Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 247South Africa
Recycling and Economic Development Initiative of South Africa NPC v Pirelli Tyre (Pty) Ltd (69164/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 247 (19 April 2022)
Headnotes
several operational meetings with the Department between 2013 and 2014 and that it was the Department’s position that ‘the REDISA Plan does not need to be amended and taken through the review process as contemplated in Regulation …12’. It therefore in terms of those consultations published its first annual public report in October 2015 on its website which it specifically addressed the maintenance of the fee at R2.30kg. [13] It averred that the Respondent’s alternative defence that the REDISA Board has misappropriated the REDISA funds to enrich its shareholders, in which its reliance was on the winding up proceedings
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPPHC 247
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Recycling and Economic Development Initiative of South Africa NPC v Pirelli Tyre (Pty) Ltd (69164/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 247 (19 April 2022)
Recycling and Economic Development Initiative of South Africa NPC v Pirelli Tyre (Pty) Ltd (69164/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 247 (19 April 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2022_247.html
sino date 19 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISON, PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 69164/2019
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
19/4/22
In
the matter between:
RECYCLING
AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
INITIATIVE
OF SOUTH AFRICA
NPC
Applicant
And
PIRELLI
TYRE (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
Delivered
on: 19 April 2022
JUDGMENT
SARDIWALLA
J
:
# Introduction:
Introduction:
[1]
This is an application brought on notice
of motion whereby the
Applicant seeks the Respondent to comply with its legal obligations,
in terms of a Deed of Adherence signed
by the Respondent, of which it
committed itself to compliance with the REDISA Plan including the
payment of fees.
# Background to the
Application:
Background to the
Application:
[2]
On 30 November 2012 the Minister of Water
and Environmental Affairs
promulgated the Integrated Industry Waste Tyre Management Plan
(‘HWTMP’) more commonly known
as ‘the REDISA Plan’.
The REDISA Plan is an instrument of subordinate legislation was
created to manage the national
network for collecting waste tyres,
storing them and delivering them to the recycling process.
[3]
There REDISA plan is a self-funding initiative
funded by a waste tyre
management fee that all tyre manufactures and importers pay to REDISA
in terms of the Waste Tyre Regulations,
2009, published under GN R149
in GG 31901 of 13 February 2009 (“The Regulations’)
promulgated under the Environment
Conservation Act 73 of 1989 (‘the
ECA”).
[4]
The Applicant is a company incorporated in
terms the
Companies Act,
71 of 2008
of South Africa and is responsible for the scheme.
[5]
The Respondent is a company carrying on business
as a tyre importer
and/or manufacture of tyres as defined in terms of the REDISA Plan
and is a subscriber to the REDISA Plan.
[6]
The Respondent signed a Deed of Adherence
“the DOA’ on 29
January 2013 in which it committed itself to the compliance with the
REDISA Plan which included the
payment of the waste tyre management
fee.
[7]
The Respondent has failed to comply with
its obligations to pay the
waste tyre management fee for the period of August 2016 to November
2016 to the amount of R3,775,558.77
calculated as follows:
7.1
Invoice number 6000, dated 5 August 2016, for an amount of
R878,394.93;
7.2
Invoice number 6155, dated 16 September 2016, for an amount of
R833,949.71; and
7.3
Invoice number 6332, dated 15 November 2016, for an amount of R1,
194,920.17 and
7.4
Invoice number 6333, dated 15 November 2016, for an amount of
R868,293.96.
[8]
On 30 July the Applicant addressed a letter
of demand to the
Respondent for the outstanding fees, setting out the Respondent’s
legal obligations and consequences of
non- compliance in respect of
the REDISA Plan. The Applicant instituted this application on 13
September 2019., the purpose of
which is that the Applicant seeks
payment of the outstanding fees in terms of the following order: -
“
1.
Payment in the Sum of R3,775,558.77;
2.
Interest thereon a tempora morae;
3.
Costs of suit; and
4.
Further and/or alternative relief.”
[9]
The application is opposed by the Respondent
on the grounds that:
9.1
The Applicant in contravention of the REDISA Plan failed to review
the Waste Tyre Fee annually
and in consultation with the relevant
consumer bodies;
9.2
Did not determine the Waste Tyre Fee on a cost recover basis; and
9.3
That the Applicant’s calculation of the Waste Tyre Fee for the
period of October to December
2016 was unlawful and unconstitutional.
# Applicant’s
Argument
Applicant’s
Argument
[10]
It is the applicant’s submission that the respondent has
wilfully and intentionally failed to comply with its statutory
obligations and contractual obligations of the Deed of Adherence
set
out below as follows:
a)
The
REDISA Plan
“
Clause 4
“Subscribers to the Plan” provided that:
Any tyre producer, in
terms of part 3 of the Waste Tyre Regulations must subscribe to an
Integrated Industry Waste Tyre Management
Plan (IIWTMP) approved by
the Minister. A tyre producer’s failure to subscribe to an
approved IIWTMP whilst continuing to
produce tyres would constitute
an offence.
In order for the
proper operations of the Plan, all subscribers will have to sign a
deed of adherence acknowledging the existence
of the IIWTMP and the
requirements of the Waste Tyre Regulations…
Clause 16 ‘Estimated
Costs” provided that:
... in the initial
years of operations, there will be over-recovery of operating costs
from the Waste Tyre Management Fee as a number
of depots,
transporters and Processors will be less than the targets final
numbers. The over-recovery will be accumulated as provisions
will be
used to find establishment and set up costs..
…
REDISA will
obtain its funds primarily from the levying of Waste Tyre Management
Fees from subscribers of R2.30 + VAT per kg of
manufactured and/or
imported tyres and casings…
Clause 17.1 “Payments’
provided that:
The Waste Tyre
Management Fee levied on the subscribers will be calculated to
recover the cost of the waste tyre management process
..
Subscribers will have
to produce monthly and actual statistics on tyres produced and/or
imported…payment terms for subscribers
who are regular
importers or manufacturers and who are subscribed to the Plan will be
90 days…
…
The Waste Tyre
Management Fee will be reviewed annually and accordingly notified to
all subscribers, and is subject to change depending
on actual costs
and number of tyres manufactured and imported. REDISA will strive at
all times to minimize the Fee, while still
meeting its mandate.
REDISA’s objective will be to contain the levy amount in real
terms to be equal to or less than the
initial amount.
Clause 28.2
‘Compliance Monitoring’ provides that:
Failure to abide by
the terms of the obligations of a subscriber towards REDISA will
result in non-compliance, and this will include
but not be limited
to, inter alia, in the circumstances set out below:
·
Failure to provide monthly declarations within 2 workings days of
due date;
·
Failure to declare fully all tyres manufactured, imported or
exported;
·
Failure to pay Waste Tyre Management Fee by due date.
b)
The
Deed of Adherence
On 29 January 2013, the
Respondent represented by its financial manager Riaan van Niekerk
signed the ‘DOA’ to comply
with the REDISA Plan and all
its provisions including any reasonable administrative requirements
and act in compliance and abide
by the REDISA plan at all times.
[11]
It argues that the Respondent has not denied the Applicant’s
claim or the quantum but has instead raised a defence of ‘collateral’
challenge to the fee payable due to the Applicant’s
alleged
failure to review the fee being an unlawful administrative act.
Relying on a plethora of legal precedent the Applicant’s
argued
that a court could only exercise its discretion to allow a party to
invoke ‘collateral’ challenge where there
is a reasonable
explanation and basis to do so. Therefore, there is an onus on the
Respondent to demonstrate that there were appropriate
circumstances,
including an adequate explanation for the delay in challenging the
unlawful administrative act, which the Applicant
submits the
Respondents has failed to do. It states that despite the fact that
the Respondent had the opportunity to institute
review proceedings
regarding the determination of the fees, which is designed to
investigate alleged unlawful administrative acts,
it failed to do so
for several years without any explanation why it did not take such
steps if it claims there were irregularities.
Nor does the Respondent
provide any explanation of any other action it took to address the
irregularities it claims exist. It now
for the first time raises the
issue of unlawfulness in these proceedings with an objective to
utilize the defence to defy its statutory
obligations which should
not be permissible.
[12]
The Applicant indicated that it had complied with it obligation
to
‘review’ the fee which it contended also included to
‘revise’ and to ‘amend’ when it held
several
operational meetings with the Department between 2013 and 2014 and
that it was the Department’s position that ‘the
REDISA
Plan does not need to be amended and taken through the review process
as contemplated in Regulation …12’. It
therefore in
terms of those consultations published its first annual public report
in October 2015 on its website which it specifically
addressed the
maintenance of the fee at R2.30kg.
[13]
It averred that the Respondent’s alternative defence that
the
REDISA Board has misappropriated the REDISA funds to enrich its
shareholders, in which its reliance was on the winding up proceedings
instituted by the Minister against REDISA was untenable as the SCA in
those proceedings rejected the theory that there was any
misappropriation. Lastly that there was no basis for the order of
discovery sought by the Respondent as it is a general principle
that
there is no discovery in applications unless there is an application
in terms of Rule 35(13) which the Respondent’s
again have
failed to institute. As a result, there is no actual defences against
the Applicant’s relief.
# Respondent’s
Argument
Respondent’s
Argument
[14]
The respondent opposed the application on two grounds. Firstly,
that
REDISA failed to review the fee annually or at all and therefore the
fee was unlawful. It alleges that if REDISA did in fact
review the
fee that it did not consider or consul with the Respondent which is
unlawful and procedurally unfair. Therefore, it
is not obligated to
pay a fee that was imposed unlawfully by REDISA. It’s second
argument was that the conduct of REDISA’s
Board was
mala
fide
in that the funds of the REDISA Plan were being
misappropriated to the benefit of the managing company appointed for
the collection
of the fees. Further that The Board failed in its
obligations terms of clause 17.1 to minimize or reduce fees where the
actual
costs each year was lower and the surplus increased.
[15]
The Respondent relied on the previous litigation proceedings
instituted
by the Minister to further its arguments regarding the
review of fees and the Applicant’s conduct. It further averred
that
in respect of the meeting held between the Board and the
Department of Environmental Affairs, the fact that the Department did
not permit the increase as suggested by the Applicant was not an
instruction to not review the fee, rather to the contrary the
Respondent argued that the Department was clearly of the view that
the Applicant could not only justify and increase but the continued
rate of R2.30kg as appropriate. Therefore, the conduct of the
Applicant in not reviewing the fee and not consulting the subscribers
was not lawful. Lastly that the Department had no power to instruct
the Applicant not to comply with the REDISA Plan and its failure
to
conduct the review and consult with subscribers was arbitrary and
contrary to the ‘doctrine of public accountability’
which
is a punishable offence in terms of Regulation 17(1)(B) of the Waste
Tyre Regulations.
# The Collateral Challenge
The Collateral Challenge
[16]
A collateral challenge raises the invalidity and unlawfulness of
an
administrative action as a defence prior to it being set aside. It is
collateral because it is raised in proceedings which are
not intended
to decide the validity or otherwise of such administrative action.
[17]
In the case of
Gobela Consulting CC v Makhado Municipality
(910/19)
[2020] ZASCA 180
, the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) was
called upon to consider whether the high court was entitled to find
that a contract was
invalid and unlawful despite the municipality not
having made a counter-application seeking to review and set it aside
after being
sued by the consulting firm for alleged breach of
contract. The municipality had instead raised a collateral challenge,
where it
relied on the invalidity of the disputed contract due to
prescribed procurement processes not being followed.
[18]
The appeal concerned a dispute arising from a contract concluded
by
the municipal manager on behalf of Makhado Municipality with Gobela
Consulting. The contract emanated from an unsolicited proposal
submitted by Gobela to the municipality to render certain services.
No performance was rendered in terms of that contract. Gobela
alleged
that the municipality had refused and/or neglected to allow it to
perform its obligations in terms of the contract and
subsequently
issued summons against the municipality, claiming the entire contract
value as damages for alleged breach of contract.
[19]
The municipality raised a special plea disputing the municipal
manager’s authority to enter into the contract. In its plea,
the municipality denied liability on the basis that the contract
was
in contravention of the
Local Government: Municipal Finance
Management Act 56 of 2003
and the municipality’s own Supply
Chain Management Policy, and that as a result, the contract was
invalid and unlawful. Importantly,
the municipality did not file a
counter- application seeking the review and setting aside of the
contract.
[20]
The high court found that the contract was concluded in breach of
the
applicable procurement prescripts which are designed to ensure a
transparent, cost-effective and competitive tendering process
as
prescribed by section 217 of the Constitution and the provisions of
the Municipal Finance Management Act. Accordingly, it dismissed
Gobela’s claim on the basis that the contract was invalid and
unlawful. Gobela appealed the judgement and argued in the SCA
that
the high court had erred in dismissing its claim, on the basis that
since the municipality did not bring a counter-application
to set
aside the contract, it was not open to the court to sanction the
municipality’s collateral challenge to the validity
of the
contract by declaring the contract invalid and unlawful. In support
of its argument, Gobela relied on
MEC for Health, Eastern Cape and
Another v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd
2014 (5) BCLR 547
(CC)
(
Kirland
).
[21]
In answering the question whether the high court was entitled to
declare the contract invalid and unlawful in the absence of a
counter-application specifically seeking that it be reviewed and
set
aside, the SCA referred to the Constitutional Court’s (CC)
judgement in
Merafong City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti
Limited
2017 (2) SA 211
(CC) (
Merafong
). In the Merafong
judgement, the majority found that South African law allows for a
degree of flexibility in collateral challenges
to administrative
action.
[22]
In
Merafong
, the CC reaffirmed the Oudekraal principle
(Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
2004
(6) SA 222
(SCA)) that a decision by an organ of state remains
binding until set aside. Moreover, it provided some guidelines for
assessing
the competence of a collateral challenge. With specific
reference to
Kirland
, it provided that,
“
Both decisions
[Oudekraal and Kirland] recognised that there may be occasions where
an administrative decision or ruling should
be treated as invalid
even though no action has been taken to strike it down. Neither
decision expressly circumscribed the circumstances
in which an
administrative decision could be attacked reactively as invalid. As
important, they did not imply or entail that, unless
they bring court
proceedings to challenge an administrative decision, public
authorities are obliged to accept it as valid. And
neither imposed an
absolute duty of proactivity on public authorities. It all depends on
the circumstances.
…
A
reactive
challenge
should
be
available
where
justice
requires
it
to
be.
That
will depend, in each case, on the facts.
”
The
SCA held that the permissibility of a collateral challenge to the
lawfulness of an administrative action depends on a variety
of
factors. In this case, the SCA considered firstly, that the high
court took into account in its judgement that, despite the
absence of
a counter- application, the validity and lawfulness of the contract
was raised squarely in the pleadings. Secondly,
by not declaring the
contract invalid and unlawful, the untenable outcome would be that
the high court would be authorising the
very result which section 217
of the Constitution and all other procurement-related prescripts seek
to prevent. Thirdly, finding
in favour of Gobela would have the
equally untenable result that the municipality would be required to
pay for a benefit it did
not receive.
[23]
The SCA held that justice required that the municipality be allowed
to raise a collateral challenge and consequently that the high court
was entitled to declare the disputed contract invalid and
unlawful,
despite the municipality not having counter-applied for it to be
reviewed and set aside.
[24]
This judgement made it clear that a court is entitled to declare
a
contract invalid and unlawful where justice requires it to do so,
even in the absence of a counter-application seeking the review
and
setting aside of the contract. However, each case will and should be
decided on its own merits.
Breach
of contract in terms of the Deed of Adherence
[25]
The Applicant contends that failure to pay the waste management
fee
is a material breach of the contract as set out in terms of
clause
16 and 17.1
of the REDISA Plan. On 30 July 2019 Applicant’s
attorneys addressed a letter to Respondent informing it that it was
in breach
of the agreement of REDISA Plan, by failing to make payment
of the fees due to Applicant as set out in
clause 16 and 17.1
respectively.
[26]
Significantly the respondent does not deny that it is indebted to
the
Applicant but has instead raised the ‘collateral’
challenge to vitiate its responsibility to pay in terms of the
Deed
of Adherence. The Respondent addresses the issue of the breach of the
agreement by stating that the Applicant was in fact
in breach of the
REDISA Plan for its failure to review the Fee annually. It in fact
does not even dispute the amounts claimed by
the Applicant it simply
alleges that the fee for the specific period is unlawful and
therefore it cannot be required to pay it.
To the contrary the
Respondent in its papers confirms that the REDISA Plan was binding on
the parties but seeks only to hold the
Applicant accountable for its
alleged failures in attempt to absolve itself from its responsibility
in terms of the Plan. Alternatively
suggests that the failure of the
Applicant to comply with the Plan by consulting with the Respondent
permits it not to comply either.
However, the Respondent has not
provided any proof in this respect but rather requires this Court to
sanction its unlawful conduct
merely on the basis that the alleged
conduct of the Applicant too is also unlawful. Such contentions are
bad in law and cannot
be deemed to be a just and equitable approach
to addressing contraventions.
[27]
I am of the opinion that the Respondent cannot place the burden
of
existence of its defence, which in this matter has been done by way
of a ‘collateral’ challenge, of the alleged
unlawfulness
of the determination of the fee on the Applicant. In the absence of
evidence by the Respondent and on analysis of
clause 17.1 of the
REDISA Plan it is clear from the ordinary reading of the clause that
the annual review would be an internal
discussion on whether to amend
or maintain and that the subscribers would be notified of the outcome
of such discussion thereafter.
Whilst perhaps I empathise with the
Respondent that such decisions may adversely affect it and other
consumers and therefore perhaps
is imperative that such discussions
be a collective endeavour, the Applicant electing not to exercise
such discretion however does
not make its conduct unlawful. There
were corrective steps by way of review proceedings in which exclusion
of the various consumer
bodies could be addressed and remedied but
the Respondent did not elect to pursue such route, without an
adequate explanation thereof
when it was in its best interests to do
so. I am satisfied that as the REDISA Plan as it stands it does not
confer an absolute
obligation on REDISA to include the Respondent in
the review process, albeit that it should have been discretionary, it
does not
place that obligation, therefore REDISA’s election not
to cannot be said to be unlawful on that basis alone.
[28]
In the matter of Arbour Town (Pty) Ltd v Sunny Skies Investments
CC
t/a Chimney & Sabah Collection (aka Pearl of India) Shishi J Held
that;
“
The defendant
must consequently put up a defence honestly, disclose fully the
nature and grounds of it and in so far as he relies
upon facts lay
before the Court, facts which if proved will be a good defence.”
[29]
Applying the principles of the
Merafong supra
to this
application that this Court has the power to declare a contract or
provisions of a contract or administrative action unlawful
and
invalid, where such discretion is to be exercised requires this Court
to carefully consider the circumstances that permit it
to do so. This
requires an analysis of the whether the conduct of the Respondent in
raising the defence is
bona fide
does not only require the
Court to consider the delay in instituting the review proceedings but
the conduct of the Respondent as
a whole with regards to the dispute
raised. It is not only a requirement that a defence be raised but
rather more importantly the
requirement is that the defence raised is
also good.
[30]
This application was launched in September 2019. The Respondent
has
since 2013 to July 2016 complied with its obligations in terms of the
alleged unlawful REDISA Plan without any complaints.
The Respondent,
I have noted, has not at any stage indicated that it took any
reactive steps to question, challenge or overt the
review of the Fee
with either the Department of Environmental Affairs, the Applicant or
any other relevant consumer body that it
alleges that the Applicant
was under a statutory obligation to consult with to determine the
annual review of the Fee. As found
above, there was no absolute
statutory obligation on the Applicant but more of a discretion on
part of the Applicant. Moreover,
there has been a period of time
between when these proceedings were instituted and the matter was
heard before me in which the
Respondent would have further attracted
liability to pay the alleged Fee. The Respondent is still continuing
its business of manufacturing,
importing and exporting tyres as a
subscriber to the REDISA Plan. There are no allegations that the
Respondent has not paid in
terms of the Fee levied for the period
after November 2016 to date. It therefore begs the question why then
the Respondent has
taken issue with the invoices that form part of
this claim only. It clearly cannot and has not provided any evidence
of any prejudice
it has suffered during that time or after to suggest
that its conduct for that specific period is warranted.
[31]
Further that the Respondent also does not deny the contention by
the
Applicant that after its consultative meeting with the Department of
Environmental Affairs that in October 2015 it published
on its
website its first annual public report which specifically addressed
the retention of the Fee at the nominal rate of R2.30kg
and therefore
complied with clause 17.1 to accordingly notify its subscribers of
the Fee to be applied. More relevant I find is
that the Respondent
continued to pay the Fee after the publication at the nominal rate
for a further ten months before it unilaterally
decided that it would
no longer comply. Even then it failed to inform the Applicant, the
Department of Environmental Affairs or
any other consumer body of its
dissatisfaction of the determination of the Fee or with the review
process or the Applicant’s
failure to hold a proper review
process as alleged. Instead the Respondent chose to stay silent and
take no reactive steps until
such time as it faced with coercive
action to obtain compliance by the Applicant in bringing this
Application.
[32]
Firstly, even if this Court where to consider the review of the
Fee
unlawful, it would then have the effect of sanctioning the
Respondent’s unlawful conduct which is clearly
mala fide
and
permit it to escape its contractual and statutory liability. The
Court would therefore be condoning The Respondent’s blatant
disregard for its responsibility in terms of the REDISA Plan and Deed
of Adherence. Secondly it would be condoning its failure
to institute
the processes afforded to it to remedy any administrative action
which may be unlawful against it. The Respondent’s
version that
there is legal precedent that states that a factor of delay plays no
part in whether or not it has the right to a
‘collateral’
challenge and therefore cannot prevent it from bringing such a
challenge is misconceived or misinterpreted.
The Respondent loses
sight of the fact that delay is only one of the factors to consider
and not the only factor and that the Court
in
Merafong
clearly
emphasised that delay would play no part in ‘classical’
collateral challenges. That, I am of the view is the
distinctive
difference between
Merafong
and the Respondent case. The
Respondent has proffered no evidence that its defence falls under the
guise of a ‘classical’
collateral challenge and as such
it is not for this Court to merely make the assumption that it does.
[33]
This Court is tasked with weighing up the interests of justice which
also include the Respondent’s failures to any other reactive
steps regarding the validity of the Fee. To the contrary again
the
Respondent places the burden of remedial and corrective action at the
feet of the Applicant simply because it claims that there
is no
appeal process or other internal remedy to challenge the Applicant’s
alleged unlawfulness in determining its Fee’s
and as a result
it had no other choice but to raise a ‘collateral’
challenge. I cannot find truth in this statement.
There were other
remedies available to the Respondent such as the review proceedings
which was created to addresses and investigate
administrative action
especially with relation to The Public Administrative Justice Act 3
of 2000 in respect of reasonableness
and fair procedure in
circumstances such as the Respondent’s. It’s failures to
do so is not simply a question of its
delay, it is also a question of
why the Respondent chose not to take any action at all. In this case
the Respondent has taken no
action at all with no explanation. The
Respondent has not provided any evidence that it was deprived from
doing so and as such
I find that the interests of justice require
that the Respondent be held accountable.
Conclusion
[34]
In applying the dictum of
Merafong supra
that ‘
unless
they bring court proceedings to challenge an administrative decision,
public authorities are obliged to accept it as valid.
And neither
imposed an absolute duty of proactivity on public authorities. It all
depends on the circumstances’
that they may have been no
absolute duty on the Respondent but I find that the duty was rather a
reactive duty to absolve itself
of any liability to pay the Fee, if
indeed it strongly believed that there was an unlawful action taken
against it to be proactive
in addressing such alleged unlawfulness. I
accordingly find that the conduct of the Respondent did not satisfy
this Court that
there are circumstances before it that require this
Court to intervene in the interests of justice and to the contrary it
would
require this Court to act as its mediator rather than an
objective and impartial instrument of law. In my view it could not
have
been the legislature’s and/or the Rules Board of South
Africa’s intention that the Respondent invoke or attempt to
invoke Rule 13(3) Uniform Rules of Court to suspend its obligations
to comply in a lawful claim or allow the Respondent to circumvent
proving it has a good defence by requiring the Applicant by way of
discovery to disprove its ‘collateral’ claim.
[35]
I accordingly find that this Court cannot sustain such a contention
and as a result I find that the Respondent’s defence is without
cause and fact and as a result must be dismissed. I am therefore
satisfied that the Applicant has made out a case for the relief
sought
in casu
and cannot be deprived of its power to exercise
its rights to compel compliance.
[36]
I accordingly hereby make the following order that:
1.
The Respondent is ordered to pay the Applicant in the sum
of R3, 775,558.77 together with interest thereon a tempora morae; and
2.
The Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this
application on an attorney and own client scale.
SARDIWALLA
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Date
of hearing
: 3 February
2021
Date
of judgment
: 19 April 2022
Counsel
for the Plaintiff
:
ADV L KELLY
Applicant’s
Attorneys
:
Cliffe Dekker
Hofmeyer
Counsel
for the Respondent :
ADV BC STOOP SC
Respondent’s
Attorneys
:
Barnard
Incorporated
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Recycling and Economic Development Initiative of South Africa and Others v Electronic Media Network (2019/38998) [2022] ZAGPJHC 76 (15 February 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 76High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Recycling and Economic Development Initiative of South Africa NPC v Siweya (5126/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1496 (24 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1496High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)98% similar
Recycling and Economic Development Initiative of South Africa NPC v Tubestone (Pty) Ltd (16077/19) [2022] ZAWCHC 86 (23 May 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 86High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Interwaste (Pty) Ltd and Others v Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Commission and Others (34095/21) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1179; 2024 (1) SA 439 (GP) (5 July 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1179High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)97% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Kokoloane Cyril Pitjeng (422/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 973 (6 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 973High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)97% similar