Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 282South Africa
Road Accident Fund v H.W. Theron Inc. Attorneys and Others (30076/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 282 (29 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 October 2021
Headnotes
SUMMARY OF THE MERITS (INITIAL HEARING)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Road Accident Fund v H.W. Theron Inc. Attorneys and Others (30076/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 282 (29 April 2022)
Road Accident Fund v H.W. Theron Inc. Attorneys and Others (30076/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 282 (29 April 2022)
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sino date 29 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 30076/2021
REPORTABLE:
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
REVISED.
29/04/2022
In
the matter between:
ROAD
ACCIDENT
FUND
Applicant
And
H.W.
THERON INC. ATTORNEYS
First Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Second Respondent
SHERIFF
OF THE COURT, PRETORIA EAST
Third Respondent
ABSA
BANK
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MBONGWE
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
There are presently two applications before me concerning this matter
and both emanate
from the judgment that was delivered on 4 October
2021. The first is the application for leave to appeal against the
judgment and
orders granted and the second is the counter application
by the Applicant in terms of the provisions of section 18(4) of the
Superior
Courts Act in response to the approval of the Court sought
by the First Respondent to execute writs attachments against the
Applicant,
despite the application for leave to appeal or the outcome
thereof.
[2]
In the initial urgent application, the Applicant had sought an order,
in Part A, that
it pays court ordered or settled capital amounts and
taxed costs in respect of certain listed matters directly to the
successful
claimants, not their attorneys (First Respondent) as
ordered, and that the execution of the wrists of attachment issued at
the
behest of the First Respondent be suspended pending the
determination of Part B of the application. The application was
dismissed
with costs.
[3]
The Applicant now seeks leave to appeal against that judgment. The
First Respondent
has simultaneously approached the Court in terms of
Sections 18(1) and (3) seeking its approval for the execution of the
warrants
of attachments against the Applicant, despite the
application for leave to appeal or the outcome thereof. To counter
the First
Respondent, the Applicant brought an application in terms
of section 18(4) seeking an order that the execution sought by the
First
Respondent be stayed pending the outcome of the hearing of the
appeal.
SUMMARY
OF THE MERITS (INITIAL HEARING)
[4]
It is necessary to consider the merits or lack thereof, in the
application for leave
to appeal. The First Respondent has had orders
granted for payments by the Applicant, into its trust account, of the
capital amounts
and taxed bills of costs in some 9 listed matters in
which it represented the successful claimants. The Applicant’s
refusal
to make the payments is premised on problems it previously
had with the First Respondent and in respect of which the Applicant
laid complaints with the Legal Practice Council (LPC) and criminal
charges against the First Respondent some four years ago. No
action
has been taken against the First Respondent. The problems concerned
were resolve and the parties continued to work normally.
[5]
The court had considered each of the grounds raised by the Applicant
for refusal to
pay as ordered and concluded that the refusal lacked
legal grounding and/or justification and, therefore, dismissed the
urgent
application on 4 October 2021. It is necessary to state that,
according to an uncontested version of the First Respondent, the
Applicant had shortly after the judgment was .handed down, effected
payments in respect of all, but one of the matters concerned.
In so
doing, the Applicant had correctly complied with the initial orders,
as well as the order in the judgment appealed against.
It is not the
Applicant’s case that the payments were made without prejudice
and the contention that the relevant payments
were made in error lack
merit as the Applicant had not demanded the repayments thereof. It
is, therefore, impossible to find the
basis upon which the present
application for leave to appeal premised.
[6]
It is apposite to refer to a judgment of the Full Court in
Road
Accident Fund v
Legal Practice Council & Others
[58145/2020] handed down on 09 April 202, wherein it was stated:
“
[39]
I have referred to the objections raised by the attorneys acting on
behalf of the clients who are successful claimants against
the RAF. I
do not believe that payments should be withheld from successful
claimants because of a dispute between the RAF and the
attorneys
acting for them, or pending the repayment of double payments by
attorneys. Such exceptions may cause hardships on and
be unfair to
successful claimants. In such instances, the RAF should approach the
court, on a case-by-case basis, if it believes
or is advised that it
has valid grounds to obtain an order suspending writs of execution
and warrants of attachments against it…The
RAF, as it
undertook to do, must pay all claims based on court orders already
granted or settlements already reached in terms of
the RAF Act, which
are older than 180 days as from the date of the court order or date
of the settlement already reached in terms
of the RAF Act, on or
before 3 April 2021
,
provided
that it has been notified by any attorneys who represent claimants
that have such claims in accordance with paragraph 3
of this order
made on 16 March 2021. ”
[7]
There is no allegation by the Applicant that the First Respondent has
not complied
with the principle(s) in the judgment of the Full Court.
Instead, the Applicant sought to opportunistically rely on the Public
Finance Management Act (PFMA) and the Constitution for the relief it
sought notwithstanding the unjustifiable prejudice to the business
of
and interference with the agreement between the First Respondent and
the successful claimants it represents.
[8]
The principles in the matters mentioned paragraph 6 finds application
in the present
matter. The invocation of the provisions of the PFMA
and the Constitution is misplaced in the face of the unjustified
prejudice
caused by conduct of the Applicant, which is nothing short
of an abuse of power. Neither the provisions of the Constitution nor
the Public Finance Management Act offer refuge to the Applicant in
the circumstances of this case.
[9]
In particular, it is of no moment that the Applicant differs with the
views expressed
in the judgment of this court with regard to the
distinguishable circumstances and facts in this matter and the
matters before
Basson J and Van der Schyff J, respectively. The
matters before the two Courts concerned the erroneous double payments
the RAF
had made to the attorneys involved as parties in those
respective matters. The reference to those matters came as a result
of the
First Respondent’s assertion that it had itself been a
recipient of double payments, but had returned the second payments
on
its own accord to the Applicant – implying that there was no
justification for the Applicant to refer to those decisions
and for
the relief sought against it in the present matter.
[10]
It necessary to state that I have since become aware of a similar
application the Applicant had
brought on urgency before Mabuse J in
Road Accident Fund v Ehlers Attorneys and Others
[Case No.
32968 /2021 in which judgment was handed down on 28 July 2021. The
relevance of that judgment lies in the similarities
of the facts and
in the Applicant’s approach to both Courts. Notably are the
similarities in the interim orders sought in
PART A. Both matters
were heard in the same month and were dismissed with costs.
[11]
Both the Applicant’s applications for leave to appeal and in
terms of Section 18(4) were
dismissed, correctly so, by Mabuse J. The
Applicant’s subsequent appeal to the Full Court in this
division against Mabuse
J’s refusal and dismissal of the
application in terms of section 18(4) were also dismissed by the Full
Court on 9 December
2021, thereby cementing the way for the First
Respondent in that matter to proceed with the execution of the
warrants. I am bound
by the decision of the Full Court which I
coincidentally fully embrace.
CONCLUSION
[12]
The Applicant’s persistence with this type of unwarranted and
harmful litigation ought
to frowned upon. As indicated in this and
the earlier judgment, there is no justification for the Applicant
conduct in bringing
this appeal, all the circumstances considered.
The applications consequently ought to fail.
[13]
I could think of no reason why the Applicant’s attorneys,
having been instructed in both
matters, had not brought the two
applications simultaneously for hearing by the same court at the same
time. The engagement of
two counsel, including Senior Counsel, in
each matter points to a disregard of the precarious financial
position of the Applicant.
This fact, viewed against the
unreasonableness and unjustified refusal to pay the Court ordered or
settlement amounts as per Court
orders is egregious and contemptuous.
[14]
The appeal has no prospects of success nor are there compelling
Circumstances for the appeal
to be heard.
COSTS
[15]
The general principle that costs follow the outcome of the matter
applies.
ORDER
[16]
In light of the findings in this judgment the following order is
made:
1.
The application for
leave to appeal is dismissed
2.
The application in
terms of section 18(4) is dismissed.
3.
The First Respondent is
granted approval to proceed with the execution of the warrants of
attachment in respect of payments that
have not been made relating to
the matters of the claimant concerned in this case.
4.
The Applicant is
ordered to pay the costs which shall include the costs consequent
upon the employment of two senior counsel.
M
MBONGWE J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA.
APPEARANCES
For
the Appellant:
Adv R Schoeman
With him Adv P.
Nyapholi-Motsie
Instructed
by:
Malatji
& CO
c/o Ditsela Attorneys
3A Guild House
239 Bronkhorst Street
Brooklyn, Pretoria.
For
the Respondents: Adv J.F Grobler S.C
With him Adv J. Bam
Instructed
by:
Friedland
Hart Solomon & Nicolson
Suite 301, Block 4,
Monument Office Park
79 Steenbok Avenue
Monument Park,
Pretoria.
Date
of Hearing: 26 November 2021
JUDGMENT
WAS ELECTRONICALLY TRANSMITTED ETC ON 29 APRIL 2022.
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