Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 322South Africa
Wilgeheuwel Retirement Village (Pty) Ltd v Volschenk (5904/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 322 (29 July 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Wilgeheuwel Retirement Village (Pty) Ltd v Volschenk (5904/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 322 (29 July 2025)
Wilgeheuwel Retirement Village (Pty) Ltd v Volschenk (5904/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 322 (29 July 2025)
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sino date 29 July 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case Number:
5904/2024
In the matter between:
WILGEHEUWEL
RETIREMENT VILLAGE (PTY) LTD
Applicant /Respondent
and
CORNELIA
JOHANNA VOLSCHENK
Respondent / Applicant
Coram
:
Da Silva Salie, J
Judgment
delivered
:
29 July 2025
Counsel for
Applicant
:
Adv. Whitcomb
Instructed
by
:
Casper Le Roux Inc.
Counsel for
Respondent
:
Adv. J Bernstein
Instructed
by
:
Barnard Patel Inc.
JUDGMENT EX TEMPORE
HANDED DOWN ON 29 JULY 2025
STRIKING OUT
APPLICATION
Order:
[17]
For the reasons set out herein, the following order is made:
[i]
“The application in terms of Rule 30 is dismissed with costs on
scale
A.”
DA
SILVA SALIE, J:
[1]
This is an opposed application brought in terms of Rule 30 of the
Uniform Rules of
Court to set aside two sets of affidavits filed by
the respondent in the pending liquidation application (the "main
application").
[2]
This judgment is delivered
ex tempore
, shortly after the
matter was fully argued earlier today, and is of necessity brief.
[3]
The applicant ("Wilgeheuwel") contends that these
documents/affidavits —
marked AA1 (the replying affidavit) and
AA2 (a re-commissioned founding affidavit) —constitute
irregular steps.
[4]
The background to the main application is very brief as follows:
[4.1]
The respondent, Mrs Volschenk, purchased a life right in property
with her late husband under the
Housing Development Schemes for
Retired Persons Act 65 of 1988. After her husband’s passing and
a decline in her health,
she cancelled the agreement with the
applicant by mutual consent. As per the cancellation agreement, the
applicant became liable
to repay an amount of R889,000 by 18 April
2021. When payment was not effected, Mrs. Volschenk instituted action
to recover the
aforesaid amount.
[4.2]
Wilgeheuwel filed a plea to the action that another party, Ms.
Juliana Steyn, the attorney who received
the proceeds in trust,
should have been joined.
[4.3]
Mrs Volschenk then brought an application for its liquidation on the
basis that it was unable to pay
its debts. On the last page of
the founding affidavit, the commissioner of oaths details does
however not set out the name
in full nor the address as required and
instead his stated initials and surname, designation as
"predikant
"
(pastor/church minister) with a designation number and the date.
Wilgeheuwel took issue with that omission and exclusively
based its
opposition to the relief for liquidation on that aspect in its
answering affidavit. I deal with this aspect further
hereunder.
[5]
In the present Rule 30 application, Wilgeheuwel contends that AA1
(the replying affidavit)
was filed out of time without a substantive
application for condonation, and that AA2, being a re-commissioned
founding affidavit,
was irregularly filed without the leave of the
Court. The argument follows that such leave should have been sought
on notice of
motion, failing which the affidavits are irregular and
prejudicial. In the result, it is argued that it had been deprived of
an
opportunity to contest the grounds for condonation of the
non-compliance and thus suffers prejudice. Differently stated,
it was argued that the respondent's failure to obtain the Court's
leave to condone its non-compliance had reversed the onus onto
Wilgeheuwel to bring an application to file a further set of
affidavits to answer to or oppose the filing of the late and
irregular
affidavits.
[6]
In the main liquidation application, Wilgeheuwel raised in its
answering affidavit
two objections, so called technical defences.
These objections were the only two grounds upon which liquidation was
resisted,
which were related to the defects in the commissioner of
oaths’ details. In this application, Wilgeheuwel takes
issue
with the correction of the commission of oaths details and
contends that the replying affidavit was filed late. For those
reasons, both ought to be set aside as irregular steps. The
applicant’s submission presupposes that the re-commissioned
affidavit constitutes a second founding affidavit, which it argues
was impermissibly filed without leave given that it was late.
[7]
I queried counsel for the applicant during his submissions as to the
nature of the
alleged prejudice which must be illustrated and whether
the discretion to admit the affidavits does not ultimately lie with
the
Court hearing the main application. The latter would be able to
consider the issues raised on condonation and non-compliance within
the full context of the factual matrix of the matter and not as a
mere technical aspect, nor in vacuum, as presently sought. I
ventilated with him that the consideration and adjudication of
condonation issues at the hearing of the matter is a most common
procedure and oft-occurrence in our Courts as points
in limine
.
[8]
Counsel submitted, with reference to various authorities, that
procedural irregularities
of this kind require Court’s leave
and that mere filing does not suffice. Practically, this
contention envisages a
separate application in Third Division, which
given Wilgeheuwel's opposition would have to be postponed and heard
on the opposed
motion roll (fourth division) on a later date as may
be set down by the Chief Registrar. This would amount to a
substantial
delay before the liquidation application could be heard
by a Court. It also contemplates, if the opposition succeeds,
the
respondent will have to withdraw the two affidavits (AA1 and AA2)
and then bring a further separate application for condonation
for the
filing of the amended founding affidavit and the late filing of the
affidavit in reply. In other words, I see the
argument to
amount to the applicant in the main application for liquidation to
then have to start
de novo
.
[9]
Counsel maintained that as matters stand Wilgeheuwel is prejudiced by
being compelled
to rebut the facts alleged in condonation without
having had the opportunity to oppose such condonation procedurally.
It was also
contended that the respondent's delay of nearly two
months was insufficiently explained
[10]
For the respondent, it was submitted that the applicant failed to
establish any real prejudice
or to demonstrate that the steps taken
were irregular as contemplated by Rule 30 nor has it shown that it
suffers any prejudice.
Reliance was placed on
Anglo
Operations Ltd v Sandhurst Estates (Pty) Ltd
2007 (2) SA 363
(SCA),
to support the submission that the applicant
seeks to exploit a technicality rather than engage the merits.
In so doing
it is seeking to delay, impermissably, the ventilation of
the main application. The argument followed that the grounds
for
condonation were set out in the replying affidavit, under a
separate heading with it specifically stating that leave would be
sought
from the Court at the hearing of the matter to condone the
correction of the commissioner’s details and the late filing of
her replying affidavit. Wilgeheuwel took a technical point as
its objection to the application for liquidation and sought
dismissal
of the relief purely on that basis. The remedied founding
affidavit means that it could no longer reply on its
exclusively
technical opposition to the liquidation, however, this is not
sufficient to support a contention that the prejudice
for the
applicant is that the correction amounts to nullifying the technical
opposition which it had raised in its opposition to
the liquidation
application. The failure to demonstrate prejudice based on the
respondent’s irregularities is fatal.
In other
words, the only prejudice is one of being deprived of the opportunity
to raise technical objections, however there
is no real or
substantial prejudice suffered by the applicant. The argument
followed that a Court may at the hearing of the
matter, in its
discretion, permit the filing of irregular or late affidavits and
that such relief could be sought before or after
the affidavits had
been filed. Either way, whether leave is sought before or
afterwards, in seeking an indulgence, the Court
will consider the
reasons and explanation for the affidavit being late/irregular,
having regard to all the circumstances of the
case.
[11]
I stood the matter down to reconvene after the lunch adjournment to
consider the bundles of authorities
handed up by both counsel and
their submissions made.
Discussion:
[12]
As I see it, the crux of the applicant’s case is that the
affidavits were “
slipped in”
without a
proper application and thereby attempt to circumvent the rules. The
leave of the Court, it was argued, must be sought
to permit the
affidavits. I find this argument rather problematic and without
merit. In my view, the real issue for the applicant
or as the
proverbial saying goes, the thorn in its flesh, is that the applicant
chose to approach the opposition to the application
for liquidation
on a purely technical basis and elected not to engage in the merits
or answer thereto. It purely based its
opposition to its
liquidation on the basis of it being unable to pay its debts on the
shortcoming with the sub-regulations of the
Justices of the Peace and
Commissioner of Oaths Act 16 of 1963. Now that the respondent
has taken the step to remove the
basis for that complaint, its
opposition to the liquidation prayer is seemingly extirpated, should
a Court grant the condonation
at the hearing. What would be
left in its opposition as it stands presently? Nothing, since it had
not answered anything
relating to the merits of the claim for
liquidation. That is really the nub of concern for the
applicant. However,
should the applicant wish to address the
reasons relating to condonation and oppose it, a Court hearing the
liquidation application
would certainly not deny it an opportunity to
do so. The basis for such an affidavit would be to address new
matters raised
by the opposing party who seek the indulgence. The
audi alterem partem
rule guarantees that a party would be able
to answer such new facts. This application is thus wholly unnecessary
and, in my view,
a dilatory effort to avoid the ventilation and
adjudication of the application for liquidation of the respondent.
[13]
It is indeed so that the Court retains the discretion to permit late
or irregular filings. However,
that discretion properly vests in the
Court seized with the main application. It is that Court who is to
consider the condonation
application and determine whether the
irregularities, if any, should be excused or condoned and/or give
further directive/s as
it considers prudent taking into account the
nature and circumstances of the matter and the interests of justice.
The present application
seeks to usurp that discretion prematurely
and denude the power of the Court hearing the liquidation
application.
[14]
The corrected founding affidavit (correcting the commissioner’s
details) in my view is
not a new or supplementary affidavit in the
true sense as it does not add new matter. No new issues are
added or addressed
in the body of the affidavit. Stripped down
to the core, all it really did was blow out the technical defences
which the
applicant raised in opposition to an application for it to
be wound up based on the shortcomings of the Commissioner of Oaths
details.
[15]
I am not persuaded that the applicant suffers any real prejudice of
the kind contemplated by
Rule 30. The respondent had, in her
affidavits, explained the circumstances of the late filing and stated
that leave would be sought
at the hearing of the main matter. The
defects in the commissioning of the founding affidavit are sought to
be remedied in AA2
simultaneously filed with the replying affidavit
(AA1). Ultimately, the respondent bears the risk of her
non-compliance of the
rules and the onus to persuade the Court
hearing the liquidation application to condone the delay in filing
her replying affidavit
and the correction of the Commissioner’s
details in her founding affidavit. The applicant retains the right to
oppose the
leave for condonation and consequent relief on affidavit,
for the Court hearing the matter to consider as a
point in
limine.
[16]
Our Courts have consistently stated that rules serve the interests of
justice and should not
be applied rigidly. Over-formalism is
discouraged. The aim of the rules is the expeditious and fair
resolution of disputes. In
the absence of demonstrable prejudice and
where the issue can be more appropriately determined by the Court
hearing the main application,
I am not persuaded that this Rule 30
application bears any merit. For these reasons the application must
fail.
Order:
[17]
For the reasons set out herein, the following order is made:
[i]
“The application in terms of Rule 30 is dismissed with costs on
scale
A.”
DA
SILVA SALIE, J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
WESTERN
CAPE
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