Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 411South Africa
Goedhals v Lodge (37390/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 411 (6 June 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Goedhals v Lodge (37390/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 411 (6 June 2022)
Goedhals v Lodge (37390/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 411 (6 June 2022)
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sino date 6 June 2022
SAFLII
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 37390/2020
REPORTABLE: YES/ NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS
JUDGES: YES/ NO
REVISED
06
JUNE 2022
In
the matter between:
CHARLES
JOSEPH
GOEDHALS
APPLICANT
and
MOBI
LODGE
RESPONDENT
This
judgment by the Judge whose name is reflected herein, is delivered
and submitted electronically to the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail. This judgment is further uploaded to the
electronic file on this matter on Caselines by the Judge or
his / her
secretary. The date of the judgment deemed to be 06 June 2022.
JUDGMENT
MOLEFE
J
[1]
The
applicant seeks an order in terms of the provisions of section
27(1)(a) read with section 27(2) of the Superior Courts Act
[1]
(‘the Act’) that the pending trial action instituted by
the applicant in the Gauteng Division, Pretoria, under case
number
37390/2020 is to be removed from the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and
transferred to the Mpumalanga Provincial Division of
the High Court,
Middelburg. The respondent opposes the application.
Background
[2]
The applicant is an adult male pensioner
currently residing at [....] I[....] Gardens, [....] I[....] Avenue,
Eldoraigne, Pretoria.
[3]
The respondent, Mobi Lodge is a firm
trading under such name with its registered offices and main place of
business at 1 Joule Street,
Middelburg, Mpumalanga. At all relevant
times during 2018 the respondent was the manufacturer and distributor
of the Mobi Lodge
Ultimate caravan (‘MLU’).
[4]
During 2018 the applicant was an owner of
an MLU with a ground clearance of approximately 500mm. Having
knowledge of such installation
on a different model manufactured by
the respondent, the applicant approached the respondent regarding the
installation of an electrical
lifting platform at the door of the
applicant’s MLU. The purpose of such installation was to assist
the applicant who suffered
from polio as well as post-polio syndrome,
and caused him severe mobility limitations. The lifting platform was
to enable the applicant
to access and/or exit the MLU easier.
[5]
The applicant then purchased an electric
lifting platform from the respondent to be manufactured alternatively
sourced by the respondent.
After the manufacturing and/or
installation was completed, the applicant received his MLU with the
attached lifting platform on
or about 25 May 2018.
[6]
On or about 30 July 2018, at or near Satara
Camp, Kruger Park, the applicant attempted to make use of the lift to
exit the MLU.
Shortly after pressing the button on the remote to
descend, the cable of the system broke, resulting in the applicant
falling approximately
500mm to the ground. As a result of the fall,
the applicant broke his left hip, injured both his ankles and injured
both his knees.
He required a total left hip replacement due to his
injuries.
[7]
During September 2020, the applicant as
plaintiff issued summons against the respondent as defendant out of
this court claiming
damages. The claim is based upon the alleged
defect of the manufacturing of the lift system resulting in the
applicant’s
fall and injuries. The defendant defended the
action and filed a special plea of non-jurisdiction. In its special
plea the respondent
avers that its main place of business and
registered address, the place where the agreement was concluded and
where the incident
occurred are all outside the jurisdiction of this
court.
[8]
The applicant accepts that the special plea
is good in law and concedes that the action should have been
instituted in the Mpumalanga
High Court. As a result of the special
plea, the applicant launched this application to invoke the section
27 of the Act and the
transfer of the action from this court to
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court, Middelburg.
[9]
Section 27 of the Act provides:
“
Removal
of proceedings from one division to another and from one seat to
another in the same division
1.
If any proceedings have been
instituted in a division, and it appears to the court that such
proceedings-
(a)
Should have been instituted in
another division or at another seat of that division; or
(b)
Would be more conveniently or
appropriately heard or determined-
i.at
another seat of the division; or
ii.by
another division,
that court may, upon
application by any party thereto and after hearing all other parties
thereto, order such proceedings to be
removed to that other division
or seat, as the case may be.
2.
An order for removal under subsection
(1) must be transmitted to the registrar of the court to which is
ordered, and upon receipt
of such order that court may hear and
determine the proceedings in question.
”
[10]
The
Act repealed section 9 of the Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959 as well as
section 3 of the Interim Rationalisation of Jurisdiction
of High
Courts Act 41 of 2001
[2]
(‘Interim Rationalisation Act’).
[11]
In
Road
Accident Fund v Rampukar
[3]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal (‘SCA’) considered the
interpretation of section 3(1)(a) of the Interim Rationalisation
Act
which reads similar to the now section 27 of the Act, and found that
the relief afforded by this section is available to all
litigants,
and that the reason why the litigant mistakenly instituted action in
the wrong court is of no consideration. The court
found that if such
reason is to be considered, it might result in irrational
discrimination between different litigants which cannot
be attributed
to the legislation. Although
Rampukar
dealt with the now repealed legislation, the ratio of the SCA is
similarly applicable in casu.
[4]
Points
in limine
The
respondent raised the following two points in limine in respect of
this application.
[12]
The
respondent submitted that the application does not comply with the
provisions of rule 6(5)(b)(ii) of the Uniform Rules of Court
and the
application is therefore irregular and fatally defective. In
response, the applicant correctly pointed out that this application
is actually governed by the provisions of rule 6(11), and not rule
6(5)(b)(iii). Rule 6(11) governs applications incidental to
pending
proceedings. An interlocutory or incidental application is an
application for an order at an intermediate stage in the
course of
litigation, aimed at settling and giving directions with regard to
some preliminary or procedural question that has arisen
in the
dispute between the parties.
[5]
[13]
An application incidental to pending
proceeding is to be brought on notice, which does not mean a notice
of motion, and need not
be served by a Sheriff. Service may be
affected upon the attorney of record of the respondent by the party
initiating the proceedings.
The current application is clearly
incidental to the main action. Rule 6(5) relates to new applications
and as such finds no application
in this application. This point in
limine is without substance, bad in law and is therefore dismissed.
[14]
The second point in limine is that the
application does not contain the referral in terms of rule 41A(2) of
the ‘Supreme Court
Rules’(sic), and is therefore
irregular in terms of rule 30(A) of the Uniform Court Rules. It is
accepted that the respondent’s
reference to section 41A(2) is
actually reference the Uniform Rules of Court, which rule relates to
every new action or application.
Rule 41A(2) compels the plaintiff or
applicant as the case may be, to serve on each of the defendants or
respondents, a notice
indicating whether such plaintiff or applicant
agrees to or opposes referral of the dispute to mediation.
[15]
In my view, this application does not
constitute a new application but is incidental to pending
proceedings. This point in limine
is therefore without any merit and
is dismissed.
[16]
The question to be determined by this court
is whether the action was indeed instituted on a division that lacks
jurisdiction. On
a basic consideration of the facts, it is clear that
this court does not have the necessary jurisdiction to entertain the
matter.
More importantly, the absence of jurisdiction is common
cause. Section 27(1)(a) of the Act caters for this exact scenario.
[17]
The respondent’s argument is that the
reasons advanced by the applicant for instituting the action in the
wrong jurisdiction
does not constitute a valid and acceptable excuse
for failure to ensure that the proceedings were instituted in the
correct forum,
that the applicant was negligent and that the
application should be dismissed.
[18]
This argument is in my view of no relevance
in determining the issue before this court. I am satisfied that the
applicant has shown
compliance with the requirements of section
27(1)(a) of the Act. The action was instituted in a division that has
no jurisdiction.
The use of the word “may” in section 27
is an indication of a discretion that must be exercised, and in
exercising
the court’s discretionary powers, the application is
removed and transferred to Mpumalanga Provincial Division of the High
Court.
Costs
[19]
The applicant has been successful and there
is no reason why costs should not follow the results.
[20]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The application in terms of
section 27
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
is granted with costs and the
draft order marked “X” attached hereto, initialled, dated
and signed is made an order
of court.
D
S MOLEFE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicants:
Adv. W R du Preez
Instructed
by:
GMI Inc Attorneys
Counsel
for the Respondents: Adv. P
A Venter
Instructed
by:
Birmans Inc c/o VZLR Inc
Date
heard:
03 May 2022
[1]
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[2]
Section 55
(1)(a) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[3]
Road
Accident Fund v Rampukar
2008 (2) SA 534
SCA.
[4]
Van
Loggerenberg Superior Courts Practice- Vol 1, page A2-141.
[5]
Graham
v Law Society, Northern Provinces
2016 (1) SA 279
(GP) at 289 (E-F).
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