Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 507South Africa
Minister of Home Affairs and Another v NEC Africa (Pty) Ltd (69402/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 507 (14 July 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 July 2022
Headnotes
on Tuesday, 22 May 2018.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Minister of Home Affairs and Another v NEC Africa (Pty) Ltd (69402/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 507 (14 July 2022)
Minister of Home Affairs and Another v NEC Africa (Pty) Ltd (69402/2017) [2022] ZAGPPHC 507 (14 July 2022)
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sino date 14 July 2022
IN
THE HIGH OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No.: 69402/2017
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
Date:
14 JULY 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS
First Applicant
THE
DEPARTMENT OF HOME AFFAIRS IN THE REPUBLIC
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Second Applicant
And
NEC
AFRICA (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
In
re:
NEC
AFRICA (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
And
THE
MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS
First Respondent
THE
DEPARTMENT OF HOME AFFAIRS IN THE REPUBLIC
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Second Respondent
THE
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF STATE INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY
AGENCY SOC LTD
Third Respondent
STATE
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AGENCY SOC LTD
Fourth Respondent
EOH
HOLDINGS
LIMITED
Fifth Respondent
EOH
MTHOMBO (PTY)
LTD
Sixth Respondent
ACCENTURE
(SOUTH AFRICA) (PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
JUDGMENT
NEUKIRCHER
J:
[1]
This is an
application
[1]
in terms of Rule
41(1)(c). The Notice of Motion reads
inter
alia
as
follows:
“
1.
Directing the Respondent, NEC Africa (Pty) Ltd, to pay the cost
incurred by the First and Second Applicants
(including the costs of
two counsel), in opposing the urgent application instituted by the
Respondent on 9 October 2017, and the
subsequent withdrawal on 19
July 2018.”
[2]
The Rule
41(1)(c) application
[2]
was
instituted on 11 October 2021 which is three years and almost 4
months after the NEC
[3]
withdrew
their review application.
The
common cause facts:
[3]
The following facts are common cause:
3.1 on
9 October 2017 the NEC instituted urgent motion proceedings against
the applicants;
3.2 the
purpose of that application was to review and set aside Bid no RFP
1498/2016 which was
inter
alia
for the design, maintenance and support of an integrated automated
biometric identification system for the second applicant (the
Department of Home Affairs – “the DHA”)
[4]
;
3.3 the
applicants opposed the review application and on 22 May 2018 a
meeting took place at the office of the
Deputy Judge President the
purpose of which was to apply for a special allocation and to set
directives regarding the exchange
of further affidavits;
3.4 on
19 June 2018, a week before the applicants were due to deliver their
answering affidavit, the NEC withdrew
the application – the
notice of withdrawal simply states:
“
TAKE NOTICE
that the Applicant hereby withdraws the above-mentioned application.”
3.5
accompanying this notice was an email by the NEC’s attorneys of
record stating the following:
“
Please find
attached our client’s notice of withdrawal of the application.
Given the history and development of this matter,
the notice of
withdrawal does not contain a tender for the payment of costs.
We intend to resolve
the issues of costs with the respondents individually and in the
circumstances we invite the respondents’
individual suggestions
in this regard.”;
3.6 of
course, the failure to tender costs did not sit well with the
applicants, whose attorney responded to this
email in a letter dated
16 November 2018. In this letter he sets out his client’s
position and the substantial costs that
had been incurred before the
matter was so abruptly withdrawn. As the letter sketches the reasons
for this application, it is apposite
to quote it:
“
2.
Following an extensive consideration of your client’s
invitation, our client hereby proposes
the following, for the reasons
mentioned herein below:
2.1
Since the institution of the review application proceedings in the
Pretoria High Court in October 2017,
followed by the urgent
interlocutory applications in November 2017, our client has incurred
substantial legal costs in opposing
these proceedings.
2.2
In order to challenge your client’s contentions, our client was
required to secure the services
of two senior counsel, a junior
advocate, and experts to assist our clients to rebut the allegations
presented – due to the
complex nature of the matter.
2.3
The complete set of the founding papers, including the amended notice
of motion and founding affidavit
with annexures, aggregated to more
than 500 pages.
2.4
The Record of Proceedings comprised of more than 8000 pages, which,
needless to say, was an arduous
document to consider.
2.5
Your client, as early as February 2018, had approached the office of
the Deputy Judge President (“DJP”)
to convene and publish
a Special Allocation for the exchange of further affidavits, and a
set down date for the hearing of the
matter, which meeting was held
on Tuesday, 22 May 2018.
2.5.1
At that meeting the DJP directed that, inter alia, the majority of
the respondents, including our clients,
file their answering
affidavits by 29 June 2018.
2.5.2
You circulated your notice of withdrawal via email on 18 June 2018,
merely a week before our clients were
due to deliver their answering
affidavit, which comprised of more than 125 pages, excluding
annexures.
2.6
At the time of your client’s withdrawal of its review
application, our clients were considering
the final draft of their
answering affidavit for purposes of finalising and deposing to same.
2.7
In order to prepare and formulate a response, numerous consultations,
meetings, and interactions between
the representatives of the Council
for Scientific and Industrial Research (“CSIR”) and the
DHA were held, to obtain
comprehensive instructions.
3.
As a result of your client’s election to pursue the review
application, our clients
incurred substantial costs (in the sum of
over R3 million) to oppose your client’s application, including
(but not limited
to) the costs of employing three counsel, the
services of experts, and appointing correspondent attorneys. In the
event that you
request to view the invoices detailing these costs,
kindly let us know, and we will make the necessary arrangements in
this regard.
4.
In view of the aforementioned, we refer to the decision of SA
Commercial Catering and Allied
Workers’ Union v Lehapa NO
(Mostert NO intervening) 2005(6) SA 365 (WW) wherein it was held that
where a litigant withdraws
proceedings, he or she is in a position
similar to that of an unsuccessful litigant, and the general rule is
that the other party
is entitled to costs.
5.
Based on the aforegoing, we are instructed to propose that your
client pays a contribution
to our clients’ legal costs
(including disbursements) in the sum of R2.5 million.
6.
Accordingly, please furnish us with your client’s response to
our client’s proposal
by close of business on 29 November
2018.”
;
3.7 on
13 February 2019, the applicants’ attorney addressed a
follow-up email to the NEC – it was
met with a deafening
silence.
[4]
Then, on 19 November 2019, the State Information Technology Agency
SOC Ltd (“SITA”)
– who were the third and fourth
respondents in the review application - launched an application to
recover their costs of
that application. On 31 July 2020, the
applicants launched an application for leave to intervene in those
proceedings in which
they sought the following relief:
“
2.
The Respondent, NEC Africa (Pty) Ltd is directed to pay the costs
incurred by the Department of Home
Affairs (intervening party/second
applicant) in opposing the urgent application instituted by the
respondent on 09 October 2017
and withdrawn on 19 June 2018.”
[5]
[5]
The applicants state that the reason for this application was that
their basis for
seeking costs against NEC therein was identical to
those in SITA’s application. However, on 5 August 2020, the
applicants
withdrew their application for leave to intervene. There
is no explanation for this in the founding affidavit of this costs
application.
All that the applicants state in their founding
affidavit is:
“
20.
In the matter of SA Commercial Catering and Allied Workers’
Union v Lehapa NO (Moster NO intervening) 2005(6)
SA 354 (W), the
Court held that where a litigant withdraws proceedings, he or she is
in a position similar to that of an unsuccessful
litigant, and the
general rule is that the other party is entitled to costs.
21.
NEC Africa is liable for the costs incurred by Applicants in opposing
its review application. This much is
acknowledged in the email
correspondence wherein NEC Africa requests proposals for the
settlement of such costs.”
The
Defence
[6]
The NEC opposes the costs application on the following grounds:
6.1
that the applicants claim for costs, to the extent that it has a
valid claim which is denied, has prescribed;
6.2 the
withdrawal of the review application was because the conduct of the
NEC had rendered the relief sought
moot by the date allocated for
hearing;
6.3
that the email of 19 June 2018 indicating that the NEC “
intends
to resolve the issues of costs with the respondents individually…”
is not an admission of liability for costs.
[7]
It is appropriate to first deal with the issue of whether the
applicants claim for
costs has prescribed as, if successful, it would
be dispositive of the matter.
The
Prescription Defence
[8]
Section12 of the
Prescription
Act
[6]
reads as follows:
“
12 When
prescription begins to run
(1) Subject to the
provisions of subsections (2), (3), and (4), prescription shall
commence to run as soon as the debt is due.
(2) If the debtor
wilfully prevents the creditor from coming to know of the existence
of the debt, prescription shall not commence
to run until the
creditor becomes aware of the existence of the debt.
(3) A debt shall not
be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge of the identity
of the debtor and of the facts from which
the debt arises: Provided
that a creditor shall be deemed to have such knowledge if he could
have acquired it by exercising reasonable
care.
(4) Prescription shall
not commence to run in respect of a debt that is based on the alleged
commission of-
(a) any sexual offence
in terms of the common law or a statute; and
(b) offences as
provided for in sections 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 (1) and involvement in
these offences as provided for in section 10 of
the Prevention and
Combating of Trafficking in Persons Act, 2013, during the time in
which the creditor is unable to institute
proceedings because of his
or her mental or intellectual disability, disorder or incapacity, or
because of any other factor that
the court deems appropriate.”
[7]
[9]
Rule 41(1) states:
“
(1)
(a) A person instituting any
proceedings may at any time before the matter
has been set down and
thereafter by consent of the parties or leave of the court withdraw
such proceedings, in any of which events
he shall deliver a notice of
withdrawal and may embody in such notice a consent to pay costs; and
the taxing master shall tax such
costs on the request of the other
party.
(b)
A consent to pay costs referred to in paragraph (a), shall have the
effect of an order
of court for such costs.
(c)
If no such consent to pay costs is embodied in the notice of
withdrawal, the other
party may apply to court on notice for an order
for costs.”
[10]
It is common cause that the NEC’s notice of withdrawal was
delivered on 19 July 2018 and
was not accompanied by a tender for
costs. Thus the question is:
10.1 when does
prescription start to run in respect of the Rule 41(1) application?
10.2 does the NEC’s
attorneys’ email of 19 June 2018 embody a tender for costs?
10.3 what effect,
if any, does the applicants application for intervention and
subsequent withdrawal
[8]
have on
the running of the prescription?
[11]
The applicants argue that despite the NEC’s email of 19 June
2018 and their attorneys’
correspondence of 16 November 2018,
13 February 2019 and 19 November 2019 and a telephone call between
its attorneys and that of
the NEC at mid-December 2018
[9]
,
the NEC have simply failed to make good on their original
undertaking.
[12]
The applicants also argue that although SITA successfully prosecuted
a claim for costs, the NEC
has otherwise remained silent on the issue
vis-à-vis the other respondents in the review application.
[13]
The applicants then argue that, in order to determine whether or not
the claim has prescribed
one must first ascertain the nature of the
claim. This goes to the heart of whether the claim for costs, absent
a consent to pay
or a court order, can be considered to be a debt.
This, so the argument goes, is because a litigant is not
automatically entitled
to their costs of litigation and that for the
“
debt”
to become “
due”
, either
an agreement regarding the amount of costs to be paid, or the
taxation thereof via a court order, must first take place.
[14]
In furthering their argument, the applicants rely,
inter
alia
,
on the following
dictum
of Harms JA in
Santam
Ltd v Ethwar
[10]
:
“…
It
seems to me that the answer, perforce, has to be that the parties
could not have intended that the respondent could recover her
costs
without a prior agreement or taxation. Any summons claiming payment
of costs not agreed upon or not taxed would have been
met by a
successful exception.”
[15]
But reliance on
Santam
for this proposition is, in my view,
misplaced: in that case the respondent had instituted an action for
compensation. The appellant
offered to settle the matter by way of
payment in terms of Rule 34 and also agreed to pay the respondent’s
costs “
as taxed or agreed between the parties”.
The
offer was accepted by the plaintiff and the damages were paid. But
the plaintiff only presented his bill of costs and a notice
of
taxation more than three years later. Harms JA found that the meaning
of “
prescription should commence running as soon as the debt
is due”
is that “…
a debt becomes due in
terms of the Act when the creditor acquires a complete cause of
action for its recovery; further, that a cause
of action is the
entire set of facts which a plaintiff proves to succeed”
.
[16]
In
Santam
the Court found that, given the terms of the
appellant’s tender, the parties could not have intended that
the respondent
could recover costs without a prior agreement or
taxation. Thus, prescription could only start upon either one of
those two events
taking place. Given that neither event had taken
place, prescription had therefore not commenced and the claim had not
prescribed.
[17]
The set of facts in
Santam
is very different to that
in
casu
, the question here is: what is the trigger for prescription
i.e.
when is the cause of action complete?
[18]
The applicants argue that, at worst, this would be once this Court
orders that the NEC is to
pay the applicant’s costs. They argue
that this is firstly because there is no tender for costs in the
notice of withdrawal
and secondly because a litigant is not
automatically entitled to costs. The argument is further that even
were a costs order to
be granted, the “
debt”
would
not become “
due”
until such time as the costs had
been taxed or agreed per
Santam
supra
.
[19]
Lastly, the argument is that even if prescription had begun to run,
then it started to run on
16 November 2018 when the applicant made
efforts to engage with the NEC on the issue of costs – if this
is indeed so, then
this application was timeously instituted. If
either of the other arguments hold sway, then prescription has not
yet commenced.
[20]
In
Truter
and Another v Deysel
[11]
the SCA held that:
“
[16] …For
the purposes of the Act, the term 'debt due' means a debt, including
a delictual debt, which is owing and payable.
A debt is due in this
sense when the creditor acquires a complete cause of action for the
recovery of the debt, that is, when the
entire set of facts which the
creditor must prove in order to succeed with his or her claim against
the debtor is in place or,
in other words, when everything has
happened which would entitle the creditor to institute action and to
pursue his or her claim.”
[21]
And at paragraph 19 the SCA held that “
cause of action”
for the purposes of prescription thus means:
“
'. . . every
fact which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if
traversed, in order to support his right to the judgment
of the
Court. It does not comprise every piece of evidence which is
necessary to prove each fact, but every fact which is necessary
to be
proved.'”
[22]
In
Mtokonya
v Minister of Police
[12]
Zondo J stated the following:
“
Section 12(3)
does not require the creditor to have knowledge of any right to sue
the debtor nor does it require him or her to have
knowledge of legal
conclusions that may be drawn from 'the facts from which the debt
arises'. Case law is to the effect that the
facts from which the debt
arises are the facts which a creditor would need to prove in order to
establish the liability of the
debtor.”
[23]
The argument that the requirement that the “debt” is
“due” cannot be
fulfilled until a) this Court has
actually ordered the NEC to pay those costs; and b) the costs are
taxed/agreed upon (i.e. the
debt is liquidated) loses sight of the
following: in
Mtokanya
[13]
,
the court referred to an unreported judgment by Moseneke J in
Eskom
v Bojanala Platinum District Municipality
in which he stated the following:
'In my view, there is
no merit in the contention advanced on behalf of the plaintiff that
prescription began to run only on the
date the judgment of the SCA
was delivered. The essence of this submission is that a claim or debt
does not become due when the
facts from which it arose are known to
the claimant, but only when such claimant has acquired certainty in
regard to the law and
attendant rights and obligations that might be
applicable to such a debt. If such a construction were to be placed
on the provisions
of s 12(3) grave absurdity would arise. These
provisions regulating prescription of claims would be rendered
nugatory and ineffectual.
Prescription periods would be rendered
elastic, open ended and contingent upon the claimant's subjective
sense of legal certainty.
On this contention, every claimant would be
entitled to have legal certainty before the debt it seeks to enforce
becomes or is
deemed to be due. In my view, legal certainty does not
constitute a fact from which a debt arises under s 12(3). A claimant
cannot
blissfully await authoritative, final and binding judicial
pronouncements before its debt becomes due, or before it is deemed to
have knowledge of the facts from which the debt arises.'”
[14]
[24]
And finally, in
Mtokanya
the notion that “…
the
meaning of the provision in section 12(3) that a debt shall not be
deemed to be due until the creditor has ‘knowledge
… of
the facts from which the debt arises’ includes that the
creditor must have knowledge of legal conclusions, i.e.
that the
conduct of the debtor was wrongful and actionable…”
was rejected.
[25]
All the facts informing the application in terms of Rule 41(1)(c)
were known to the applicants
on 19 June 2018 – on that date its
cause of action became complete.
[15]
The
fact that the applicants were not in possession of a court order
regarding costs does not postpone the commencement of prescription:
in my view they are in the same position as a party who institutes
(for example) a damages claim for negligence where the merits
portion
of the claim must first be decided before the quantum is decided. In
these cases, if the claim is not instituted within
3 years, it
prescribes.
[26]
What the applicants actually argue is that they require “certainty”
as to their position
before the period of prescription begins to run,
but this argument is untenable as is clear from
Eskom
and
Mtokonya
supra.
[27]
Furthermore, none of the correspondence that flowed between the
parties’ respective attorneys
subsequent to 19 June 2018 has
any bearing on prescription and certainly never interrupted it, as
there is no indication that the
NEC unequivocally acknowledged
liability for costs. The fact that the NEC’s attorney stated
that he was “
awaiting further instructions”
on
this issue of costs in mid-December 2018 also does not assist the
applicants’ case as it falls far short of this acknowledgment.
[28]
Thus I am of the view that the applicants’ claim had prescribed
by the time it launched
these proceedings on 11 October 2021.
[29]
This being so, the merits of this application do not require
consideration.
[30]
The order I therefore grant is the following:
The application in
terms of Rule 41(1)(c) is dismissed with costs.
NEUKIRCHER
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 14 July 2022.
Appearances:
For
the applicants
:
Adv T Pooe
Instructed
by
:
Edward
Nathan Sonnenburgs Inc
For
the respondent :
Adv K
Harding-Moerdyk
Instructed
by
:
Smit
Sewgoolam Inc
Date
of hearing
:
30 May
2022
[1]
The
applicants in the present application were the respondents in the
review application. They are referred to as “the applicants”
in this judgment
[2]
Called
“the costs application” herein
[3]
The present respondent
[4]
This
application is referred to as “the review application”
herein
[5]
I.e.
precisely the same relief presently sought
[6]
Act
68 of 1969
[7]
It is not disputed that the period of prescription under discussion
is 3 years
[8]
See
paragraph 3.8
supra
[9]
Where
the latter undertook to “
take
instructions”
from his client
[10]
[1998] ZASCA 102
;
[1999] 1 All SA 252
(A) at 256
[11]
2006(4)
SA 168 (SCA)
[12]
2018 (5) SA 22 (CC)
[13]
At para 46
[14]
Mtokanya
supra
[15]
i.e. they were in possession of (a) the notice of withdrawal, (b)
the date of the withdrawal, and (c) all the facts regarding
their
alleged entitlement to the costs order.
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