Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 622South Africa
Rapid IT Solutions v National Health Laboratory Services and Others (25671/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 622 (23 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Rapid IT Solutions v National Health Laboratory Services and Others (25671/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 622 (23 August 2022)
Rapid IT Solutions v National Health Laboratory Services and Others (25671/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 622 (23 August 2022)
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sino date 23 August 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(NORTH GAUTENG HIGH
COURT, PRETORIA)
Case
No:
25671/2020
REPORTABLE: NO.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO.
REVISED
23 August 2022
In the matter of:
RAPID
IT SOLUTIONS
Plaintiff
and
NATIONAL
HEALTH LABORATORY SERVICES
First Defendant
SEAN
GRIMMETTE
Second
Defendant
MICHAEL
SASS
Third
Defendant
JUDGMENT
Todd
AJ
1.
This matter came before me as an interlocutory matter on the
opposed
motion roll on 16 August 2022.
2.
The main proceedings were instituted by way of action.
It is
apparent from the file that the matter has been the subject of a
number of different interlocutory proceedings. In
part these
have been attributable to the fact that the Plaintiff in the action
is not legally represented, and the matter is being
conducted by Mr
Jethro Diphare, stated to be a director of the Plaintiff.
3.
The status of the action proceedings is that, following an exception
brought by the Defendants the Plaintiff amended its particulars of
claim and the Defendants have filed specials pleas and a plea
dated
20 April 2022. Pleadings have now closed.
4.
According to Ms Lefaladi, who appeared for the Defendants, all
that
is left to be done for the matter to be trial ready is for the
parties to comply with their respective discovery obligations
and to
hold a pre-trial conference, and the matter should then be able to be
enrolled for trial.
5.
The application that came before me on 16 August 2022 was an
application for an interdict and certain related consequential relief
that Mr Diphare had first conceived more than a year ago,
in June
2021. At that time, according to Mr Diphare, he had hoped to
secure interlocutory relief, pending the action, that
would prevent
the underlying contract which has given rise to the dispute from
lapsing.
6.
In the interim, between the time when the interlocutory papers
were
delivered and the matter was argued before me, the contract had in
fact lapsed. Mr Diphare accepted that he could no
longer seek
an order preventing that from happening, and he indicated that he no
longer sought the interdictory and related relief
that was set out in
the notice of motion in the interlocutory application. Instead,
in submissions before me he indicated
that he sought instead, on the
same papers, an order for the payment of part of the amount of
damages that he was claiming by way
of action.
7.
The application was opposed by the Defendants. Ms Lefaladi
submitted that the application was simply an abuse of process, and
that this was but one of a number of similar instances of irregular
conduct by the Plaintiff in the course of the proceedings. I do
not have before me the details of the other interlocutory
matters to
which Ms Lefaladi was referring, but Ms Lefaladi submitted that the
present interlocutory application was ill-conceived
and that it
unnecessarily ratcheted up costs in the action proceedings. She
submitted that the application should simply
not have been brought in
the first place, or enrolled at this stage of the proceeding, and
that it should consequently be dismissed
with costs. She
further submitted that costs should be awarded on a punitive scale.
8.
Mr Diphare submitted in reply that if the application was indeed
misconceived this was a consequence of the fact that he was
unfamiliar with legal practice and procedure, that he was learning
as
he went along, and that in those circumstances the costs of this
application should be deferred for determination at the eventual
trial of the matter.
9.
I have carefully considered the papers in the notice of motion
that
Mr Diphare filed and have considered whether there are any grounds on
which this court can or should come to the assistance
of the
Plaintiff at this stage, pending finalisation of the action.
Put simply, however, there are no grounds on which Mr
Diphare could
or should have approached the court in this manner at this stage.
The application should, therefore, be struck
from this court’s
roll as an abuse of process. I intend to make an order along
those lines.
10.
As regards costs, the court is sympathetic to Mr Diphare’s
position.
He submits, from the bar, that Plaintiff is unable to
afford legal representation, that his business has suffered in
consequence
of the issues that have given rise to the dispute (for
which he attributes blame solely to the Defendants), and that it
would be
unduly burdensome on the Plaintiff to saddle it with the
costs of today’s proceedings.
11.
On the other hand, the fact of the matter is that Mr Diphare has
initiated and
persisted with unwarranted interlocutory proceedings
that have put the Defendants to significant costs in circumstances in
which
this was unnecessary and unwarranted. The application had
no legitimate cause of action nor any foundation in the rules of
this
Court, and constituted an abuse of process.
12.
Mr Diphare characterised his conduct in pursuing the application as
an indication
of the frustration that he has experienced in
consequence of the fact that the Defendants had not responded
favourably to a settlement
proposal that had been communicated to
them by the Plaintiff’s erstwhile legal representatives.
From this submission
it is apparent that Mr Diphare deliberately
sought to enrol the matter on an interlocutory basis either to
pressurise the Defendants
or in reaction to their failure to respond
to a settlement proposal. This indicates a deliberate abuse of
this court’s
processes for purposes for which they are not
intended.
13.
Despite this I have decided to defer decision on the question of
wasted costs
arising from the proceedings before me on 16 August
2022, including the question whether, if costs are awarded, this
should be
on a punitive scale, pending the further case management
process to which I refer below. Those costs will be dealt with
as
part of that process.
14.
This matter should be brought to trial in a manner that minimises or
excludes
further unnecessary costs, whether in relation to
interlocutory proceedings or otherwise. With the Plaintiff
unrepresented
and with Mr Diphare learning as he goes along, as he
explained in his submissions, there is an obvious risk that the
matter may
not be brought to trial efficiently and expeditiously.
15.
As a result, I intend to convene a case management meeting shortly
with a view
either to securing agreement on each of the further steps
necessary to bring the action proceedings to conclusion or if the
parties
cannot agree those steps issuing directions as appropriate.
16.
My secretary will be in contact with the parties shortly to schedule
a case
management meeting.
ORDER
The
application brought by way of notice of motion dated 15 June 2021
which came before me on 16 August 2022 is struck from the
roll.
The costs of the application are reserved for later determination.
C Todd
Acting Judge of the
High Court of South Africa.
REFERENCES
For
the
Plaintiff: Mr
Jethro Diphare
Instructed
by: In
person
For
the Defendants: Adv.
K Lefaladi
Instructed
by: H.M
Chaane Attorneys Incorporated
Judgment
reserved: 16
August 2022
Judgment
delivered: 23
August 2022
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