Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 314South Africa
Road Accident Fund v Nthosa Madiba Incorporated and Others (22264/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 314 (26 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 April 2022
Headnotes
on 26 April 2022 pertaining to cases 5509/19, 222/21, 6563/19, 5658/19, 795/16 and 5079/19
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Road Accident Fund v Nthosa Madiba Incorporated and Others (22264/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 314 (26 April 2022)
Road Accident Fund v Nthosa Madiba Incorporated and Others (22264/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 314 (26 April 2022)
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sino date 26 April 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 22264/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
26 April 2022
In
the matter between:
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
APPLICANT
AND
NTHOSA
MADIBA INCORPORATED
FIRST RESPONDENT
MRS.
L
NEL
SECOND RESPONDENT
(In
her capacity as Sheriff Pretoria East)
ME
MASOLA
THIRD RESPONDENT
T
NKUNA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
M
R LELAKA
FIFTH RESPONDENT
S
P
KGOLE
SIXTH RESPONDENT
M
D
MAFOLOGELA
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
NT
MOITSI
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
[1]
The applicant approached the urgent court on the basis of extreme
urgency
seeking an order interdicting the Sheriff of Pretoria East
from removing and/or selling the applicant's movable property as per
the arranged sale of execution to be held on 26 April 2022 pertaining
to cases 5509/19, 222/21, 6563/19, 5658/19, 795/16 and 5079/19
respectively, pending the finalisation of the application under case
number 3525/22 and the applicant's Forensic Investigating
Department's (FID) investigation on or before 26 July 2022. The
applicant does not seek that the warrant of execution be set aside,
but that the removal and sale of the property be stayed pending the
occurrence of two future events, namely the finalisation of
the
application under case number 3525/22 and the applicant's FID
investigation.
[2]
The unique context of this application is found therein that the
cases
in terms of which relief is sought, were dealt with in the
Limpopo Division of the High Court, held at Polokwane and the writs
of execution pursuant to which the sale in execution was arranged,
were issued by the Registrar of the Limpopo Division of the High
Court.
[3]
The
applicant contends that the court has the necessary jurisdiction to
hear this application because
section 21(1)
of the
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
empowers this court with jurisdiction over respondents
residing or being in and in relation to all causes arising within its
area
of jurisdiction. The applicant referred the court to
Zokufa
v Compuscan
Credit
Bureau
[1]
where
Alkema J held:
'I believe, with respect,
that it follows from all of the above that on a proper interpretation
of
s 19(1)
and on general principle a court will have jurisdiction to
grant an interdict if the jurisdictional connecting facts supporting
the requirements for the interdict are present within its area of
jurisdiction'.
[4]
The
applicant also referred the court to
Mtshali
v Mtambo and Another
[2]
where
the court held:
'There is obvious ample
justification for the rule that an interdict founds jurisdiction and
that no exception to the Court's jurisdiction
can be taken in such
proceedings. The interdict procedure is an extraordinary remedy
devised for matters which do not admit of
delay -
periculum in
mora
and in which the power of the Court should be summarily
interposed to prevent and, if necessary, to discontinue, the
perpetration
of unlawful acts forthwith and for good or pending
action. The administration of justice would be seriously hampered, if
not frustrated,
if a Court does [not] have such power within its own
area of jurisdiction.
... therefore, ... lack
of jurisdiction cannot be interposed as an objection in proceedings
for an interdict in which the recognised
requirements for an
interdict are satisfied by the facts within the territorial
jurisdiction of the Court.'
[5]
In the present matter, the writs of execution are sought to be
enforced
in this court's area of jurisdiction. The Sheriff who holds
instruction is the Sheriff of Pretoria East. The assets of the
applicant
are those in the Menlyn Office, which is in the
jurisdiction of this court. The first respondent's offices are within
this court's
area of jurisdiction. This court can competently
exercise jurisdiction in relation to the first and second respondents
in this
matter, and no relief is sought against the third to eighth
respondents. The conduct sought to be interdicted is arranged to take
place within this court's area of jurisdiction.
[6]
The first, and third to eighth respondents (the respondents) submit
that
this court does not have the necessary jurisdiction to hear this
application. Counsel correctly pointed out that the applicant failed
to plead in the founding affidavit that this court has jurisdiction
to hear the matter. Counsel for the applicant submitted that
the
court is entitled to consider the whole of the founding affidavit to
determine whether a case is made out that the court has
jurisdiction
and the failure to specifically claim that a court has jurisdiction
to hear a matter is not the end of the issue.
[7]
The respondents' counsel submit that it is trite that a court that
was
seized with a matter when it was first instituted retains
jurisdiction throughout the entire 'life of the matter'. In casu,
where
the actions for damages were instituted in the Limpopo High
Court, the orders granted in the Limpopo High Court and the warrants
sought to be stayed issued out of the Limpopo High Court, the Limpopo
High Court retained jurisdiction over the execution of its
orders.
# Discussion
Discussion
[8]
Rule 45A of
the Uniform Rules of Court provides that the court may suspend the
execution of any order for such period as it may
deem fit. The
question arises, however, whether this court has the necessary
jurisdiction to stay or suspend the execution of an
order granted by
another court. Binns-Ward J recently confirmed the trite principle
that the jurisdiction of one court to set aside
or vary an order
competently made by another court is not lightly to be presumed.
[3]
In my view,
the same applies to the question as to the court's jurisdiction to
suspend the execution of an order granted by another
court.
[9]
The Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Van
Rensburg and Another NNO v Naidoo and Others NNO; Naidoo and Others
NNO v Van Rensburg NO and Others,
[4]
was
called upon to deal with the question regarding the power of a high
court, not sitting as a court of appeal, to suspend or nullify
a
final order granted in the same division. In dealing with this issue,
the Supreme Court of Appeal stated the law in respect of
the staying
of execution of judgments as follows
[5]
'[51] Apart from the
provisions of Uniform Rule 45A, a court has inherent jurisdiction, in
appropriate circumstances, to order a
stay of execution or to suspend
an order. It might, for example, stay a sale in execution or suspend
an ejectment order. Such discretion
must be exercised judicially. As
a general rule, a court will only do so where injustice will
otherwise ensue.
[52] A court will grant a
stay of execution in terms of Uniform Rule 45A where the underlying
causa of a judgment debt is being
disputed, or no longer exists, or
when an attempt is made to use the levying of execution for ulterior
purposes. As a general rule,
courts acting in terms of this rule will
suspend the execution of an order where real and substantial justice
compels such action.'
[10]
In
Stoffberg
NO v Capital Harvest (Pty)
Ltd
[6]
Binns-Ward
J explained:
'The broad and
unrestricting wording of rule 45A suggests that it was intended to be
a restatement of the courts' common law discretionary
power. The
particular power is an instance of the courts' authority to regulate
its own process. Being a judicial power, it falls
to be exercised
judicially. Its exercise will therefore be fact specific and the
guiding principle will be that execution will
be suspended where real
and substantial justice requires that. 'Real and substantial justice'
is a concept that defies precise
definition, rather like 'good cause'
or 'substantial reason'. It is for the court to decide on the facts
of each given case whether
considerations of real and substantial
justice are sufficiently engaged to warrant suspending the execution
of a judgment; and,
if they are, on what terms any suspension it
might be persuaded to allow should be granted.'
[11]
Based on
the parties' submissions I am of the view that a case is to be made
out that this court has concurrent jurisdiction with
the Limpopo
Division to deal with this application.
Van
Loggerenberg
in
Pollak
The
South
African
Law
of
Jurisdiction,
[7]
states that a division of the High Court having jurisdiction in
respect of a cause, may, in certain circumstances, decline to
exercise that jurisdiction in favour of some other court which also
has jurisdiction to deal with it. I remain conscious of the
fact that
I am essentially required to intervene and suspend the execution of
an order competently granted by a court from another
division. The
enforcement stage is the last stage of the judicial process after the
claim has been determined on the merits in
a judgment or order by the
court which now remains to be enforced, and a court retains
jurisdiction to ensure compliance with its
order and to vindicate its
authority.
[12]
The applicant proffered an explanation that the respondents chose the
jurisdiction of this court when they launched the
application under
case number 3525/22 from this court. In the application under case
number 3525/22 the applicants sought to obtain
a contempt of court
order based on a judgment handed down in this court on 9 April 2022.
This application was however, struck from
the roll for lack of
urgency. I am not of the view that the respondents are bound to
proceed with the application after it was
struck and they are
entitled to seek the enforcement of the judgments obtained in their
favour in the Limpopo High Court by other
means, as they are now
doing.
[13]
Despite being of the view that this court has concurrent jurisdiction
to deal with the application,
I am of the view that a court must be
very careful to suspend the execution of an order granted by another
court, and that it should
only be done in exceptional circumstances.
The question is how to proceed from here. I am bound to consider that
the applicant
stated in its founding affidavit that it seeks a stay
of execution pending the finalisation of an investigation by its FID
in an
effort to safeguard public funds. The respondents' counsel,
with reference to the judgment of the Constitutional Court in
South
African Association of Personal Injury Lawyers v Heath and Others
[8]
submitted
that this court should not take cognisance of the applicant's
submission that it is bound to safeguard public funds. As
I read the
Constitutional Court's judgment in
Heath,
however,
the court opined that an investigation
of
any
fraud
on
the
RAF
would
fall
within
the
scope
of
the
Special
Investigating
Units and
Special Tribunals Act 74 of 1996
, but that the allegations in
question in that case, did not relate to the Road Accident Fund but
to dealings between particular
attorneys and their clients.
[9]
In
Heath,
there
is no suggestion that payments made by the Road Accident Fund to
attorneys, on behalf of their clients, were in any way unlawful
or
improper. The same cannot be said in relation to the applicant's
request to stay the execution of the orders granted in relation
to
the third, and fifth to eighth respondents' cases. The applicant
contends that the FID has
prima
facie
grounds
to suspect that the first respondent is guilty of serious misconduct
that underpins and preceded the granting of the orders,
and as a
result, public funds cannot be paid into its trust account. Sasson J
held in
Road
Accident Fund v All Firms of Attorneys Listed in Annexure ''A1"
and Others
[10]
that
one cannot lose sight of the fact that the Road Accident Fund has a
constitutional obligation to safeguard the Road Accident
Fund Fuel
Levy. I am of the view that in these circumstances the court that
granted the orders pursuant to which the writs of execution
under
discussion was issued, should decide an application for stay of
execution of its orders in this context.
[14]
The question as to whether this court should come to the aid of the
applicant and dispense
with the time periods prescribed in the
Uniform Rules of Court by hearing this application as one of urgency
in terms of Rule 6(12)
of The Uniform Rules of Court, remains to be
answered.
[15]
I engaged applicant's counsel on the question of urgency. The writs
of execution were served
on the applicant between 11 and 15 March
2022. The applicant however, without explaining as to how it
occurred, aver that it only
became aware that the Sheriff has been
instructed to execute the writs by selling the applicant's assets, on
19 April 2022. The
applicant's lackadaisical approach renders the
urgency to a great extent self-created. However, as in condonation
applications,
an applicant's tardiness to approach a court is but one
of the aspects considered when a court exercises its discretion to
condone
non-compliance with prescribed time periods or come to the
assistance of an applicant even where urgency is self- created. I
have
to consider the public interest in the proper and orderly
functioning of the Road Accident Fund, and the need to allow proper
investigate
allegations of fraud and improper conduct. The public
interest in ensuring that judgments in favour of the third, and fifth
to
eighth respondents were not obtained in an irregular manner
justifies dealing with this application, despite it being issued at
a
very late stage. I am of the view that an appropriate costs order is
sufficient as a mark of this court's disapproval with the
applicant's
tardiness in approaching the court at the last minute.
# ORDER
ORDER
In
the result the following order is granted:
1.
The application is heard as one of urgency in terms of Rule
6(12) of
the Uniform Rules of Court any non-compliance with form, service and
time periods in terms of the Uniform Rules of Court
is condoned;
2.
The sale of execution to be held on 26 April 2022 is suspended
and
the second respondent is interdicted from removing and or selling the
applicant's movable property as per the arranged sale
in execution
pertaining to case numbers 5509/19, 222/21, 6563/19, 5658/19, 795/16
and 5079/19 respectively, subject the following
condition:
2.1.The applicant is to
issue an application for the stay of execution of warrants of
execution issued in case numbers 5509/19,
222/21, 6563/19, 5658/19,
795/16 and 5079/19 respectively, in the High Court of South Africa,
Limpopo Division, within 15 days
of the date of this order.
3.
The applicant is to pay the costs of this application, inclusive
of
the costs of two counsel and the costs associated with the
arrangement of the sale in execution on an attorney and client scale.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv. RT Tshetlo
Instructed
by:
Malatji & Co Attorneys
For
the second respondent:
Adv. M E Manala
With
Adv. L J S Madiba
Instructed
by:
Ntshosa Madiba Incorporated
Date
of the hearing:
25 Aril 2022
Date
of judgment:
26 April 2022
[1]
2011 (1) SA 272
(CMA paras [30] and [61-62].
[2]
[1962] 2 All SA 457 (GW).
[3]
F[...]
v V[. ..] and Another
(10533/2014)
[2021] ZAWCHC 90
(28 April 2021) para [2].
[4]
2011 (4) SA 149
(SCA) at para [51] and [52].
[5]
Para [17]
[6]
(2130/2021)
[2021] ZAWCHC 37
(2 March 2021) para [26].
[7]
3
rd
ed service 2, 2000, 44.
[8]
[2000] ZACC 22
;
2001 (1) SA 883
(CC).
[9]
Heath,
supra,
para [55].
[10]
(21560)2021) [2021] ZAGPPHC 416 (9 June 2021) para [39]
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