Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 692South Africa
ABSA Bank Ltd v Ndziba N.O and Others In re ABSA Bank Ltd v Ndziba N.O and Others (13189/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 692 (8 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 September 2022
Headnotes
OF THE PROCEDURES IN THIS MATTER: [8] The procedural aspects in this matter can be summarized as follows: 8.1 The applicant issued action by way of a simple summons against the respondents on 17 February 2014 under case number 13189/2014. 8.2 The respondents filed a notice of intention to defend on 11 March 2014. 8.3 The applicant applied for summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## ABSA Bank Ltd v Ndziba N.O and Others In re ABSA Bank Ltd v Ndziba N.O and Others (13189/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 692 (8 September 2022)
ABSA Bank Ltd v Ndziba N.O and Others In re ABSA Bank Ltd v Ndziba N.O and Others (13189/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 692 (8 September 2022)
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sino date 8 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NUMBER 13189/2014
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
8
SEPTEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
ABSA
BANK LTD
Applicant
and
L
N NDZIBA N.O.
1st Respondent
MVUYO
MVELASE NDZIBA
2nd
Respondent
LINDELWA
NOBANTHU NDZIBA 3
rd
Respondent
In
re:
ABSA
BANK LTD
Plaintiff
and
L
N NDZIBA N.O.
1
st
Defendant
MVUYO
MVELASE NDZIBA
2nd
Defendant
LINDELWA
NOBANTHU NDZIBA
3rd
Defendant
DEBORA
LOVELL HARDING
4th Defendant
JUDGMENT
BEFORE:
HOLLAND-MUTER
AJ:
[1]
The Uniform Rules of
Court constitutes the procedural
machinery of the
courts
and
are
intended
to
expedite
court
proceedings.
It
will
be
interpreted and applied
in
a
spirit to
facilitate
the
work of
the
courts
and to
enable
litigants to
resolve
their
differences
in
as
speedy
and
inexpensive
a
manner
possible. The
Rules
are
there
for
the
court
and
not
the
court
for
the
Rules.
See
Herbstein and Van Winsen, The Civil
Practice of the Supreme Court of South Africa 4
th
Ed
p33.
[2]
The Superior Courts may, in terms of its
inherent jurisdiction, grant relief when the insistence upon exact
compliance with the
Rules would result in substantial injustice to
one of the parties. Similar a superior court has the inherent
jurisdiction to prevent
the use of the Rules for
ulterior purposes or where the exact
compliance with the Rules would result in a substantial injustice.
Such jurisdiction includes
the power to grant relief when the Rules
make no provision for
it.
See
Neal v Neal
1959 (1) SA 828
(N)
and Rule 27(3) which provides that
the court on good cause shown, condone any non compliance with
the Rules.
[3]
The Rules apply to all parties and may
not
be used
sparingly by a party to obtain advantage to the detriment of its
opponent. A party cannot strive for strict enforcement
without
similar reciprocal enforcement against itself. To put it plainly, the
Rules is a double edged sword that cuts both way
on similar aspects.
A party who demands strict application of the Rules ought to have its
house in the clear to prevent a backlash
from the Rules. See
Van
Winsen supra p 33.
[4]
In
Trans-African Insurance Ltd v Maluleka 1956(2) SA 273 (A) at278
F-G
it was held that:"
No doubt parties and their legal
advisers should not be encouraged to become slack in the observance
of the Rules, which is an important
element in the machinery
for the administration of
justice. Technical to
Jess than
perfect
procedural steps
should not be
permitted, and in the absence of
prejudice, to interfere with the expeditious and, if possible,
inexpensive
decisions
of
cases
on their real
merits".
The question arises
whether the non-compliances on both sides are of such a nature that
it causes prejudice if allowed.
[5]
The litigation between the parties arose from a suretyship entered
into by the respondents as sureties and
co-principle debtors for debt
owned by Marotex (Pty) Ltd to the applicant. The applicant, after
issuing a simple summons against
the respondents, also twice tried
unsuccessfully to have Marotex liquidated. The first application was
dismissed by Hughes J while
the second application seems not
finalized at present. A further Rule 30 application was launched and
ended with Modisa AJ granting
judgment in favour of the applicant.
Modisa AJ granted the respondents leave to appeal but this lapsed for
failure to prosecute
the appeal timeously. This all occurred prior
the present application.
[6]
This application is riddled with cross
allegations by both parties of non compliances by the opposition
trying to
disguise
their own slipups. I will refer to
these
unfortunate aspects below. The matter was further marked by serious
allegations of irregular enrolment of the matter on 30
May 2022
before Neukircher J. This court is not privy to the arguments raised
before Neukircher J, but from the email by the respondent's
attorney
of record dated 27 May 2022, even the office of Neukircher J was not
spared in the mudslinging between the parties. This
resulted in
Neukircher directing the parties to file affidavits to set out
what is alleged in this regard. From
what can be gathered from the explanation by Me Meyer (attorney on
behalf of the applicant),
it seems that during oral, arguments in
court on 30 May 2022, the allegations raised against the office of
Neukircher J was not
continued at all. The explanatory affidavit by
Mr Tjiane on behalf of the respondents does not address this specific
issue.
[7]
I am of the view that the specific issue
of alleged irregular enrolment need not be argued later before
Neukircher J. Suffice to
state that Neukircher J
prima
facie
held that there
was
in
her
view
nothing untoward
with
the joint pre-trial minute. She however directed that explanatory
affidavits be filed wherein the whole factual issue to
be canvassed by the parties. Having read
these affidavits
and
that of the official from the Registrar's Office, I am satisfied
nothing untoward took place enrolling the application. The
enrolment
occurred in terms of the latest directives issued by the Judge
President of this court to provide for the application
of the
Caselines procedure. It is the prerogative of the Judge Presidents of
each division to regulate the procedure in each division.
The
directives are not
contrary
the Uniform Rules of
Court.
BRIEF
SUMMARY
OF THE
PROCEDURES
IN
THIS MATTER:
[8]
The procedural
aspects in
this matter can be summarized as
follows:
8.1
The applicant issued action by way of a
simple summons against the respondents on 17 February 2014 under case
number 13189/2014.
8.2
The respondents filed a
notice of intention to defend on 11
March 2014.
8.3
The applicant applied for summary
judgment on 11 March 2014 and the respondents filed their answering
affidavits resisting summary
judgment on 12 May 2014.
8.4
On 14 May 2014 the applicant granted the
respondents leave to
defend
the matter via a letter from its attorney. The parties differ whether
this amounted to the mere removal of the
application for summary judgment or the withdrawing of then
application. In my view it
is immaterial what the correct legal
position would be suffice to state that the summary judgment was no
longer at stake. In my
view the only reasonable inference is by
granting
leave
to
defend
although it was not formally sanctioned by the court does not
leave it "open" for the
applicant to proceed somewhere in the future with it. The applicant's
conduct of filing the declaration
is a concession that summary
judgment was no longer to
be
adjudicated by the court somewhere in future.
8.5
The respondent then requested the
applicant to
file
its declaration within 20 days after leave to
defend was granted but the
applicant contended that the
respondents' request under Rule 32(8A) was incorrect as the rule was
repealed earlier. This argument
must fail because the
request was made long before was before
31 May 2019 when Rule 38(8A) was repealed. The request on behalf of
the respondents was
filed with the special plea on 2 November 2015.
The applicant elected to ignore the request by the respondents and
did not
file
the declaration until 3 July 2015, some 13 months out
of the
time
frame in Rule 20. The applicant must have been aware that it must
apply for condonation for the extreme late filing of the
declaration
to explain the good cause for
the
late filing thereof. This was never done
and in my view warrants the court to grant relief not specifically
provided for in the
Rules. See
par 2
supra and Neal v Neal supra.
8.6
The applicant's contention is that the
respondents should have barred the applicant but that the present
request constituted an
irregular step. In my view this is the pot
calling the lid skew. The applicant
cannot enforce the Rule one sided but try
to hold the respondent to the letter of
the Rule. When suiting its purpose. This is to eat your cake and hold
it.
See
Neal v Neal supra and par 2 supra.
8.7
Several further notices of bar followed
in the above mentioned litigation and the appeal with regard to the
judgment of Modisa AJ
which has lapsed. The applicant wants strict
enforcement of the Rules against the
respondent but conveniently fails to
adhere to the Rules when necessary. The fact that there is not
automatic or
prima
facie
bar resulting from the
non-compliance of Rule 20 (the fifteen days requirement) does not
result that the out of time filed
declaration becomes properly before court.
[9]
It is clear from a brief summary of the
chronology of the matter that from both sides certain non-compliances
of the rules occurred.
Neither the applicant nor the respondents'
hands are clean. The result hereof will
be reflected in the appropriate cost
order below.
[10]
There
were
several
previous
legal
skirmishes
between
the
parties, resulting in the striking of
the respondent's defence but subject to an appeal which has lapsed
due to non-compliance with
the Rules. There is further a pending
matter launched by the applicant under case number
31562/2018
(the so-called second liquidation
application} after Hughes J dismissed the first liquidation
application brought under case number
1046/2015
by the
applicant.
[11]
The respondents opposed the second application pleading
res
judicata
being convinced that the second application was
brought on similar issues as the already dismissed first application.
It seems that
this application has not been finalised to date hereof.
[12]
The applicant then brought a Rule 30(1)
application to have the respon dents' defence struck after the
respondents pleaded
to the simple summons and not the later
declaration, contending that the declaration was irregular as no
formal condonation application
was sought by the applicant for
the late filing of the declaration.
Modisa AJ struck the respondents' defence and this was the subject of
the application for leave
to appeal which has lapsed due to failure
to prosecute it timeously.
[13]
It is common cause that the declaration
was filed 13 months after the summary
judgment
application
was either
removed
from the roll or withdrawn. In my view
it does not
matter
whether it was merely withdrawn or removed from the roll, the crux is
that it
was
way out
of
the
fifteen
days allowed for in Rule 20(1). Rule 20(1) is clear that a
declaration
shall
be
filed within fifteen days after receiving a notice of intention to
defend.
[14]
The applicant contends that, with
reference to
Rule
26, where a declara tion is filed out of time, no
automatic
or prima
facie
bar
applies in this instance and
that the respondents should to
have
filed a formal notice of bar. I agree that this may be correct in the
ordinary but in this instance we are dealing with the
extra ordinary
of the declaration filed
13 months
after the permitted fifteen days
in
Rule 20. Taken into account the peremptory provisions of Rule 20, the
applicant was compelled to
bring
a condonation application in terms of Rule 27 for an extension of
time for the late filing of the declaration. The fact that
the
respondents did not file any notice of bar does not undo the non
compliance of Rule 20
by
the applicant.
[15]
The argument on behalf of the applicant
that because no automatic or
primafacie
bar exists, no condonation is needed
to abridge or extend any time prescribed by the Rules, is without any
merit. The fact that
there is no automatic bar for the non-compliance
with Rule 20 does not
mean
a party may file a declaration in its own time despite the peremptory
fifteen days prescribed. This would render the provisions
in the Rule
20 nugatory and may cause litigants to become slack and cause serious
delays in process.
[16]
Rule 27 clearly provides for the abridgement or extension of times
not complied with by a party
by the court. There need not be a formal
bar served by the other side to compel the applicant to apply for
condonation or abridgement
of time such as in this instance. The mere
non-compliance of prescribed time frames renders a pleading filed out
of time irregular
although not attacked by the other side. This is in
my view where the court because of its inherent jurisdiction may
intervene
and make a ruling with regard to the irregular step taken
by the applicant. See
par 2 supra.
It is in the interest of
justice that the court rule that the late filing of declaration is
irregular and that a proper application
for condonation should be
brought. The non-compliance by the applicant cries out for good cause
to be shown why the court should
come to the rescue of the applicant.
[17]
The applicant argued that the crux of the matter is whether there is
a defence left for the respondent
to persuade the court for
assistance after the order granted by Modisa AJ. I agree that a
respondent cannot merely raise a defence
in an opposing affidavit to
oppose the application for default judgment, but the applicant ought
to apply on proper papers. I am
of the view that I need not decide
whether the special plea was struck simultaneously with the plea. It
makes no difference as
to the status of the applicant's papers before
the court. It is clear that the declaration was filed way out of time
and before
it can be relied upon by the applicant the papers need be
in order. I am of the view that the application for default judgment
cannot succeed. I agree with the dictum in
Heiko Draht N O and
Others v Thulane Joseph Manqele and Others (2014/29501) (2017)
ZAGPPHC 44
(14 February 2017)
that under the
circumstances the applicant's application for default judgment is not
properly before the court due to the fact that
the applicant's
declaration on which the application is founded was delivered way out
of time after the expiry of the time prescribed
in Rule 20 and the
applicant did not seek an order to extend that prescribed time.
COSTS:
[18]
Costs are always within the jurisdiction of the court. The normal is
that costs follow the result
unless the court decides the contrary.
The applicant knew all along of its non-compliance of Rule 20 to
apply for condonation.
The applicant cannot escape the provisions of
Rule 27. The respondents on the other hand ought to have approached
the court to
compel the applicant to apply for
condonation
for
the
extreme late filing of the declaration
but
failed
to. The respondents further by way of the dreaded E-mail to the
Chambers of Neukircher J (supra) caused a further delay in
the
litigation. The overarching principle regarding indemnity to the
successful party is trite. See
Taxation
of Costs
in
the
Higher
and
Lower
Courts:
A
Practical
Guide
by
Kruger
and Mostert Lexis-Nexis p
5
and
Salie and Another v Shield Insurance
Co Ltd
1978 (2) SA 396
C
with regard
to
wasted
costs incurred. I am of the view that both parties are before court
with dirty hands in one way or the
other. It would be fair and just in this
particular application and the previous hearing before Neukircher J
that both parties are
to
pay
its/their own costs.
ORDER:
[20]
I make the following order:
1.
The application for default judgment is
dismissed with
costs;
and
2.
The Respondents are to pay the
wasted costs occasioned by the
postponement of the matter on 30 May 2022..
3.
The applicant is ordered to bring the
aforesaid application for
condonation
within fifteen days from date of this order, failing which it
shall seek an order condoning the late
filing of such an application.
J
HOLLAND-MUTER
Acting
Judge of the Pretoria High Court
Matter
heard on 10 August 2022
Judgment
delivered
on
7
September
2022
##
##
## On
behalf of the Applicant:
On
behalf of the Applicant:
Attorney:
Tim du To.it & Co lnc:
Martie
Meyer:
mmeyer@timdutoit.co.za
## Counsel:Adv MPvander Merwe:
Counsel:
Adv MP
van
der Merwe:
## mp@lawcircle.co.za
mp@lawcircle.co.za
On
behalf of the Respondents:
Attorney:
GM Tjiane Attorneys Inc
graham@gmt-inc.co.za
## Counsel:AdvM
Ndziba
Counsel:
Adv
M
Ndziba
mvuyodziba@gmail.co
m
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