Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 717South Africa
Smith v SCI Essel Offshore Services Ltd and Another (17195/2010 ; A740/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 717 (21 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 September 2022
Headnotes
the appeal was not ripe and postponed it sine die with an order for the applicant to pay the costs thereof on an attorney and client scale.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Smith v SCI Essel Offshore Services Ltd and Another (17195/2010 ; A740/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 717 (21 September 2022)
Smith v SCI Essel Offshore Services Ltd and Another (17195/2010 ; A740/2014) [2022] ZAGPPHC 717 (21 September 2022)
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sino date 21 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
no: 17195/2010
A740/2014
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
21
September 2022
In
the matter between:
DAVID
HENRY
SMITH APPLICANT
and
SCI
ESSEL OFFSHORE SERVICES LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
DAWIE
DE BEER ATTORNEYS
SECOND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MAZIBUKO
AJ
Introduction
1.
The applicant
seeks an order declaring that
the
a)
N
on-compliance
with Rule 4 of the Uniform Rules of Court is condoned regarding
electronic service.
b)
First
respondent’s
appeal
under case
number A740/2014 has lapsed for failure to prosecute the appeal
within the time periods allowed, alternatively, within
a reasonable
time.
c)
Judgment of the above honourable Court per Phatudi J dated 13 May
2014, in the main action,
is final.
d)
Second respondent is to, upon production of the original letter of
undertaking, immediately make
payment to Edeling van Niekerk
Incorporated in the amount of R874 866.54 in terms of their written
letter of undertaking dated
11 November 2016 and to pay the surplus,
if any, to the first respondent.
e)
First respondent pays the costs of the application.
f)
First respondent pays the costs of 13 December 2021 occasioned by the
removal of the
matter from the roll due to the first respondent's
late opposition on an attorney and client scale.
2.
The first respondent opposes the application and seeks condonation
for late opposition
of the application. He brought a counter
application seeking an order that;
a)
The applicant be ordered to, within 15 days
from the date of this order, deliver its replying affidavit
in its
applications to adduce further evidence and amend its plea in the
main action.
b)
The applicant be ordered to, within 15 days from the date of its
compliance with paragraph a) above,
deliver its supplementary heads
of argument.
c)
The first respondent be ordered to deliver its supplementary heads of
argument within ten
days of receipt of the applicant's supplementary
heads of argument in response.
d)
Once the parties have complied with paragraphs 2a to c above, the
respondent is authorized to enrol
their appeal in accordance with the
provisions of uniform Rule 49 read with Uniform Rule 7.
e)
The applicant be ordered to pay the costs of the counterapplication.
Background
3.
The first respondent (the plaintiff in the main action, under case
number 17195/2010),
a
peregrinus
company, instituted
an action in 2010 against various defendants for payment of R130
million. The applicant was the second defendant
therein. The matter
only proceeded against the applicant. On 13 May 2014, the first
respondent's action was dismissed with costs.
4.
The first respondent sought leave to appeal the Judgment and order;
leave was
granted on 2 September 2014 to appeal to the Full Court
(Court of appeal).
5.
On 12 August 2015, at the appeal hearing, before the appeal could be
heard, the
Court of appeal heard a postponement application by the
applicant. In its motivation for the postponement application, the
applicant
submitted that it was seeking to introduce fresh evidence
and had filed its notice of intention to amend its plea to introduce
a special plea of lack of
locus standi
. The Court of appeal
also heard that the first respondent objected to the intended
amendment and had filed its opposing papers.
6.
Considering the above developments on the matter, the Court of appeal
held that
the appeal was not ripe and postponed it
sine die
with an order for the applicant to pay the costs thereof on an
attorney and client scale.
7.
The applicant did not effect the amendments on his plea, and no fresh
evidence
was ever introduced. On the other hand, the appeal was never
re-enrolled.
8.
On 11 November 2016, the second respondent issued a letter of
undertaking to
hold at the disposal of the applicant an amount of
R850,000 held in their trust account as security for costs in terms
of the Judgment,
under case number 17195/2010 and the appeal, under
case number A740/2014.
9.
On 13 May 2021, the applicant sent correspondence to the first
respondent in
enforcing the cost order of 13 May 2014 by Phatudi J,
calling for payment of the costs. The second respondent refused to
make the
payment on the instruction of the first respondent.
10.
In June 2021, the applicant invited the first respondent to apply to
reinstate the appeal
before 17 June 2021. The first respondent did
not bring such an application.
11.
On 16 August 2021, the applicant served the application on the first
respondent. On 29 November
2021, the first respondent filed his
notice of intention to oppose the application, opposing affidavit,
and its counterapplication.
At the time of the first respondent's
filing of its papers, the applicant had already set the application
down for hearing on an
unopposed motion court roll for 13 December
2021. The application was removed from the roll, and costs were
reserved.
12.
The first respondent in correspondence denied that the appeal had
lapsed. It refused the
second respondent to pay the applicant for his
costs in terms of the
letter
of undertaking in respect of the action pending the appeal.
Evaluation
Electronic
service
13.
Rule
4
of the Uniform Rules of Court
provides
that
4(1)
(a) Service of any process of the Court directed to the sheriff and
subject to the provisions of paragraph (aA) any document
initiating
application proceedings shall be effected by the sheriff in one or
other of the following manners—
(i)
by delivering a copy thereof to the said person personally: Provided
that where such person is a minor or a person under legal
disability,
service shall be effected upon the guardian, tutor, curator or the
like of such minor or person under disability;
4(1)(a)(v)
in the case of a corporation or company, by delivering a copy to a
responsible employee thereof at its registered office
or its
principal place of business within the Court's jurisdiction, or if
there be no such employee willing to accept service,
by affixing a
copy to the main door of such office or place of business, or in any
manner provided by law;
4(1)(aA)
Where the person to be served with any document initiating
application proceedings is already represented by an attorney
of
record. Such document may be served upon such attorney by the party
initiating such proceedings.
14.
The first respondent took no issue with the electronic service of the
pleadings and responded
to the court processes.
The first respondent
suffered no prejudice. The applicant’s non-compliance with Rule
4 is hereby condoned.
Condonation
application
15.
The first respondent seeks condonation for late opposition to the
applicant’s application.
He asserts that due to the incorrect
facts presented by the applicant in the correspondence between the
parties and the founding
papers, the first respondent applied for a
copy of the official transcript of the audio of the appeal hearing on
12 August 2015.
The first respondent received the transcripts on 24
November 2021. It further states that the delay in obtaining the
audio and
transcription was due to computer hacking.
16.
Upon receipt of the application, the first respondent did not file
their notice of intention
to oppose the application within the time
period specified in the notice of motion. The respondent opposes the
application for
condonation.
17.
Though one would have expected the first respondent to file their
notice of intention to
oppose the application, pending the
transcription of the record. Alternatively, send correspondence to
the applicant stating the
reason for the delay.
Upon
perusing the correspondence attached to the founding affidavit, the
first respondent's explanation regarding the delay is reasonable.
The
late filing of the prosecution of the appeal is hereby condoned.
Jurisdiction
18.
Before dealing with the declaratory order and the lapse of the
appeal, a determination about
a single judge hearing the matter at
hand must be made. The first respondent, through its Counsel,
submitted that this Court has
no jurisdiction to declare that its
pending appeal has lapsed. It argued that
only the appeal court could declare the
appeal before it lapsed.
19.
On behalf of the first respondent, it was argued that the Court of
appeal is and remains
seized with the matter as the appeal was duly
noted and prosecuted and set down for hearing by the full Court on 12
August 2015.
The Court of appeal granted a postponement for the
applicant to attend to procedural matters to get the matter ready for
adjudication
by that Court. Also, a postponement was granted with a
punitive cost order. Therefore, only the Court of appeal is empowered
to
declare that a pending appeal before it has lapsed.
20.
On the other hand, the applicant submitted that this Court is, and if
not, it can exercise
its inherent powers in
Section 173 of the RSA
Constitution
. Section 173 provides that “
The
Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court of Appeal and the High Court
of South Africa each has the inherent power to protect
and regulate
their own process, and to develop the common law, taking into account
the interests of justice.”
21.
In the case of
Nawa
vs Marakala
[1]
,
Landsman J had to deal with the question of the lapsing of an appeal
that had been noted. He said:
“
I
am satisfied that a single judge has by virtue of s 13(1)(a) of the
Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959 the jurisdiction to entertain
an
application, such as this one, for a declaration that an appeal has
lapsed. It is salutary practice for a single judge, sitting
in term
time, to refer a matter concerning a procedural aspect of an appeal
within his or her jurisdiction to a bench consisting
of an
appropriate number of judges where it necessitates a consideration of
the prospects of success of an appeal. Where the prospects
of success
of an appeal need not be traversed, it is permissible for a single
judge to dispose of the matter.”
22.
In
City of Tshwane Metropolitan v Shai and Another [2007] 30L 1920
1 (T):
It was said;
"It
is contended on behalf of the applicant that it is the appeal court
that can determine whether the appeal has lapsed. I
am of the view
that, it is the other way round, the Court to which it is appealed
can decide to resuscitate an "appeal that
is deemed to have
lapsed". However, there must be an application for condonation
brought before such Court for it to exercise
its discretion. In the
absence of such a substantive application setting forth the reasons
for the non-compliance with the rules,
or put otherwise, for the
failure to prosecute the appeal in time, I am unable to evaluate the
prospects of success for the as
yet to be made application for
condonation, and as the result, I am unable to exercise my discretion
in favour of the applicant.”
23.
The party contending that an appeal has lapsed is to approach Court
for an order to that
effect. The applicant, in its application, seeks
an order for a declaration that an appeal has lapsed.
24.
This Court may decide on the matter as, firstly, it was not requested
to determine the prospects
of success in the appeal, but, whether the
applicant has made out a case for the first respondent's appeal to be
declared as having
lapsed. Secondly, in the unique circumstances of
this matter, it is in the interest of justice whilst fortified, to
guide the parties
to bring this matter to finality. It is unique
because, since August 2015, none of the parties pestered themselves
to bring the
matter into conclusiveness though each has a direct
interest, including financial, in the matter. Each held its fire for
over six
years for the other to take a step to bring the matter into
finality.
Declaratory
relief
25.
Turning to the issue of the lapse of the appeal. The applicant
submitted that the first
respondent had not prosecuted the appeal
within the prescribed time or within a reasonable time. Therefore,
the appeal must be
declared to have lapsed.
26.
Section 21
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides that:
21(1)
A Division has jurisdiction over all persons residing in or being
in, and in relation to all causes arising and all offences triable
within its area of jurisdiction and all other matters of which it may
according to law take cognizance, and has the power –
(1)(c)
in its discretion and at the instances of any interested person to
enquire into and determine any existing, future, or contingent
right
or obligation, notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any
relief consequential upon the determination.
27.
It is common cause that both parties have an interest in the matter.
The applicant is interested
in the matter, as the Court in 2014 found
in its favour as it dismissed the first respondent's claim. The first
respondent has
an interest since it appealed the Judgment and order
that dismissed its claim against the applicant.
Lapse
of appeal
28.
On 12 August 2015, the hearing date of the appeal, the appeal was not
heard. The applicant
applied for postponement of the appeal, seeking
to introduce further
evidence and amend its plea by filing a special plea of lack of
locus
standi.
The Court of appeal granted the postponement
sine
die
, with
the applicant bearing the costs on an attorney and client scale. The
purpose of the postponement was to grant the applicant
an opportunity
to reply to the first respondent’s answering affidavit
regarding the fresh evidence and the special plea,
which answering
affidavit had been filed a day before the appeal hearing.
29.
The
applicant took no steps to deliver the replying affidavit, prosecute
the application to introduce fresh evidence or amend its
plea to
introduce the special plea of lack of
locus
standi.
None
of the parties took any steps to re-enrol the appeal.
30.
It was argued on behalf of the applicant that the respondent is
dominus litis
in the appeal matter and therefore had a
responsibility to re-enrol the matter. Further, since the first
respondent had lost a
claim of R130 million, it could not just wait
for over six years to prosecute and finalize its appeal against such
an order.
31.
On the other hand, it was argued on behalf of the first respondent
that the respondent was
waiting for the applicant to deliver its
replying affidavit or prosecute the application to introduce fresh
evidence as envisaged
during the postponement application in August
2015.
32.
On behalf of the first
respondent, it was argued that
Rule 49
is not applicable. Whilst the
applicant is opposed to that submission, it, to a certain extent,
appeared to concede that there
is no provision in
Rule 49
dealing
with appeal postponed
sine die.
33.
The applicant relied
on
Rule
49(6)
,
where the following is required in prosecuting an appeal:
Rule
49(6)
(a)
“
Within 60 days
after delivery of a notice of appeal, an appellant shall make written
application to the registrar of the division
where the appeal is to
be heard for a date for the hearing of such appeal and shall at the
same time furnish him with his full
residential address and the name
and address of every other party to the appeal,
and
if the appellant fails to do so, a respondent may within 10 days
after the expiry of the said period of 60 days, as in the case
of the
appellant, apply for the set down of the appeal or cross-appeal which
he may have noted.
If no such
application is made by either party, the appeal and cross-appeal
shall be deemed to have lapsed: Provided that a respondent
shall have
the right to apply for an order for his wasted costs.” (my
emphasis relating to paragraph 35 below).
Rule
49(6)
(b)
“The Court to which the appeal is made may, on application of
the appellant or cross-appellant, and upon good cause shown,
reinstate an appeal or cross-appeal which has lapsed.”
34.
In putting its reliance on
Rule
49(6)
, it was submitted, on behalf of the applicant that
Rule 49
,
especially the 60 days period, should have been used as a guide by
the first respondent when the applicant's amendments and the
special
plea did not come forth.
35.
It is challenging to
follow the applicant's submission in this regard, as
Rule 49
also
provides that the respondent may apply for a set down of the appeal
matter. On the one hand, the first respondent did not
apply to
re-enrol the appeal matter for hearing after the expiry of prescribed
time limits within which the applicant needed to
prosecute its
application to introduce fresh evidence and effect amendments.
36.
Conversely, the applicant chose not to follow the same
Rule 49(6)(a)
it argued was to guide the first respondent. However, it also did not
apply to enroll the appeal as provided in the said rule.
It means the
applicant did not use the same
Rule 49
to guide itself to, within 10
days, after the respondent failed to re-enrol, apply to have the
appeal matter re-enrolled.
37.
There is no provision made in
Rule 49
addressing the appeals
postponed
sine die
.
Reference to
Levenberg v Denholm
1930(2) PH L13 (C)
was made,
where
the Court had to deal with an application for condonation where the
appellant failed to apply for a date within the required
time period
allowed leading to the application being refused with costs.
This matter is
distinguishable from the matter at hand. It, therefore, offers no
assistance in determining the issue.
38.
In the matter of
Eke v Parsons
2016(3) SA 37 (CC),
in
paragraph 40
,
it was stated that “
Under
our constitutional dispensation, the object of court rules is
twofold. The first is to ensure a fair trial or hearing. The
second
is to "secure the inexpensive and expeditious completion of
litigation and . . . to further the administration of justice".
I have already touched on the inherent jurisdiction vested in the
superior courts in South Africa. In terms of this power, the
High
Court has always been able to regulate its own proceedings for a
number of reasons, including catering for circumstances not
adequately covered by the Uniform Rules and generally ensuring the
efficient administration of the courts’ judicial functions.”
39.
It was argued that the first respondent
did
not properly prosecute the appeal timeously
in terms of the
rules, nor within a reasonable time. He is
dominus
litus
and
ultimately remains responsible for the efficient disposal of its
appeal. Any interlocutory applications do not preclude it
from
progressing and finalizing its appeal.
40.
The first respondent properly prosecuted its appeal timeously and
enrolled it. On the day
of the appeal hearing, the applicant
requested a postponement. The first respondent did comply with Rule
49 at the correct stage
of the prosecution of the appeal.
41.
The first respondent did not have to wait for the applicant
indefinitely after the expiry
of the prescribed time for the
applicant to file its replying affidavit and prosecute its
application for a special plea. No explanation
has been proffered as
to why the first respondent did not apply to re-enrol the matter.
Also, none as to what prevented them from
sending courtesy
correspondence to the applicant finding out about the special plea
and the amendment of the plea thereof,
which
the applicant opted not to pursue.
42.
On the other hand, the applicant was granted postponement for it to
amend its plea by filing
a special plea, which
he,
for undisclosed reasons, opted not to pursue.
Nothing
prevented the applicant from sending correspondence to the first
respondent informing him that it was no more pursuing its
application
to amend its plea.
43.
Since the appeal postponement in August 2015, none ensured this
matter came to finality.
Only in May 2021 made the applicant attempt
to enforce the order per Phatudi J. Which order is pending its
determination
before the Court of appeal.
44.
Though the applicant is under no obligation to file a replying
affidavit, in this instance,
the applicant, before the Court of
appeal, sought to consider filing same in pursuit of introducing
fresh evidence. The applicant
did not and that marked the end of the
special plea issue and amendments thereof. The appeal before the
Court of appeal remained
pending, and no law mentioned that stood in
the way for the appeal to be re-enrolled for hearing.
45.
Conversely, nothing stopped the applicant from communicating their
intention of no more
pursuing their special plea application.
46.
Both parties chose not to take any of the various options at their
disposal in concluding
the matter. They also gave no explanation why
none of them took no steps to advance the matter or call upon each
other to do so.
None of them seemed to have been interested in the
matter nor been prejudiced by the stalemate of the appeal after it
became clear
that the applicant was no more prosecuting its
application to introduce fresh evidence.
47.
Indeed, a significant amount of time has passed since 12 August 2015.
The Court of appeal,
where the matter is pending, may still determine
all the issues surrounding the appeal itself. Therefore, the appeal
does not need
to be declared to have lapsed.
Counterapplication
48.
The first respondent submitted that the parties be granted an
opportunity to file all outstanding
papers before the re-enrolment of
the appeal, meaning the special plea raised before the Court of
appeal during the postponement
application in August 2015.
49.
The applicant, without expressly and formally abandoning or
withdrawing or even communicating
its intention relating to its
application to introduce fresh evidence, has, in May 2021 already,
attempted to effect the court
order pending determination at the
Court of appeal. Which appeal the first respondent was ready to argue
on 12 August 2015. The
applicant
did
not even mention that it could use an opportunity to prosecute its
application for amendments.
It,
therefore, can be safely accepted that the applicant has no intention
to amend its plea or any papers relating to the amendment
notice and
application delivered in 2015.
50.
Therefore, though in 2015, the applicant considered amending its plea
and introducing fresh
evidence, ordering them to do the same would
not serve any purpose and the interest of justice. However, they may
follow the rules
to do so, if so desired.
51.
The abandonment of the amendment application and special plea meant
that the Judgment of
Phatudi J remained pending determination by the
Court of Appeal, as it remained seized with the matter. The effect is
that the
operation and execution of Phatudi J's decision are
suspended pending the appeal decision.
Conclusion
52.
No case is made out for a declaratory order
based on the appeal being deemed to have lapsed.
53.
There is also no case made out for a compelling order for the
applicant to file their amendments,
including the special plea. The
case is partially made out for
the
counterapplication relating to the re-enrolment of the appeal.
54.
When the Court of appeal postponed the appeal
sine die
, the
appeal proceedings were stopped, without actually fixing a date for
them, to be continued later. In this type of adjournment,
the hearing
stands open indefinitely.
55.
Where a matter is postponed
sine die
, the practice in this
division usually is that the parties must apply again to the
registrar's office for another hearing before
whichever presiding
officer is allocated to hear that particular matter on the hearing
date allocated.
56.
Considering this matter's history and circumstances, though the
counterapplication partially
succeeds, each party must bear its own
costs.
57.
In the result, the following order is made for all these reasons.
Order
1.
The applicant’s
non-compliance with Rule 4 is hereby condoned.
2.
The first respondent’s condonation
application for late opposition is hereby condoned.
3.
The first respondent is to pay the costs
of 13 December 2021
on
an attorney and client scale.
4.
The applicant’s application is
dismissed.
5.
The first respondent is, within 20 days
of this order, to re-enrol its appeal under case number
A740/2014
or withdraw same
.
6.
Where the first respondent does not
comply with paragraph 5 above, the applicant, within ten days of the
respondent’s non-compliance
with paragraph 5 above, may
enrol the appeal if so desired.
7.
Consequently, where the parties do not
comply with paragraphs 6 or 7 above, the Judgment and order per
Phatudi J stand.
8.
Each party is to pay its costs, save for
paragraph 3 above.
N.
MAZIBUKO
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Counsel
for the Applicant
Advocate T Ellerbeck
Instructed
by:
Edeling van
Niekerk Inc
C/O
Arthur Channon Inc
Counsel
for Respondents:
Advocate
JG Smit
Instructed
by:
Gothe Attorney,
Inc.
Date
of hearing:
18 July 2022
Judgment
delivered on:
21
September 2022
[1]
Nawa
and others v Marakala and Another 2008(5) SA 275 at 278 A-B
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