Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 742South Africa
Legal Practice Council v Sampson and Others (2556/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 742 (6 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 October 2022
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Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Legal Practice Council v Sampson and Others (2556/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 742 (6 October 2022)
Legal Practice Council v Sampson and Others (2556/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 742 (6 October 2022)
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sino date 6 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION- PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2556/2021
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED:
YES
In
the matter between:
THE
LEGAL PRACTICE COUNCIL
Applicant
and
DARREN
SAMPSON
First
Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF JUSTICE
&
CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Second
Respondent
ROCHELLE
MAISTRY
Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for security of costs in terms of Rule 47 (4)
by the first
respondent in which the first respondent seeks the
following order:
“
(i)
The First Respondent having duly served a Rule 47(1) request for
security for costs (27 May 2021) application including a request
for
written reasons in terms of Rule 41A of the Uniform Rules of Court
(02 June 2022);
(ii)
Applicant duly opposed the application for security for costs (31 May
2021) and failed to provide written reasons in terms
of Rule 41A;
(iii)
The Applicant’s dies having expired for either providing
written reasons including filing of an answering affidavit
to oppose
the application for security for costs;
(iv)
The First Respondent hereby applies to the above Honorable Court for
security to be provided within five (5) days in terms
of Rule 47 (4)
of the Uniform Rules of Court (application for security of costs)
failing which the First Respondent shall seek
an order striking out
the application filed by the Applicant;
(v)
Costs on an attorney and own client scale and/ or in the alternative
costs
de boni propris
;
(k)Further
and/ or alternative relief.”
Background
[2]
The applicant brought an urgent application to suspend the first
respondent as a Legal
Practioner. The first respondent opposed the
matter and the urgent was heard on 16 February 2021.
[3]
Judge Ranchod was of the view that the applicant did not require a
court order suspending
the first respondent in order to discipline
the first respondent and that it should continue with its
disciplinary enquiry. Further
that after the outcome of the
disciplinary enquiry the first respondent could approach the court
and therefore postponed the matter
sine die
.
[4]
Between January 2021 and 12 March 2021 there were several
applications brought by
the first respondent including joinder
applications of the second and third respondent as well as an
application to compel in terms
of Rule 35(7). The first respondent
has brought the current application which is an application for
security for costs.
[5]
On 27 May 2021, the first respondent’s served a notice in terms
of Rule 47 (1)
on the applicant for security of costs. The applicant
opposed the application on 31 May 2021. The first respondent now
seeks an
order in terms of Rule 47(4) for this Court to order the
applicant to provide costs within 5 (five) days of the order being
granted.
The
first respondent’s submissions
[6]
The first respondent’s submissions are that the applicant
failed to file an
answering affidavit or respond to a request for
written reasons for the objection to mediation in terms of Rule 41A.
He submitted
that his request for written reasons was furnished on 2
June 2021 to obtain the information which he states stems from his
application
and which will be exchanged in the ordinary course of the
court processes. It is his submission that litigation in this matter
can be avoided. He has further stated that he has brought a Rule 23
application to dismiss the applicant’s case as it is vague
and
embarrassing and the urgent application lacks material facts.
[7]
The first respondent avers that had the applicant acted prudently
regarding the complaints
against the second and third respondent that
litigation could have been avoided. Further that he has presented
bills of costs for
payment to the taxing master and the second
respondent refuses to attend the taxations. The applicant and the
second respondent
opposed the matter in September and October 2021
respectively but only filed their answering affidavit on 15 March
2022 three days
before the hearing was set down for 18 March 2022. He
was therefore advised by the Registrar that the matter was
technically unopposed.
However, on 18 March 2022 Judge Basson
directed that the matter be removed from the unopposed roll and
reserved costs. Again on
advice from the Registrar he brought an
application to compel on 30 March 2022 for the filing of heads of
argument. He avers that
the
dies
have expired again and the
matter should be enrolled as unopposed. It is due to the applicant’s
conduct in this matter that
he requests that all his costs be covered
on an attorney and own client scale to either an attorney of his
choice or to the registrar
of the Court as guarantee and that
condonation of the applicant should not be entertained. Lastly he
submits that the applicant
refuses to permit him to enrol on the roll
of practising attorneys in order to generate an income and therefore
he has difficulty
in applying for vacancies.
Security
for costs
[8]
Rule 47(4) relied upon states the following:
“
The
Court may, if security not be given within a reasonable time, dismiss
any proceedings instituted or strike out any pleadings
filed by the
party in default, or make such other order as to it may seem
meet.”
[9]
In terms of Rule 47 of the Uniform Rules, a
peregrinus
plaintiff (or applicant) who does not own unburdened immovable
property in the country, may be ordered to give security for the
costs of his action. The objective of the rule is to ensure that if
the
peregrine
plaintiff is unsuccessful, payment of the
incola
defendant’s costs is secured. The court also has a discretion
to grant an order for security for costs where both parties
are
peregrini
.
The court must be satisfied that the main application is vexatious or
reckless or amounted to an abuse of the process of the court
[1]
.
A
peregrinus
who
is plaintiff (or applicant) and who does not own unburdened immovable
property in the Republic may be ordered to give
security for the
costs of his action
[2]
or as in this instance an opposition to the pending application.
[10]
An
incola
is not generally compelled to furnish security for costs except where
there is an abuse of the process of court, namely where the
claim is
vexatious
[3]
.
An action is vexatious if it is obviously unsustainable, frivolous,
improper, instituted without sufficient ground, to serve solely
as an
annoyance to the defendant
[4]
.
[11]
In an application for security for costs a court does not have to be
convinced as a matter of
certainty that the matter is incapable of
succeeding but rather as a probability. The test whether an action is
vexatious on the
grounds that it is unsustainable can therefore be
summarised as follows: the applicant does not have to establish this
as a certainty;
a court should not undertake a detailed investigation
of the case nor attempt to resolve the dispute between the parties.
This
would be tantamount to pre-empting the trial court, in this case
the court seized with the urgent application. Rather, the court
in a
security for costs application brought upon these grounds, should
merely decide on a preponderance of probabilities whether
there are
any prospects of success
[5]
. In Zietsman
Supra
the
Court held that:
“
The
court must carry out a balancing exercise. On the one hand it must
weigh the injustice to the plaintiff if prevented from pursuing
a
proper claim by an order for security. Against that, it must weigh
the injustice to the defendant if no security is ordered and
at the
trial the plaintiff’s claim fails and the defendant finds
himself unable to recover from the plaintiff the costs which
have
been incurred by him in his defence of the claim.”
[12]
This approach was subsequently endorsed by the Constitutional Court
in
Giddey
NO v JC Barnard and Partners
[6]
,
which concerned the correct constitutional approach to a court’s
discretion as whether to require a litigant to furnish
security for
costs. There the Constitutional Court stated as follows in relation
to the balancing exercise:
‘
To
do this balancing exercise correctly, a court needs to be apprised of
all the relevant information. An application for security
will
therefore need to show that there is a probability that the plaintiff
company will be unable to pay costs. The respondent
company, on the
other hand, must establish that the order for costs might well result
in it being unable to pursue the litigation
and should indicate the
nature and importance of the litigation to rebut a suggestion that it
may be vexatious or without prospect
of success. Equipped with this
information, a court will need to balance the interest of the
plaintiff in pursuing the litigation
against the risks to the
defendant of an unrealisable costs order
.’
[13]
I turn now to the facts of the present matter. The fact that the
applicant in this matter has
not attended taxations of numerous taxed
bills upon presentation to the taxation master is not a relevant
consideration as there
is no Court order for costs. The test from as
seen from the above precedent is that in order to succeed in an
application for security
for costs that the applicant must show that
there is a probability that the plaintiff company will not be able to
pay the costs.
Further that the objective of Rule 47 is to ensure
that a
peregrinus
plaintiff (or applicant) who does not have
unburdened immovable assets to provide security for his action. The
applicant is not
a
peregrinus
as it is domiciled in South
Africa and therefore is actually an
incola
. As indicated
earlier it is a general rule that an
incola
will not be
compelled to provide security for costs unless there is proof that
the litigation is vexatious and is an abuse of the
Court process.
[14]
It is trite that the court has an inherent jurisdiction to stop or
prevent a vexatious action
as being an abuse of the process of the
court, and one of the ways of doing so is by ordering the vexatious
litigant to furnish
security for the costs of the opposing side
[7]
.
An action is vexatious if it is clearly unsustainable. The first
respondent has in my view failed to demonstrate that the claim
by the
applicant is vexatious. However, this Court is of the view that to
prevent the plaintiff from pursuing a proper claim will
prejudice the
applicant.
[15]
The first respondent has not provided any proof that the applicant
will not be able to pay its
costs should this Court order it to do
so. The first respondent other than the fact that he is unable to
secure work as a result
of being suspended from practicing as a legal
practioner pending the disciplinary action by the applicant against
it, he has not
provided any further evidence of any other injustices
that he has or may suffer for an order for security of costs to be
granted.
[16]
Accordingly and in light of the consideration of the interests of
justice as borne out by the
totality of the facts it does not favour
the granting of the security of costs.
[17]
In my view, the first respondent's application stands to fail.
Order
[18]
I accordingly make the following order:
18.1
The application is dismissed.
C
SARDIWALLA
Judge
of the High Court of South Africa
Representation:
For
the applicant:
Adv. N Mteto
Instructed
by:
RENQE FY INC
For
the first respondent: D
Sampson
Date
of the hearing:
18
March 2022
Date
of reasons:
6
October 2022
[1]
Ramsamy
NO v Maarman
2002
(6) SA 159
(C) at 172I;
Boost
Sports Africa (Pty) Ltd v South Africa Breweries (Pty) Ltd
2015
(5) SA 38
(SCA) at 50C–I.).
[2]
Brearley
v Faure, Van Eyk and Moore
(1905)
22 SC 2
;
Lowndes
v Rothschild
1908
TH 49
;
Kachelnik
v Afrimeric Distributors (Pty) Ltd
1948
(4) SA 279 (C).
[3]
.Ecker
v Dean
1938
AD 102
; Zietsman v Electronic Media Network Ltd
2008
(4) SA 1
(SCA), para 4
[4]
See
Fisheries
Development Corporation of SA Ltd v Jorgenson and Another
1979
(3) SA 1331
(W);
Golden
International Navigation SA v Zeba Maritime Co Ltd; Zeba Maritime v
MV Visvliet
2008
(3) SA 10
(C) para 9).
[5]
Zietsman
(supra)
at para 21.
[6]
[2006] ZACC 13
;
2007 (5) SA 525
(CC) at para 8.
[7]
Zietman, supra at 4E.
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