Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 491South Africa
Barnes and Another v Kushite Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (27427/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 491 (12 July 2022)
Headnotes
the notice of an exception constitutes a procedural step which would not preclude a bar being imposed by a notice of bar ...
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Barnes and Another v Kushite Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (27427/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 491 (12 July 2022)
Barnes and Another v Kushite Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (27427/19) [2022] ZAGPPHC 491 (12 July 2022)
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sino date 12 July 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No: 27427/19
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
12/07/2022
In
the matter between:
LEROY
CURTIS BARNES
First Plaintiff / Respondent
THABO
MILTON NCALO
Second Plaintiff / Respondent
and
KUSHITE
INVESTMENT HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First Defendant / Applicant
KUSHITE
LIFESTYLE (PTY) LTD
Second Defendant / Applicant
ANDILE
CALEB MAKHUNGA
Third Defendant / Applicant
BUYISIWE
MAKHUNGA
Fourth Defendant / Applicant
MOTLATSI
MTHIMUNYE
Fifth Defendant / Applicant
MMATU
MBULELO MZAIDUME
Sixth Defendant / Applicant
Date
of Hearing: 23 November 2021
Date
of Judgment: 12 July 2022
JUDGMENT
BARNES
AJ
Introduction
1.
This is an
application launched by the first to fifth defendants
[1]
to have the plaintiffs’ application for default judgment,
delivered on 25 March 2020, set aside as an irregular step in terms
of Rule 30.
2.
For convenience, I shall refer to the parties as they are referred
to
in the main action.
3.
The facts giving rise to this application are the following:
3.1
On 6 May 2019, the plaintiffs instituted the main action against the
defendants.
3.2
On 20 May 2019, the first to fifth defendants (hereinafter “the
defendants”) delivered
a notice of intention to defend.
3.3
On 24 June 2019, the defendants delivered a notice of intention to
except in terms of Rule 23(1).
3.4
On 17 July 2019, the plaintiffs delivered a notice of intention to
amend.
3.5
The plaintiffs failed to deliver their amended pages timeously. The
defendants accordingly required
the plaintiffs to “re-deliver”
their notice of intention to amend. The plaintiffs did so on 2
October 2019.
3.6
On 1 November 2019, the plaintiffs delivered their amended pages.
3.7
On 2 December 2019 the defendants delivered a further notice of
intention to except in terms of
Rule 23(1). I shall refer to this as
“the December notice.”
3.8
On 14 February 2020 the plaintiffs delivered a notice of bar.
3.9
On 18 February 2020 the defendants “re-delivered” the
December notice. I shall refer
to this as “the February
notice.”
3.10 On 25
March 2020 the plaintiffs delivered an application for default
judgment.
3.11 On 26
March 2020 the defendants delivered their exception.
3.12 The
application for default judgment was enrolled for hearing on 17 June
2020. It was postponed
sine die
in order to allow this
application to be heard.
4.
The plaintiffs contend that the February notice delivered by
the
defendants on 18 February 2020 did not constitute a valid response to
the notice of bar and that they were accordingly entitled
to apply
for default judgment.
5.
The plaintiffs contend that, faced with the notice of bar in
the
present case, there were two options open to the defendants: they
could have filed an exception on the back of the December
notice
(together with an application for condonation since the exception
would have been out of time) or they could have filed
a plea. In the
plaintiffs’ submission, the February notice, not being an
exception or a plea, did not constitute a valid
response to the
notice of bar.
6.
The defendants, for their part, contend that it was not open
to them
to deliver an exception on the back of the December notice. This was
because the exception was out of time and “an
exception
delivered out of time is defective and a nullity and stands to be
dismissed for that reason alone.”
7.
More fundamentally however, the defendants contend that the
February
notice, as a matter of principle, constituted a valid response to the
notice of bar and precluded an application for default
judgment by
the plaintiffs.
8.
The defendants contend, in the alternative, in the event that
it is
found that they were not correct in filing the February notice, that
the plaintiffs were not entitled simply to ignore the
February notice
and proceed with an application for default judgment. The defendants
contend that if the plaintiffs were of the
view that the February
notice was irregular then they were obliged to serve a notice in
terms of Rule 30 to set aside the February
notice as an irregular
step.
9.
The crisp question in the application before me is accordingly
whether the February notice constituted a valid response to the
plaintiffs’ notice of bar.
Was
the February notice a valid response to the notice of bar?
10.
The weight of authority is to effect that a notice of intention to
except, as
contemplated in Rule 23(1), constitutes a pleading for
purposes of Rule 26 or at least “the next procedural step in
the proceedings”
and therefore constitutes a valid response to
a notice of bar.
11.
In
Steve’s
Wrought Iron Works and Others v Nelson Mandela Metro
,
[2]
a judgment handed down in the Eastern Cape High Court, Goosen J,
faced with the same crisp legal question which arises in this
case,
reasoned as follows:
“
Rule 23(1)
provides that an exception may be filed ‘within the time period
allowed for filling any subsequent pleading.’
It requires,
however, the peremptory filing of a notice if it is contended that
the pleading is vague and embarrassing. A party
is only barred from
filing an exception (which is a pleading) if that party is time
barred in accordance with rule 26.
…
In this instance the
notice of exception was delivered within the five day period provided
in the notice of bar. That is permitted
in accordance with the
authorities referred to and the plain wording of the rules.
Plaintiff’s counsel
relied upon the judgment in
McNally
NO and Others v Codron and Others
[3]
where Yekiso J held that the notice of an exception constitutes a
procedural step which would not preclude a bar being imposed
by a
notice of bar ...
The finding of Yekiso J
runs counter to the authority of this division. It bears emphasis
that it was specifically held in
Felix
[4]
that a party is entitled to proceed to except in response to a notice
of bar. Thus, the filing of a notice of exception, which
is a
peremptory requirement where it is alleged that a pleading is vague
and embarrassing, is permitted. This was followed in Landmark
Mthatha
(Pty) Ltd v
King
Sabata Dalinyebo Municipality and Others: In re African Earthworks
(Pty) Ltd v Landmark Mthatha (Pty) Ltd and Others.
[5]
I am bound by the
decisions of this division unless I am persuaded that they are wrong.
I am not so persuaded. To the contrary,
they are in my view correctly
decided. The decision in
McNally
in effect precludes a party who intends to object to a pleading on
the basis that it is vague and embarrassing from taking such
exception upon receipt of a notice of bar unless that party has filed
such notice of intention to except within the initial period
allowed
for the filing of a plea. Such construction of rule 23(1), in my
view, would defeat the purpose to be served by the process
of
excepting to a pleading.”
[6]
12.
This
division has followed the same approach as that followed by Goosen J
and has criticised the judgment in
McNally
for the
same reasons. In
Tuffsan
Investments 1088 (Pty) Ltd v Sethole and Another,
[7]
Van der Westhuizen AJ held as follows:
“
I am in respectful
agreement with the findings in this regard of
Felix
supra and
Landmark Mthatha
supra. To hold the contrary, as in
McNally
supra, would disentitle a party after the initial period of 20
days within which to file an exception where the pleading is vague
and embarrassing to thereafter take such an exception. Such party
would have difficulty in pleading to vague and embarrassing
allegations. It is trite that the very purpose of pleadings is to
crystallise the issues in dispute.
It follows that the
defendants were entitled to serve the notice in terms of rule 23(1)
within the period allotted in the notice
of bar.”
13.
The
judgment of
Kramer
Weihmann and Joubert Inc v South African Commercial Catering and
Allied Workers Union
[8]
handed down in the Free State High Court is the most closely related
to the present case from a factual point of view. The plaintiffs
served a notice of bar on the defendants and the defendants responded
by serving a notice in terms of Rule 23(1) within the allotted
five-day period. The plaintiffs ignored the Rule 23(1) notice and
proceeded to apply for default judgment. The Court held that
a party
faced with a notice of bar may file any relevant pleading in response
thereto. The Court held that the defendants had filed
the rule 23(1)
notice within the period stipulated in the notice of bar and that the
defendant had therefore filed a relevant pleading
before the
expiration of the period stipulated in the notice of bar. It follows
logically said the Court “
that
where the respondent in response to a notice of bar delivers a rule
23(1) notice he has taken the next procedural step in the
matter and
has thus complied with the court rules.”
[9]
14.
As Adv McKenzie, counsel for the defendants, correctly pointed out in
argument
before me,
McNally
was for a long time the lone
judgment which held that a notice of intention to except in terms of
Rule 23(1) did not constitute
a valid response to a notice of bar.
15.
This was
until
Tracey
Hill N. O. and another v Mark Brown,
[10]
a judgment handed down by the Western Cape High Court on 6 July 2020
after the launch of the present application. Relying on
McNally,
the Court in
Tracey
Hill
,
held that if a defendant is to avoid being barred pursuant to a
notice in terms of Rule 26, he or she must file a pleading, that
is,
a plea or an exception. The Court held that a Rule 23(1) notice which
is merely a precursor to an exception does not constitute
a proper
response to a notice of bar.
[11]
16.
Curiously, the Court in
Tracey Hill
made no reference to the
judgments in
Landmark Mthatha; Steve’s Wrought Iron Works;
Tuffsan Investments or Kramer Weihmann
, all of which ruled that a
notice in terms of Rule 23(1) constitutes a valid response to a
notice of bar. Moreover, as set out
above, the judgments in
Steve’s
Wrought Iron Works
and
Tuffsan Investments
, were highly
critical of the reasoning in
McNally.
17.
In addition
to
McNally
and
Tracey
Hill
,
the plaintiffs sought to rely on the judgment of
De
Bruyn v Mile Inv 307 (Pty) Ltd and Others
[12]
in support of their contention that the February notice filed by the
defendants did not constitute a valid response to the notice
of bar.
The judgment of
De
Bruyn,
did not, however, consider the question of whether the delivery of a
Rule 23(1) notice had the effect of interrupting a notice
of bar. The
Court in
De
Bruyn
was called upon to determine the validity of an exception in
circumstances in which the exception had been delivered out of time
following the delivery of the Rule 23(1) notice.
18.
Ultimately,
I am bound by the judgment in
Tuffsan
Investments
which is a judgment of this division unless I am satisfied that it is
wrong. I am not. On the contrary, the judgment in
Tuffsan
accords
with the weight of authority on this point which is that a notice in
terms of Rule 23(1) constitutes a pleading or at least
the next
procedural step in the proceedings and is therefore a valid response
to a notice of bar. I agree with Goosen J in
Steve’s
Wrought Iron Works
that the alternative construction of Rule 23(1) endorsed by
McNally
would defeat the purpose to be served by the process of excepting to
a pleading. As such it is a construction which favours form
over
substance. It bears emphasis that the rules of court exist to
facilitate the ventilation of disputes and not to make substantive
law. As was held in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Zalvest Twenty (Pty) Ltd
[13]
“
The rules of court
exist to facilitate the ventilation of disputes arising from
substantive law. The rules of court may only regulate
matters of
procedure; they cannot make or alter substantive law
(United
Reflective Converters Pty Ltd v Levine
1988 (4)
SA 460
(W) at 463B -E and authority there cited). The court is, moreover,
not a slave to the rules of court. As has often been said, the
rules
exist for the courts not the courts for the rules (see
Standard
bank of South Africa v Dawood
2012 (6)
SA 151
(WCC)
para 12).”
[14]
19.
For all of the above reasons, I find that the February notice
delivered by the
defendants on 18 February 2020 constituted a valid
response to the plaintiffs’ notice of bar.
20.
It follows that the plaintiffs were not entitled to apply for default
judgment
in the circumstances and their application for default
judgment accordingly falls to be set aside as an irregular step.
21.
In the circumstances I make the following order:
Order
1.
The application succeeds with costs.
2.
The plaintiffs’ application for default judgment delivered
on
25 March 2020 is declared an irregular step and set aside.
3.
The plaintiffs shall pay the costs of the application.
BARNES
AJ
Appearances:
For
the Defendants: Adv A C McKenzie instructed by Webber Wentzel
For
the Plaintiffs: Attorney J Dorning of Millers Attorneys
[1]
As they are referred to in the main action proceedings under the
same case number. The plaintiffs sought no relief against the
sixth
defendant and cited it merely as an interested party.
[2]
2020
(3) SA 535 (ECP)
[3]
[2012]
ZAWCHC 17
(19 March 2012)
[4]
Felix
and Another v Nortier NO and Others
(2)
1994 (4) 502 (SE) at 506E, where Leach J specifically held that a
defendant is entitled to file a notice of exception upon
receipt of
a notice of bar.
[5]
2010
(3) SA 81
(ECM) at para 13.
[6]
At
paras 14 to 18
[7]
2016 JDR 1425 (GP); [2016] SAGPPHC 653 (4 August 2016)
[8]
[2012]
SAFSHC 152 (16 August 2012)
[9]
At
para 9.
[10]
[2020]
ZAWCHC 61
(3 July 2020)
[11]
A
para 8.
[12]
[2017]
SAGPPHC 286 ( 5 May 2017)
[13]
2014
(2) SA 119 (WCC).
[14]
At
para 11.
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