Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 300South Africa
Huge Networks (Pty) Ltd v Telemax (Pty) Ltd (A56/21; 89823/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 300 (6 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 May 2022
Headnotes
with costs; and
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Huge Networks (Pty) Ltd v Telemax (Pty) Ltd (A56/21; 89823/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 300 (6 May 2022)
Huge Networks (Pty) Ltd v Telemax (Pty) Ltd (A56/21; 89823/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 300 (6 May 2022)
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sino date 6 May 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO: A56/21
COURT
A QUO
CASE NO: 89823/19
DATE: 6 May 2022
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
REVISED
In the matter between:-
HUGE
NETWORKS (PTY)
LTD
Appellant
and
TELEMAX
(PTY)
LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KOOVERJIE
J
(Khumalo J and Noncembu AJ
concurring)
[1]
This appeal has been instituted against the final order of the court
a quo
granted on 26 June 2020 where the following order was
made that:
(i)
payment plan concluded by the parties on 25 November 2019 is made an
order of court;
(ii)
the appellant (the respondent in the court
a quo
) is to pay
the costs of the application on an attorney and client scale,
including the costs of 20 November 2019.
[2]
It is the appellant’s case that the issue that had to be
adjudicated by the
court
a quo
(the court) was the return day
of a rule nisi for an interim interdict which was granted on 30
November 2019 and not the final
relief.
[3]
For the purposes of this judgment Huge Networks (Pty) Ltd will be
referred to as “the
appellant” and Telemax (Pty) Ltd will
be referred to as “the respondent”.
[4]
The basis of the appeal is twofold: firstly, it was submitted that
the court acted
ultra vires in granting the respondent a final
relief, and secondly, it was argued that a case for interim relief
was not made,
hence the court should have discharged the rule nisi.
[5]
The appellant specifically seeks the following relief, namely that:
5.1 the
appeal be upheld with costs; and
5.2 the
order of 26 June 2020 be replaced therewith-
5.2.1 the rule nisi and
interim interdict granted on 30 November 2019 are discharged;
5.2.2 the applicant is
ordered to pay the costs of the application.
THE COURT
A QUO
HEARING
[6]
It is necessary to set the background in order to appreciate what
transpired in the
court
a
quo that led to the aforesaid order.
[7]
On Friday, 29 November 2019, the respondent launched an urgent
application. The respondent
sought an interim interdict to restore
the respondent’s telecommunication services and other ancillary
relief in a form of
a rule nisi, returnable on a date to be
determined.
[8]
The order was intended to serve “
as an interim order with
immediate effect pending the finalization of the application to have
the payment plan settlement agreement
made an order of court”.
[9]
The matter stood down until Saturday 30 November 2019. On the said
date the court
granted the rule nisi and ordered the return date to
be Thursday 5 December 2019.
[10]
The error however came about on 5 December 2019 when the court was
required to adjudicate on
whether the rule nisi should be confirmed
or discharged. Instead the court postponed the decision and on 26
June 2020 made a final
order as set out above.
[11]
On appeal, during argument, the respondent eventually conceded that
the court
a quo
was not requested to make a final order.
[12]
However, it must be mentioned that this was not their attitude in
their answering papers, on
appeal. The respondent opposed the appeal,
inter alia
, on the basis that the court has a wide
discretionary power and could have made the final order.
[13]
It was further submitted that in granting the order the court
effectively disposed of all the
possible issues and dealt with the
entire application. The court therefore effectively ordered the
existence of a contract and
protected both parties by making the
payment plan an order of court. The respondent further persisted with
the argument that the
appellant made out a
prima facie
case in
order to obtain the final order.
[14]
During argument on appeal, we have noted the appellant’s
submissions as to why the court
could not have granted such an order.
In our consideration of the appeal record, the appellant’s
contention has merit. The
relief sought was the following:
“
2.
That this order serves as an interim interdict with immediate effect
and a rule nisi be issued calling
upon the respondent to show cause
why on the ___ day of ________ 2020 at 10:00 or as soon thereafter as
the matter may be heard
why an order in the following terms should
not be made final:
2.1
that the respondent and/or directors of the respondent and/or
employees of the respondent and/or agent
and/or those appointed by
the respondent and/or any other person who associates themselves with
the respondent and/or those acting
through and under the respondent,
be ordered, compelled and directed to restore, turn on the
applicant’s internet, voice
hosting, 3cx, and mega cloud
services and connectivity and related services within one hour from
the time of obtaining this order;
2.3
…
3.
The respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application on a
scale between attorney
and own client, only in the event of
opposition;
3.1
the costs of the application be reserved for final determination of
the return date.
4.
That this order serves as an interim order with immediate effect
pending the finalization of the application to have the payment
plan
settlement agreement made an order of court
.
5.
That the applicant be granted leave to supplement its papers, should
the need arise; ….”
(Our
emphasis)
[15]
The court
a quo
, aware of the issues before it as well as the
nature of the relief sought, had erred. In its judgment, at paragraph
[17], the court
was mindful of the appellant’s contention that
the notice of motion was defective in that the applicant sought an
interim
interdict pending the bringing of an application or action to
have the alleged agreement of 25 November 2019 made an order of court
without specifying the period within which an application or action
would be brought.
[16]
However, the court went on and stated at paragraph [18]:
“
[18]
In view of the rule nisi being anticipated I am of the view that this
point is no longer pertinent to the issues to be
determined and it is
not necessary anymore to deal with this point.
[19] The
main issue to be determined is whether the agreement was concluded
between the applicant and the respondent
of 25 November 2019 ….”
[17]
It was specifically emphasized that the relief sought made provision
for a pending application
which still had to be finalized. It was
only thereafter that a final order could be made.
[18]
The appellant further submitted that in order to obtain a final order
the respondent had to demonstrate
that it had a clear right. At that
stage of the application, the respondent was only required to
establish a
prima facie
right and could have only been
entitled to an interim order.
[19]
The defectiveness of the relief sought was further pointed out. The
respondent failed to specify
a period in which the rule nisi would
serve as an interim order pending an application to have the payment
plan settlement agreement
made an order of court (the rule nisi had a
return date which was 5 December 2019. The subsequent application
regarding the payment
plan settlement agreement made an order of
court had no specific time-period). The effect thereof would be that
the interim interdict
would be perpetual.
[20]
The appellant further proceeded to make out a case as to why the rule
should have been discharged.
The following reasons were proffered:
(i)
it was common cause that the respondent fell in arrears with the
payments to the appellant and
that it had been in arrears for some
time;
(ii)
in terms of the agreement between the parties the appellant was
entitled to suspend the telecommunication
services to the respondent
due to the fact that the respondent was in arrears;
(iii)
there was clearly a dispute of fact regarding the payment plan
settlement agreement which was to be determined
in the envisaged
application/action proceedings in the future.
[21]
The respondent, on the other hand, in its papers submitted that it
made out a
prima
facie case and that a payment plan was in
place between the parties. The existence of the agreement between the
parties was thus
sufficient to establish a
prima faci
e right.
There could never have been any doubt. The
prima facie
right
existed as a result of the admission that the agreement was signed
between the parties and duly responded to in the opposing
affidavit.
[22]
It was further argued that the respondent particularly agreed to the
payment plan on the alleged
arrear amount in order to prevent and
avoid suspension of the services by the appellant.
[23]
In our view, this was however not the case. On the respondent’s
own version, it was alleged
that the payment plan settlement
agreement was subject to it signing an acknowledgement of debt
[24]
The appellant’s case in relation to the error committed by the
court in not finalizing
the adjudication of the interim order but
making a final decision on the merits of an Application that was not
yet before it, has
merit and consequently, the court
a quo
’s
decision stands to be set aside. At that point in time, the court
a
quo
was not in the position to have made a final order but merely
an interim order.
[25]
Even if the order of the court
a quo
is set aside we are posed
with a further aspect for consideration. The respondent submitted
that the relief the appellant seeks
would have no practical effect.
In fact, it was argued that the parties have gone past the issue of
the internet services and other
services being restored. Hence this
court should not be considering as to whether a case for interim
relief has been made or not.
[26]
It is not in dispute that presently action proceedings have been
instituted in the magistrate’s
court and such litigation is
ongoing between the parties on the same issues. The restoration of
services is no longer an issue.
[27]
It was also not disputed that before the court had furnished the
order on 26 June 2020, the parties
had already parted ways and
litigation in the said lower court was initiated, which remains
pending. There was no probable payment
plan in place even at the
time.
[28]
The respondent specifically submitted that the appellant was aware
already at the leave to appeal
stage, that the interim application
would have no consequence, hence no practical effect. In other words,
a decision from this
court on the interim interdict issue had become
moot due to the aforesaid supervening circumstances.
[29]
The appellant, on the other hand, argued from a different
perspective. The appellant’s
view was that it is necessary to
proceed with the appeal and eventually have the court order set
aside, that is, “final”
judgment. Such judgment stands
unless overturned. As it stands, the court order reflects that a
payment plan was concluded. It
was argued that such conclusion could
not have been reached as there were existing disputes concerning this
issue on the papers.
[30]
Counsel for the appellants, although conceding that the issue of the
rule nisi had become moot,
persisted that the order confirming the
existence of a payment settlement plan between the parties remained a
valid and binding
court order be set aside as it would have
consequences on the pending litigation in the lower court between the
parties. On that
basis therefore, the appeal could not be moot.
[31]
The respondent relied on Section 16(2)(a) of the Superior Courts Act
which reads:
“
(i)
When at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that
the decision sought will have
no practical effect or result, the
appeal may be dismissed on this ground alone;
(ii)
unless under exceptional circumstances, the question whether the
decision would have practical effect
or result is to determine
without reference to any consideration of costs.”
[32]
In our consideration, we find that the order, as it now stands,
confined that a payment plan
agreement is in existence. We have
however noted that the appellant, in its papers, persisted in having
the rule nisi order discharged.
As alluded to above, the granting of
such order would have no practical effect.
[34]
It is trite that a case will be moot if the controversy is
hypothetical, or if the judgment of
the court for some other reason
cannot operate to grant any actual relief, and the court is without
power to grant a decision
[1]
.
COSTS
[35]
On the issue of costs, the respondents submitted that no “exceptional
circumstances”
exists that would justify an order which had no
consequence to costs.
[36]
The approach followed by our courts, more particularly in the John
Walker Pools
[2]
matter, was that
where an appeal has become moot by the time leave to appeal is
sought, it will generally be appropriate to order
the appellant to
pay the costs, since the appeal was stillborn from the outset.
However, different considerations apply where an
appeal becomes moot
at a later time. We have found that this appeal is partially moot in
respect of the rule nisi. The appellant
has however been
substantially successful in respect of having the court
a
quo’s
order set aside.
[37]
We agree with the appellant that it was necessary to nullify the
order of the court due to its
effect in the pending litigation
between the parties.
[38]
We deem it necessary to remind the parties that as a general rule,
that litigants and their legal
representatives have a responsibility
in circumstances where an appeal becomes moot during the pending
appeal proceedings, to be
alive to the efficient use of judicial
resources, and are required making sensible proposals so that an
appellate court’s
intervention is not needed. The parties were
required to do in this instance.
[39]
Both parties were mindful that supervening events occurred before the
decision of the court
a quo
was handed down on 26 June 2020.
Despite there being no longer a contractual relationship between the
parties, they persisted with
their respective submissions on the
papers and proceeded to argue as to whether or not a case for final
relief was made.
[40]
We further note the respondent’s submission that it raised the
issue of mootness in its
heads of argument which was already filed in
April 2021. However, it is our view that since the court order was
granted erroneously
the respondent could have at least abandoned the
incorrect order and headed to the aforesaid approach. Its failure to
do so prompted
the appellant to proceed with the appeal. In our view,
we therefore find the appellant is partially successful. We deem it
appropriate
that it be entitled to 5-% of the costs occasioned by the
appeal.
[41]
In the premises we find the following order to be appropriate:
(1)
the judgment of the court
a quo
of 26 June 2020 is set aside;
(2)
the respondent to pay 50% of the appellants costs occasioned by the
appeal.
NV
KHUMALO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
H
KOOVERJIE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
V
NONCEMBU
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
:
Counsel
for the
Applicant
:
Adv GVR Fouche
Instructed
by:
Makda Cull Kotze Inc
Care
of: Jacobson & Levy Inc
Counsel
for the First
Respondent
:
Adv J Prinsloo
Instructed
by:
Hills Inc
Date
heard:
16 March 2022
Date
of Judgment:
April 2022
[1]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality & Others v the Minister
of Home Affairs
2000 (2) SA 1
EC at par. 18
[2]
John
Walker Pools v Consolidated Aone Trade and Invest 6 (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) and Another (245/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 012
(8 March 2018)
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