel attorneys from
June 2020.”
20]
As is clear from the above, this application has more to do with the
self-interests of the applicants than their
professed duty towards
their clients. This is made more obvious by the fact that there has
been much litigation on the subject of
the termination of the panel
of attorneys by the RAF. Whilst it is certainly so that, initially,
there was much confusion and consternation
caused by RAF’s
non-appearance at the civil trial roll call in these matters
[15]
,
that situation was remedied by the fact that judgment was granted in
default of the RAF’s appearance in terms of the Uniform Rules
of
Court and, later, with the guidance of Directives issued by the Judge
President of the Gauteng Division
[16]
.
21]
Thus, at no stage were plaintiffs denied access to courts or access
to justice. One must also never lose sight
of the fact that there is
no rule which would entitle a party, or a court for that matter, to
force another party to come to court
and defend a matter they did not
wish to defend. That is precisely why a court is entitled to grant
judgment against a party in default
of an appearance.
22]
The applicants allege that the interest of personal injury attorneys
is self-evident. The submission is that
a dysfunctional RAF adversely
affects the rights of plaintiff attorneys in practising in the courts
as non-appearance by the RAF
or their attorneys at trial and
non-payment of judgment debts adversely affects all role players.
23]
In my view the applicants’ argument in this matter is artificial:
firstly - as stated - the Rules of Court
specifically cater for
instances where the defendant is in default of appearance. The courts
are not hamstrung by a non-appearance
of the RAF at trial – the
court may grant judgment in default of the RAF’s appearance;
secondly, the applicants have not pointed
to any specific instances
of non-payment by the RAF. At best their argument is that payment has
been delayed. This is not novel and
it is not unique to the RAF. As
previously pointed out, this has been dealt with in several instances
by our courts in the past year
and, bearing in mind that the 6 month
hiatus granted on warrants of execution in
RAF
v LPC
[17]
has passed, the applicants are entitled to utilise the mechanisms
provided in the Rules to enforce payment – just as they would
in
any other matter against a defendant who fails to satisfy a judgment
debt.
24]
Thus, the section 34 rights upon which the plaintiffs rely on behalf
of their clients are firstly not theirs
to assert, secondly they have
failed to join (or provide a mandate from) any party who alleges that
their section 34 rights have
been subverted, and thirdly, as they are
not, and will not ever be, a judgment creditor in a claim instituted
by a plaintiff against
the RAF. They have therefore not demonstrated
any direct and substantial interest on this leg of the argument.
The s22, as
read with s38(a), argument
25]
Section 22 of the Constitution states:
“
Every
citizen has the right to choose their trade, occupation or profession
freely. The practice of a trade, occupation or profession
may be
regulated by law.”
26]
In
Giant
Concert CC v Rinaldo Investments (Pty) Ltd
[18]
the
court held that:
“
33.
The separation of the merits from the question of standing has two
implications for
the own-interest litigant. First, it signals that
the nature of the interest that confers standing on the own-interest
litigant is
insulated from the merits of the challenge he or she
seeks to bring. An own-interest litigant does not acquire standing
from the
invalidity of the challenged decision or law, but from the
effect it will have on his or her interests or potential interests.
He
or she has standing to bring the challenge even if the decision or
law is in fact valid. But the interests that confer standing to
bring
the challenge, and the impact the decision or law has on them, must
be demonstrated.
34.
Second, it means that an
own-interest litigant may be denied
standing
even though the result could be that an unlawful decision stands.
This is not illogical. As the Supreme Court of Appeal pointed
out,
standing determines solely whether this particular litigant
is entitled to mount the challenge: a successful challenge
to a
public decision can be brought only if “the right remedy is sought
by the right person in the right proceedings”.
39
To
this observation one must add that the interests of justice under the
Constitution may require courts to be hesitant to dispose
of cases on
standing alone where broader concerns of accountability and
responsiveness may require investigation and determination
of the
merits. By corollary, there may be cases where the interests of
justice or the public interest might compel a court to scrutinise
action even if the applicant’s standing is questionable. When the
public interest cries out for relief, an applicant should not
fail
merely for acting in his or her own interest.”
27]
But the
Giant Concerts
case is to be differed on the
application of the facts – in that case, Giant Concerts sought to
challenge the lawfulness of a contract
under which the eThekwini
Municipality sold land to the respondent, Rinaldo Investments. The
aggrieved applicant had sought to purchase
that land and had lodged
an objection to the sale of the land to Rinaldo, but the agreement
was concluded anyway. The Supreme Court
of Appeal found that Giant
Concerts did not have legal standing to challenge the lawfulness of
the contract between eThekwini and
Rinaldo Investments and this
decision was upheld by the Constitutional Court which found the
following:
“
55.
The inference that Giant
was merely toying with process, or seeking to thwart a propitious
public development because it had been
made available to someone
else, is therefore one the Court is entitled to draw. The consequence
is that Giant lacks standing, since
its interest remains incipient
and has never become direct or substantial.
56.
Giant’s mere participation in
the notice and comment process by
lodging
an objection did not confer standing on it to challenge the
transaction. The very point of that process is to identify
objections,
to afford them expression, and then to evaluate and
consider them.
It is not logical to assert that an
own-interest standing qualification arises from participation in a
process if the objection remains
hypothetical and academic.
57.
Section 217 of the Constitution,
on which Giant relied, does not give
stronger
warrant to its claim to standing. This is because Giant never
gave substance to its complaint that the process should
have involved
competitive tendering by even minimally showing in the review
proceedings that it had the capacity to make a competitive
alternative proposal. Ultimately this is why it should be denied
standing.”
28]
Insofar as the applicants base their claim on section 22 of the
Constitution, they must demonstrate on what
basis they have been
prevented from plying their trade and, in my view, this is where the
applicants’ argument stumbles. The appointment
of Letsoalo does not
detract from the applicants’ choice to apply their chosen
occupation – in fact, they apply their trade freely
which is what
the Constitution allows them to do. But the applicants are enjoined
to apply their trade within the confines of the
applicable law, this
being the Legal Practice Act
[19]
and all the Rules that apply to their trade, for example the Superior
Courts Act
[20]
and Uniform
Rules of Court, to name just two.
29]
The fact is that this matter is about little more than the fact that
the applicants are aggrieved by their termination
from the RAF panel
of attorneys and/or the fact that the parlous financial state of the
RAF (which has existed for many years prior
to Letsoalo’s
appointment) have resulted in delayed payment
[21]
of plaintiffs’ claims
[22]
.
30]
Amongst others, this issue was raised in
FourieFismer
Inc and Others v Road Accident Fund and related matters
[23]
and when a section 18(3) application was heard by the Full Court, the
following was noted:
“
ii)
Chaos in the civil rolls and the judicial system in disarray: The
Court cited examples of cases being postponed, matters proceeding
by
default and a general state of uncertainty in the system as well as
the Courts regarding RAF matters. In those examples Courts
stood
matters down to the next day where in one instance it appears
finality was reached for the benefit of both the claimant and
the RAF
and in the other it was not clear what occurred. The RAF says that
its inhouse staff including lawyers are making good progress
in
resolving matters and that the crisis that the respondents allude to
are in the words of Davis J
[24]
‘more illusionary than real’.
(iii) Of
course any suggestion of a crisis in the civil rolls or of the
juridical system being in disarray requires to be taken seriously.
What emerges however is that there has been some disruption which
one imagines would have been inevitable with the transition from
an
old established model to a new model whose fault lines are still to
emerge. There has certainly been disruption and a level
of
uncertainty but given the volume of RAF matters that come before our
Courts, even in those cases cited, the outcomes have generally
not
been prejudicial to claimants or the system as a whole.
In this
regard it must be recalled that claimants are generally represented
by attorneys and counsel who will seek to ensure that
the interests
of claimants are not imperiled and courts at the same time will seek
to ensure that those interests are also protected
and that the
judicial system does not fall into disarray. Some of the examples
cited compellingly demonstrate how courts have been
proactive in
protecting the integrity of the system for the benefit of all and are
duty bound to oversee settlement agreements when
they are made orders
of court.
(iv)
Finally, and in passing, one is compelled to observe that some two
and a half months after the grant of the review order and
the ongoing
suspension of its operation occasioned by both the application for
leave to appeal as well as the automatic appeal in
terms of Section
18(4),
the
evidence of chaos, disruption and a judicial system in disarray
remains scattered, anecdotal and relatively isolated if
regard is had
to the nature of the disruptions, how they have been managed as well
as the volume of cases that are being dealt with.
If anything, the
crisis the respondents make reference to, would have exacerbated over
time resulting in the possible implosion of
the system or the
emergence of more sustained harm but no further evidence of this has
emerged.
”
[25]
31]
These allegations
[26]
have
been raised several times before and have been raised once more
before me, but in my view they do not found the applicants’
locus
standi:
the
applicants are all admitted legal practitioners who practice under
the watchful eye of the Legal Practice Council (LPC)
[27]
.
Thus, the practice of their trade is subject to, or limited, by the
application of that law and the Rules and Codes published by
the LPC.
For as long as they remain on the roll of legal practitioners, they
are entitled to represent a client from whom they derive
their
mandate to litigate and from whom they also receive payment for
services rendered. The latter would be pursuant to either a
fee
arrangement or via an agreement concluded under the
Contingency Fees
Act 66 of 1997
. At no stage does an attorney acquire any right qua
his client to the litigation itself.
32]
The appointment of Letsoalo as CEO of the RAF neither deprives the
applicants of their right to practice their
chosen trade under
section 22 of the Constitution, nor of their entitlement to receive
their remuneration from their clients.
Conclusion
33]
Whilst the applicants assert the injunctive relief stipulated in
s172(1)(a)
[28]
of the
Constitution, I am of the view that there is no conduct inconsistent
with the Constitution which requires that a declaration
of invalidity
be made. I am of the view that there is no triable issue
[29]
which confers upon the applicants the
locus
standi
to bring this application.
[30]
34]
I am therefore of the view that the application must fail on that
basis alone. Given this, it is unnecessary
to consider the merits of
the application.
Costs
35]
As to the issue of costs: there is no reason to deprive any of the
respondents of their costs. They have all
been successful in their
opposition. They all seek costs of two counsel and I am of the view
that, given the complexities of the
matter, costs of two counsel are
warranted.
Order
36]
The order I therefore make is the following:
The application
is dismissed with costs, which costs shall include the costs of two
counsel
.
NEUKIRCHER
J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Delivered: This judgment
was prepared and authored by the 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 for hand-down is deemed
to be 31 MARCH 2022.
For the
applicant
: EC
Labuschagne SC, with him I Hlalethoa and V Mabuza
Instructed
by
: K Malao
Inc
For the 1
st
respondent
: J
Motepe SC, with him MV Magagane
Instructed
by
: State
Attorney, Pretoria
For the 2
nd
and 3
rd
respondents
:
NA
Cassim SC, with him S Freese
Instructed
by
: Malatji
& Co. Inc
For the 4
th
respondent
: C
Puckrin SC, with him R Schoeman and P Nyapholi-Motsie
Instructed
by
: Malatji
& Co. Inc
Matter heard on
: 15 October
2021
[1]
Referred
to herein as ‘the applicants’
[2]
In
terms of the
Contingency Fees Act no 66 of 1997
[3]
Section
34:
“
Everyone
has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the
application of law
decided in a fair public
hearing before a court or, where appropriate, another independent
and impartial tribunal or forum.”
[4]
The
relevant provisions being
s38(a)
and (c)
[5]
They
filed their supplementary heads of argument on 22 October 2021
[6]
He
filed his further heads of argument on 22 October 2021
[7]
The
applicants filed their second supplementary heads of argument on 10
October 2021 and further
submissions on locus standi on
14 October 2021
[8]
(C
ase
no 304/2020)
[2021] ZASCA 157
(5 November 2021)
[9]
I.e
the point of locus standi
[10]
United
Methodist Church of South Africa v Sokufunumala
1989 (4) SA 1055
(O)
at 1057D-I; Tavakoli
and Another v Bantry Hills (Pty)
Ltd
2019 (3) SA 163
(SCA) para 26
## [11](6683/21)
[2021] ZAGPPHC 162 (12 March 2021)
[11]
(6683/21)
[2021] ZAGPPHC 162 (12 March 2021)
[12]
[2021]
ZAGPPHC 386 (11 June 2021)
## [13]2021
(6) SA 230 (GP)
[13]
2021
(6) SA 230 (GP)
[14]
A
delay in payment is to be differentiated from a complete failure to
pay
[15]
Dichabe
v RAF (case no 18770/16 – Gauteng Division, Pretoria); judgment
date 15 June 2020 –
Neukircher J
[16]
Revised
Directive 1 of 2021 re Civil Trials in the Gauteng Division of the
High Court (issued on 11 June
2021); Revised Consolidated 18
September 2021 Directive re Court Operations in the Gauteng
Division of the High Court
[17]
At
paragraph 13 supra
[18]
[2012]
ZACC 28
(29 November 2012) para 31
[19]
28 of
2014
[20]
10 of
2013
[21]
Which is to be differentiated from non-payment
[22]
A fact
which is also not new or unique to Lesoalo’s appointment
[23]
2020
(5) SA 465 (GP)
[24]
Davis
J heard Part A of the application ie it was an application for
interim relief. He dismissed it as he found that the applicants
had
not demonstrated a
prima
facie
right even if open to some doubt. Part B was heard by Hughes J who
granted certain relief
## [25]Road
Accident Fund and Others v Mabunda and Others (15876/2020;
17518/2020; 18239/2020)
[25]
Road
Accident Fund and Others v Mabunda and Others (15876/2020;
17518/2020; 18239/2020)
## [2020]
ZAGPPHC 386; [2021] 1 All SA 255 (GP) (18 August 2020) para 60
[2020]
ZAGPPHC 386; [2021] 1 All SA 255 (GP) (18 August 2020) para 60
[26]
Of
systemic chaos, threats to the proper functioning of the RAF,
destabilisation of the RAF and the
delayed resolution of
plaintiffs’ claims
[27]
Established
by the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014
.
[28]
“
172(1)
When deciding a constitutional matter within its power, a court-
(a)
must declare that any law or
conduct that is inconsistent with the Constitution is invalid to the
extent of its inconsistency…”
[29]
Mukaddam
v Pioneer Foods (Pty) Ltd and Others
2013 (5) SA 89
(CC) para 16
[30]
Moropa
and Others v Chemical Industries National Providence Fund and Others
2021 (1) SA 499
(GJ)
para 31 – the legal standing
must be determined independently of the merits of the challenge
sino noindex
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