Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 424South Africa
Mtshotshise and Another v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans (61707/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 424 (13 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Mtshotshise and Another v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans (61707/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 424 (13 June 2022)
Mtshotshise and Another v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans (61707/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 424 (13 June 2022)
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sino date 13 June 2022
IN
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 61707/2020
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
REVISED.
YES
DATE:
14/06/22
In
the matter between:
M.
MTSHOTSHISE
APPLICANT
XOLANI
MADLINGOZI
SECOND APPLICANT
and
THE
MINISTER OF DEFENCE
RESPONDENT
AND
MILITARY VETERANS
JUDGMENT
BAQWA
J:
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties representatives by email and by
being
uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is deemed
on 13 June 2022.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The Applicants herein seek an order that their late service of the
Notice for Intention
to Institute Legal Proceedings against the
Respondent be condoned in terms of 3(4)(a) and (b) of the Institution
of the Legal Proceedings
against certain Organs of State Act 40 of
2002 (the Act) and that they be granted leave to proceed with the
legal proceedings they
have instituted against the Respondent.
FACTS
[2]
The Applicants have been employees of the South African National
Defence Force, the
Respondent herein.
[3]
During June/July 2009 they were suspended without benefits as a
result of having been
charged with taking part in an illegal or
unprotected protest action.
[4]
In August 2014 a Military Judge found them not guilty on all the
charges.
[5]
During the period of suspension, the Respondent introduced the
technical allowance
for members doing technical work which was
implemented in February 2011 and backdated to July 2009.
[6]
Having been found not guilty, the Applicants applied for the
technical allowance,
back pay as well as the monthly allowance to
which they were entitled.
[7]
The Respondent has failed to make the necessary payments to the
Applicants despite
having made payments to their colleagues who were
not charged in regard to the protest action and who were not
suspended.
This was despite an acknowledgement of indebtedness
to the Applicants on or about 25 September 2018.
[8]
During 2019 the Military Ombudsman was approached by the Applicants
to investigate
the issue of payment to due to them. In his decision,
the Ombudsman ruled that the Defendant must pay the Applicants
claim.
THE
LAW
[9]
Section 3 of the Act provides as follows:
1)
“No legal proceedings for the recovery of a debt may be
instituted against an organ of state
unless
a)
The creditor has given the organ of state in question notice in
writing of his or her or its intention
to institute the legal
proceedings; or
b)
The organ of state in question has consented in writing to the
institution of that legal proceeding[s]
I.
Without notice; or
II.
Upon receipt of a notice which does not comply with all the
requirements set out in subsection
(2).
2)
A notice must
a)
Within Six months from the date on which the debt became due, be
served on the organ of state in
accordance with section 4(1); and
b)
Briefly set out
I.
The facts giving rise to the debt; and
II.
Such particulars of such debt as are within the knowledge of the
creditor.
3)
For the purposes of subsection (2)(a)
a)
A debt may not be regarded as being due until the creditor has
knowledge of the identity of the
organ of state and of the fact
giving rise to the debt, but a creditor must be regarded as having
acquired such knowledge as soon
as he or she or it could have
acquired it by exercising reasonable care, unless the organ of state
wilfully prevented him or her
or it from acquiring such knowledge;
and
b)
A debt referred to in section 2(2)(a), must be regarded as having
become due on the fixed date.
4)
a)
If an organ of state relies on a creditor’s failure to serve a
notice in terms of section
(2)(a). The creditor may apply to a
court having jurisdiction for condonation of such failure.
b)
The court may grant an application referred to in paragraph (a) if it
is satisfied that
The debt has not been
extinguished by prescription;
I.
Good cause exists for the failure by
the creditor; and
II.
The organ of state was not
unreasonably prejudiced by the failure.
c)
If an application is granted in terms of paragraph (b), the court may
grant leave to institute
the legal proceedings in question, on such
conditions regarding notice to the organ of state as the court may
deem appropriate”.
THE
DELAY
[10]
The section 3 notice was supposed to have been issued within a period
of six months of the date
of the failure to pay by the Defendant
which, it is common cause, was in 2014.
REASONS
FOR THE DELAY
[11]
In their founding affidavit the Applicants state that they were
represented by Karlien Botma
Attorneys who had sent a notice of
institution of legal proceedings to the Respondent.
[12]
However due to the lack of information about further progress from
the said attorneys and an
inability to contact them, they appointed
their current attorneys, Elliot Attorneys Inc, during or about August
2020.
[13]
As far as Applicants were aware, notice was already sent to the
Respondent in terms of section
3(1)(a) as read with sections 3(2)(a).
[14]
The current attorneys attempted to contact the previous attorneys by
telephone and by physical
attendance at their offices in order to
physically serve a letter requesting the Applicants’ file but
the offices were found
vacant.
[15]
Elliot Attorneys then contacted the Legal Practice Council’s
records department to try
and obtain the contact details of the
erstwhile attorneys but none of these efforts were successful.
Copies of letters from
the current attorneys to the previous
attorneys and to the Legal Practice Council have been presented as
proof of the efforts made
to try and retrieve Applicants’ file.
[16]
Through being unable to obtain the relevant file content and copies
of the notices sent, a notice
in terms of section 3 of the Act was
sent by the current attorneys on 13 September 2020 by electronic
mail. Service of the
notice was also effected by the Sheriff.
COMPLIANCE
WITH SECTION 3(4)(b)
[17]
As stated above on 26 November 2019 the Ombudsman found in favour of
the Applicants in that the
Respondent was indebted to pay the claims
by the Applicants. This finding by the Ombudsman was an
endorsement of a previous
finding by the Military Judge to the same
effect. This was confirmed by the Respondent’s Counsel in
his address to
this Court.
[18]
It is common cause that the Respondent has complied with neither of
those findings and with reference
to the date of the Ombudsman’s
order the Applicants contend that the claims have not prescribed as
claimed by the Respondent.
[19]
The Respondent pleads in this regard that the Ombudsman finding was
fraudulently obtained but
absent a review and setting aside the
Ombudsman’s finding, the objection by the Respondent is not
sustainable.
[20]
The Respondent further pleads that the prescription date should be
calculated from the year 2014
when the Applicants first lodged their
demands with the Respondent. This plea can equally not hold
water because prescription
was interrupted by the exhaustion of
internal remedies by the Applicants through the offices of the
Military Judge and the Ombudsman.
In any event, if the defence
of prescription is still of any relevance, the Respondent still has
the right to pursue same at the
trial. The matter is not for
final determination at this stage as this Court merely has to
determine whether the Applicants
have established a
prima facie
case or not.
PROSPECTS
OF SUCCESS
[21]
The Respondent pleads that there are no monies payable to the
Applicants as whatever was owed
to them was already paid. This
defence is not sustainable in light of annexure “F” which
is ostensibly an acknowledgement
of debt regarding various amounts
owed by the Respondent to the applicants. The Respondent contends
that annexure “F”
was a fraudulent document. This
is yet another matter to be considered by the Trial Court because
ex
facie
the document liability cannot be denied.
[22]
With the common cause facts, namely the employment of the Applicants
by the Respondent, the fact
that the Military Judge and the Ombudsman
found in their favour together with the aforesaid acknowledgement of
debt, the only conclusion
I can come to is that a
prima facie
case does not exist and that the Applicants have reasonable prospect
of success in the circumstances.
PREJUDICE
[23]
The Respondent contends that it stands to lose millions of rands in
the event this Court grants
the relief sought as that would possibly
lead to an avalanche of similar cases. The fact of the matter
is that this application
has to be decided on its own facts and not
on any speculative supposition of possible future litigation.
[24]
The Respondent also contends that it might find it difficult to call
relevant witnesses who may
have left or been dismissed by the
Respondent. Bearing in mind that the Respondent is a huge
organisation that keeps records
especially of financial transactions,
this defence is also unsustainable.
[25]
In my view, it is the Applicants who stand to suffer in light of the
Respondent’s acknowledgment
of debt aforesaid, should this
Court not grant the relief sought.
THE
INTEREST OF JUSTICE
[26]
The considerations to be taken into account were succinctly
summarised by Zondo J (as he then
was) in the matter of
Grootboom
v National Prosecuting Authority
[1]
when he said:
“
The
interests of justice must be determined with reference to all
relevant factors. However, some of the factors may justifiably
be left out of consideration in certain circumstances. For
example, where the delay is unacceptably excessive and there is
no
explanation for the delay, there may be no need to consider the
prospects of success. If the period of delay is short
and there
is an unsatisfactory explanation but there are reasonable prospects
of success, condonation should be granted.
However, despite the
presence of reasonable prospects of success, condonation may be
refused where the delay is excessive, the
explanation is non-existent
and granting condonation would prejudice the other party. As a
general proposition the various
factors are not individually decisive
but should all be taken into account to arrive at a conclusion as to
what is in the interest
of justice.”
[27]
Whilst the delay might appear to be excessive, a full and
satisfactory explanation has been tendered
by the Applicants in
respect thereof. Coupled with the prospects of success and the
dictum
by Zondo J (as he then was), the interests of justice
compel me to make the following order.
ORDER
[27]
In light of the above the following order is made:
1)
The Applicants’ non-compliance with section 3(1)(a) and section
3(2)(a) of the Institution
of Legal Proceedings Against Certain
Organs of State Act is hereby Condoned;
2)
The Applicants are granted condonation in terms of section 3(4) of
the aforesaid Act;
3)
The Respondent is ordered to pay the Applicants’ costs of the
application on a party and
party scale.
SELBY
BAQWA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 16 May 2022
Date
of judgment: 13 June 2022
Appearance
On
behalf of the Applicants
Adv G Louw
Instructed
by
Elliott Attorneys Inc
Tel:
071 571 039
Email:
keegan@elliottattorneys.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondents Adv G Mihlanga
Instructed
by
The State Attorney
Tel: 012 309 1500
Email:
vunwemhlanga@gmail.com
[1]
2004
(2) SA (CC) 2014 (1) BCLR (CC) para 51
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