Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 569South Africa
Minister of Police v Dziva (38700/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 569 (3 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
3 June 2022
Headnotes
on the 27 May 2022 signed by the respondent. Although anticipated, the applicant had not filed an application to rescind the striking out order before or on the date of trial.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Police v Dziva (38700/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 569 (3 June 2022)
Minister of Police v Dziva (38700/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 569 (3 June 2022)
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sino date 3 June 2022
SAFLII
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No.
38700/2016
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
26
July 2022
In the matter between:
THE MINISTER OF
POLICE
Applicant
and
DZIVA WINSTON
Respondent
In re:
DZIVA WINSTON
Plaintiff
and
THE MINISTER OF
POLICE
Defendant
JUDGMENT
ON POSTPONEMENT
RETIEF
AJ
:
This
matter has been heard via MS Teams and disposed of in terms of the
directives of the Judge President of this Division. The
order was
handed down on the date of hearing being the 3
rd
June 2022,
the written judgment is accordingly hereby, as requested, published
and distributed electronically.
[1]
The applicant seeks a postponement of the
trial which was set down
for the 31 May 2022, together with ancillary relief. The ancillary
relief appears to be Judicial authority
to launch an application to
rescind a striking out order of the applicant’s defence granted
on the 20 August 2019 final interdictory
relief ordering the
respondent’s attorney to file a power of attorney in terms of
rule 7.
[2]
I intend to deal with the request for postponement
first and shall
thereafter deal with the ancillary relief in the order as prayed for,
save for the aspect of costs.
PROCEDURAL
BACKGROUND TO APPLICATION FOR POSTPONEMENT
[3]
The respondent instituted action against
the applicant for the
recovery of damages suffered and legal costs incurred subsequent upon
his alleged unlawful and wrongful arrest
and detention on the 9
October 2015 by members of the South African Police Services (“
SAPS
”)
who, at the time, were allegedly in the employ of the applicant.
[4]
The trial was set down for adjudication on
the Monday of the 31
st
May 2022. At the calling of the trial roll, the respondent’s
Counsel informed both the Court and the applicant for the first
time
that he had delivered an application, in which it simultaneously
sought an order of separation in terms of rule 33(4) and
leave in
terms of rule 38(2) for a the respondent’s evidence to be
tendered by way of an affidavit ( “the application”).
The
affidavit to be tendered was indeed the founding affidavit in support
of the application.
[5]
The respondent intended moving the application
prior to the
commencement of the matter being heard before the Trial Court. The
applicant on the other hand, did not receive formal
notice of the
application prior to the date of the hearing but, on the date of the
hearing and during roll call.
[6]
The applicant’s position,
supra
, too, is to be
considered against the backdrop of the applicant’s attorney and
Counsel only having received access to all
the relevant documents
filed and duly uploaded onto Caselines for trial purposes, on the
morning of the trial.
[7]
Delayed access occurred as a direct result
of the respondent’s
attorneys failure to provide the applicant’s legal team with
access to Caselines, notwithstanding
numerous requests to do so and
in direct contrast to his own compliance affidavit deposed to of the
11 April 2022. The respondent
remained silent on this aspect.
[8]
The request for a postponement was now brought
as a direct result of
the application. The applicant who know sought the postponement was
granted an opportunity to file a substantive
application for
postponement. The hearing of the application was remanded to Friday
the 3
rd
June 2022 thereby allowing both parties time to
exchange affidavits in the event of opposition.
[9]
The Court gave direction for the exchange
of affidavits as follows:
the applicant was directed to deliver its application for
postponement by 16h30 on 1
st
June 2022, and the respondent
to serve it’s answer by 2
nd
June 2022. The purpose
of the direction was to ensure that by the 3 June 2022 the
application for the postponement was properly
before Court. For
allocation to a Judge on the 3
rd
June 2022.
[10]
Although the parties achieved just that, by the time the application
was heard before me, the respondent’s Counsel nonetheless
informed me that his attorney only received unsigned affidavit
copy
of the applicants papers on the 1
st
June 2022
and thereafter, a signed copy was ultimately delivered on 2
nd
June 2022 at 16h14. The respondent’s Counsel initially wished
to take the point of delay by stating that the application
for
postponement was “dead on arrival”. However, what the
respondent’s Counsel failed to inform me was that already
on
the day before the trial, 30
th
May 2022, his own
attorney became aware, when attempting to serve the unsigned copy of
the pre-trial minute of the 27
th
May 2022, that an
emergency situation existed at the applicant attorney’s
building rendering the service of the final pre-trial
minute
impossible.
[11]
It later transpired that the emergency was indeed a fire in the
SALU
building in which the State Attorneys’ offices were situated.
The building was evacuated as it was declared unsafe to
occupy. The
pre-trial minute of the 27
th
May 2022 only signed by the
respondent (“the minute”) was then served on the
applicant
via
e-mail in the afternoon of the 30
th
May 2022.
[12]
The fire, according to the applicant’s Counsel logistically
caused unforeseen delays in the State Attorneys Offices, such
delays including the ability to serve documents, access to
files, to
documents, to information, the ability to print and scanning
facilities. A factor for consideration in the delay of the
applicant’s ability to serve its signed paper’s on
the 1
st
June 2022 by 16h30.
[13]
From the facts it appeared that a delay was anticipated by both
parties and not unreasonable under the present unforeseen
circumstances. Furthermore, the respondent had insight into the
founding
papers, albeit not signed by the 1
st
June 2022 as
the applicant had e-mailed an unsigned copy thereof in the interim.
The respondent therefore had an insight into the
content of the
evidence to be relied upon in support of the application for
postponement on the 1
st
June 2022. Notwithstanding the
unforeseen delay, the respondent was able to prepare and deliver its
answering affidavit opposing
the postponement on the 2 June 2022, the
same day on which the applicant finally delivered their signed
founding affidavit.
[14]
The intended papers for argument was before Court on the 3
rd
June 2022. Having regard to all, the respondent’s Counsel aptly
did not take the point of delay any further nor did he expand
on it
further in his in argument. He rather conceded that he raised the
point of delay merely to bring it to my attention. The
application
for postponement was adjudicated on all the papers filed by the 3
rd
June 2022.
RELEVANT
ANTICIPATED PROCEDURAL STEPS
[15]
Although the applicant’s Counsel in argument made a meal of
the
pre-trial minutes uploaded onto Caselines by the respondent’s
attorney in that, the pre-trial minute of the 20 October
2019 was
missing and the remaining uploaded pre-trial minutes were not signed
jointly by the parties, such details became irrelevant.
The only
relevance of the uploaded pre-trial minutes, for purposes of the
postponement and costs, lay in the consideration of what
procedural
steps could have been anticipated, whether agreed to or not, by both
parties on the date of trial. The following relevant
procedural steps
vis n vis
all the uploaded pre-trial minutes, could have been
anticipated by both the parties:
15.1
The applicant’s recorded intention to bring a recission
application
of the order to strike out the applicant’s
defence (“
striking out order
”). The reason to
rescind is foreshadowed by the pre-trial minute of the 7 December
2020 in which the applicant’s record
that they wished to
investigate the how the order to compel discovery in terms of rule
35(7), was granted. The applicant’s
intention to rescind was
further recorded in the last pre-trial minute held on the 27 May 2022
signed by the respondent. Although
anticipated, the applicant had not
filed an application to rescind the striking out order before or on
the date of trial.
15.2
The respondent’s intention to separate the issues in terms
of
rule 33(4). Although an agreement between the parties to separate the
issues, aforesaid, remains in dispute, the respondent’s
intention was recorded and brought to the applicant’s
attention, albeit for the first time, with the delivery of the
unsigned
pre-trial minute in the afternoon of the 30
th
May
2022. The respondent did not deliver a formal application before the
trial date.
15.3
That respondent’s intention to tender his evidence by way
of an
affidavit in terms of rule 38(2) was anticipated, albeit for the
first time, with the delivery of the unsigned minute in
the afternoon
of the 30
th
May 2022. Any agreement thereto remained in
dispute. No version under oath was provided to the applicants for
consideration, whether
for purposes of raising an objection nor for
trial preparation. From the application, it appeared that the
respondent wished to
rely on his founding affidavit in support of the
application as his evidence before the Trial Court. The respondent
did not deliver
a formal application before the trial date.
[16]
In argument, the applicant’s Counsel contended that the
applicant
wished to oppose the application.
[17]
The applicant’s Counsel contended further that it had always
been the applicant’s
intention to proceed with the rescission
application of the striking out order as echoed in the pre-trial
minutes, however, but
for the application, no tactical advantage on
the pleadings as they stood, triggered the necessity.
[18]
In consequence, the application was the trigger for the necessity
of
the applicant’s request for a postponement and ancillary
relief, including Judicial consent to bring a rescission application.
[19]
In fact, so the applicant’s Counsel argued, the applicant,
inter alia
, relied on the fact that the respondent would give
viva voce
evidence at trial in order that his version could be
tested under cross-examination. This, notwithstanding the fact that
applicant
could not put a version to Court or to the respondent.
[20]
The applicant’s Counsel argued that the respondent appeared
erroneously to proceed
to trial with the application on the premise
of a default basis. Nothing was further than the truth, as the
applicant on the morning
of the trial before notice of the
application was ready to proceed to trial on the pleadings as they
stood.
[21]
Conversely the respondent’s Counsel gave no assurances that
the
respondent was ready to proceed to trial without seeking the relief
in the application. No formal withdrawal of the application
was
tendered.
[22]
Having regard to all the facts, it therefore appeared that a
postponement
was inevitable, a postponement was an anticipated
possibility for both parties prior to the date of hearing and the
postponement
was only requested on the date of hearing due to the
delivery of the application at such a late stage.
[23]
Against this backdrop, I now turn to the general principles applying
to postponements.
GENERAL
PRINCIPLES APPLYING TO POSTPONEMENTS
[24]
If a
bona fide
reason is furnished for a postponement by the
applicant, and there is a point to such postponement and if the
respondent will not
be unduly prejudiced by such postponement, such
an application should be granted.
[25]
In
Erasmus, Superior Court Practice, Vol.2, page D1-552A
, the
following is said about postponements, (footnotes omitted):
“
The legal
principles applicable to an application for the grant of a
postponement by the court are as follows:
a)
The court has a discretion as to whether an application for a
postponement should be granted or refused. Thus, the court has a
discretion
to refuse a postponement even when wasted costs are
tendered or even when the parties have agreed to postpone the matter.
b)
The discretion must be exercised in the judicial manner. It
should not be exercised capriciously or upon any wrong principle, but
for substantial reasons. If it appears that a court has not exercised
its discretion judiciously, or that it has been influenced
by wrong
principles or a misdirection of facts, or that it has reached a
decision which could not reasonably have been made by
a court
properly directing itself to all the relevant facts and principles,
is the decision granted or refusing a postponement
may be set aside
on appeal.
c)
An applicant for a postponement seeks an indulgence. The
applicant must show strong reasons, ie. the applicant must furnish a
full
and satisfactory explanation of the circumstances that give rise
to the application. A court show be slow to refuse a postponement
where the true reasons for a party’s non-preparedness has been
fully explained, where his unreadiness to proceed is not due
to delay
tactics, and where justice demands that he should have further time
for the purpose of presenting his case.
d)
An application for a postponement must be timeously, as soon
as the circumstances which might justify such an application become
known to the applicant. If, however, fundamental fairness and justice
justifies a postponement the court may in an appropriate
case allow
such an application for postponement even if the application was not
timeously made.
e)
An application for postponement must always be bona fide and
not used simply as a tactical
manoeuvre
for the purpose of obtaining an advantage to which the applicant is
not legitimately entitled.
f)
Considerations of prejudice will ordinarily constitute the
dominant component of the total structure in terms of which the
discretion
of the court will be exercised, the court has to consider
whether any prejudice caused by a postponement can fairly be
compensated
by an appropriate order of costs or any other ancillary
mechanism.
g)
The balance of convenience or inconvenience in both parties
should be considered: the court should weigh the prejudice which will
be caused to the respondent in such an application if the
postponement is granted against the prejudice which will be caused to
the applicant if it is not.”
[26]
Considering these principles and the sudden change in the trial
landscape by the relief sought in the application, the consideration
of fairness dictates that the possibility of the trial not
proceeding, at all, was apparent.
[27]
The applicants reason for the postponement was not due to its
unreadiness
to proceed but due to an untimely application brought by
the respondent.
[28]
The trial was only set down for 1 (one) day and the respondent too,
must have anticipated that the applicant who was entitled to oppose
the application may have required time to file opposing papers.
At
best, but for the application, the day set aside for trial, by
agreement, would have been consumed by arguing the application
itself.
[29]
Under the circumstances a postponement should not be refused and
no
prejudice, on the procedural facts presented itself.
[30]
The applicant should succeed with prayer 1.
[31]
I now turn to deal with the remaining relief sought by the applicant.
RECISSION
OF THE STRIKING OUT ORDER
[32]
The applicant too, sought Judicial credence for it to bring a
recission
application of the striking out order granted by Munzhelele
AJ on the 20 August 2019 in which, the applicant’s defence was
struck. The striking out order was obtained in terms of Rule 35(7)
for the applicant’s failure to discover in terms of Rule
35(1)
(order to compel). The applicant contending that the order to compel
and subsequent striking out order was obtained without
its notice.
This is notwithstanding proof of service by the respondent.
[33]
The reason for the rescission however compelling is for the Court,
at
the time the application to rescind is brought, to decide.
[34]
Furthermore, no basis for the applicant seeking Judicial authority
to launch an application for rescission was clear from papers
nor was such basis expanded in argument. The only plausible
reason
could be that the applicant hoped, in this way, to rely on a Court
order as its authority to launch the application for
recission, in
circumstances when time constraints from date of becoming aware of
such order, was a bar. The applicant is not entitled
to such
authority and must bring the application on its own merit.
[35]
In consequence, prayer 2 must fail.
RELIEF
IN RESPET OF RULE 7
[36]
The relief sought in prayer 4 by the applicant’s is framed
as
final interdictory relief in circumstances when a rule 7 notice had
been delivered on the 2 June 2022.
[37]
The respondent has responded to the notice and filed a special power
of attorney referred to as annexure “
W19
” to its
opposing papers.
[38]
In circumstances where the applicant is not satisfied with the
response to the rule 7 notice, the applicant is not without remedy in
terms of the uniform rules.
[39]
The applicant too, did set out grounds to sustain final interdictory
relief and in consequence prayer 4 must fail.
COSTS
[40]
The only other outstanding aspect is costs. The applicant in prayer
2
sought costs as against the respondent in circumstances of
opposition. The applicant in argument now sought costs in the cause.
[41]
The respondent who brought the untimely application did not
tender costs but sought costs against the applicant.
[42]
In exercising my discretion and considering all the circumstances
it
appears fair to both parties that costs be awarded in the cause.
And
so, I make the following order:
1.
The matter is postponed
sine die
;
2.
Costs to be costs in the cause.
L.A.
RETIEF
Acting
Judge of the High Court, Pretoria
Appearances
:
Counsel
for Applicant:
Advocate
M. Bothma
[....]
Counsel
for Respondent:
Advocate FM Masweneng
Date
matter heard: 3
June 2022
Date
of Judgment:
3 June 2022
Reasons
requested: 21
June 2022
Reasons
supplied:
26 July 2022
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