Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 33South Africa
Loubser (Snr) N.O and Others v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd (11890/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 33 (9 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
9 February 2024
Headnotes
the legislature intended the issues “to be visited anew by the court hearing a section 78 application”.[2]
Judgment
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## Loubser (Snr) N.O and Others v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd (11890/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 33 (9 February 2024)
Loubser (Snr) N.O and Others v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd (11890/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 33 (9 February 2024)
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sino date 9 February 2024
Republic
of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Before: Acting
Justice Cockrell
Date of hearing: 7
February 2024
Date of judgment: 9
February 2024
Case No: 11890/2022
PAUL
FREDERIK LOUBSER (SNR) N.O.
First
Applicant
FREDERIK
HENDRIK LOUBSER N.O.
Second
Applicant
HAYWARD
LOUBSER N.O.
Third
Applicant
WILHELMINA
MARSHALL N.O.
Fourth
Applicant
PAUL
FREDERICK LOUBSER N.O.
Fifth
Applicant
UZELL
LOUBSER N.O.
Sixth
Applicant
(in
their capacities as trustees for the time being of the Paul
Loubser Trust)
And
VODACOM
(PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Judgment
delivered by email to the parties’ legal representatives and by
release to SAFLII.
COCKRELL AJ:
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The applicants are the trustees of the Paul
Loubser Trust (“the Trust”).
[2]
In 2005, the Trust concluded a written agreement
(“the Lease”) with the respondent (“Vodacom”)
in terms
of which the Trust leased immovable property to Vodacom.
The Lease permitted Vodacom to install on the property various items
of infrastructure that are commonly used for purposes of radio
telecommunications. I shall refer to the infrastructure as
“the
Mast”.
[3]
The subject matter of the Lease was the property
(“
die perseel/gebou
”
)
rather than the Mast. Vodacom was entitled to install the Mast
at its own cost.
[4]
The Lease was extended. It ultimately
expired by effluxion of time on 30 June 2020.
[5]
It is common cause that Vodacom continued to
occupy the leased premises after 30 June 2020 by virtue of the fact
that the Mast was
not removed.
[6]
The Trust believes that Vodacom kept the Mast
operational after 30 June 2020 without paying rent. The Trust
says that it intends
to sue Vodacom for its continued use of the
property after 30 June 2020. The Trust has not yet instituted legal
proceedings.
[7]
In
2022, the Trust lodged a request for access to the records of Vodacom
in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act
2 of 2000
(“the Act”). Although the incorrect form was
attached to the founding affidavit, it is common cause
that a request
was lodged in terms of Part 3 of the Act, which deals with access to
the records of private bodies.
[1]
That request was declined by Vodacom.
[8]
The Trust has now applied to this Court in terms
of section 78 of the Act for “appropriate relief” as
contemplated in
section 82. The Trust seeks an order directing
Vodacom to make available the documents listed in paragraphs 1.1 to
1.10 of
the notice of motion.
[9]
Vodacom opposes the main application. Its only
basis for opposition is that the Trust has not shown that the
requested documents
are required for the exercise or protection of a
right. Vodacom also lodged a counter-application directed at
allowing it
to remove the Mast and ancillary equipment.
#
# The main application
The main application
[10]
Insofar as relevant for present purposes, section 78(2)(d) of the Act
provides
that a requester aggrieved by a decision of a private body
to refuse a request for access, may “apply to a court for
appropriate
relief in terms of section 82”. Section 82,
in turn, provides that the court hearing such an application “may
grant any order that is just and equitable”.
[11]
The juristic nature of an
application in terms of section 78 of the Act was considered in
Transnet
Ltd v SA Metal Machinery Co (Pty) Ltd
2006
6 SA 285
(SCA). There the Supreme Court of Appeal held that the
legislature intended the issues “to be visited anew by the
court
hearing a section 78 application”.
[2]
[12]
It follows that the
present application does not amount to a review of, or appeal
against, the decision of Vodacom to refuse access
to the requested
records. It is rather “a civil proceeding like any motion
matter, in the course of which both sides
… are at liberty to
present evidence to support their respective case for access and
refusal”.
[3]
There
is accordingly no merit in Vodacom’s argument that the Trust
could not elaborate in its founding affidavit on
the somewhat terse
allegations contained in the original request for access to the
records.
[13]
In order to succeed in
the present application, the applicants have to establish as a
threshold requirement that the requested records
are “required
for the exercise or protection of any rights”.
[4]
This is a requirement that applies in the case of private
bodies but not in the case of public bodies. It derives from
section
32(1)(b) of the Constitution.
[14]
The meaning of the threshold requirement was
considered in
Clutchco (Pty) Ltd v Davis
2005 3 SA 486
(SCA) para 13. There Comrie
AJA held as follows:
“… ‘
required’
does not mean necessity, let alone dire necessity.
I
think that ‘reasonably required’ in the circumstances is
about as precise a formulation as can be achieved, provided
that it
is understood to connote a substantial advantage or an element of
need.
It
appears to me, with respect, that this interpretation correctly
reflects the intention of the Legislature in section 50(1)(a).”
(my underlining)
[15]
This approach has been
confirmed by the SCA in subsequent cases
[5]
and also by the Constitutional Court.
[6]
[16]
In short, a requester must show that the requested
record is
reasonably
required
for the exercise or protection of a right. It is not sufficient
for the requester merely to show that the requested
record would be
of some assistance to it.
[17]
How
does this threshold requirement operate in the case of pre-action
discovery? In other words, to what extent may a potential
litigant
use the Act in order to investigate whether it has a cause of action
before initiating litigation?
[7]
[18]
The SCA has considered this question in a series
of judgments:
18.1.
In
Unitas
Hospital v Van Wyk
[2006] ZASCA 34
;
2006
4 SA 436
(SCA), Brand JA held as follows:
[8]
“
[21]
…. I do not believe that open and democratic societies would
encourage what is commonly referred to as ‘fishing
expeditions’
which could well arise if s 50 [of the Act] is used to facilitate
pre-action discovery as a general practice
….. Nor do I
believe that such a society would require a potential defendant, as a
general rule, to disclose his or her
whole case before any action is
launched. The deference shown by s 7 [of the Act] to the rules of
discovery is, in my view, not
without reason. These rules have served
us well for many years. They have their own built-in measures of
control to promote fairness
and to avoid abuse. Documents are only
discoverable if they are relevant to the litigation while relevance
is determined by the
issues on the pleadings. The deference shown to
discovery rules is a clear indication, I think, that the legislature
had no intention
to allow prospective litigants to avoid these
measures of control by compelling pre-action discovery under s 50
as a matter
of course.
[22]
I hasten to add that I am not suggesting that reliance on s 50 is
automatically precluded merely because the information sought
would
eventually become accessible under the rules of discovery, after
proceedings have been launched. What I do say is that pre-action
discovery under s 50 must remain the exception rather than the rule;
that it must only be available to a requester who has shown
the
‘element of need’ or ‘substantial advantage’
of access to the requested information, referred to in
Clutchco,
at
the pre-action stage. An example of such a case is, in my view, to be
found in
Van Niekerk v Pretoria City Council
(supra),
upon which considerable reliance was placed by the court
a
quo
….. The point is, however, that the facts of that case
were materially different. Van Niekerk had a report by experts
who did not identify who was responsible for the damage to his
equipment (848C). The City Council, on the other hand, relied on
a
report which apparently exonerated it from responsibility (848F-G).
Quite understandably, in the circumstances, Van Niekerk’s
allegation was that without the report relied upon by the City
Council, he was unable to establish whether it could be held liable
(848H-I). Though I think it is legitimate to use s 50 to
identify the right defendant, I do not agree with the court
a
quo
’s thesis that one is entitled, as a matter of course,
to all information which will assist in evaluating your prospects of
success against the only potential defendant. On that approach, the
more you know the better you will be able to evaluate your
chances
against your opponent. The corollary of this thesis therefore seems
to be that the requester will in effect always be entitled
to full
pre-action discovery. The
dicta
by Cameron J in Van
Niekerk referred to by the court
a quo
(see para
[14] above) cannot legitimately be relied upon in support of its
thesis.”
18.2.
In
Claase v Information Officer, South African Airways (Pty) Ltd
2007 5 SA 469
(SCA), Combrinck AJA revisited the issue:
“
[9]
The next question is whether access to the record sought is
‘required’ for the protection of the right…..
The
substantial advantage in this matter consists in the fact that the
contents of the record would be decisive. (
Unitas
para
[54]) ie they would bring a short sharp end to the dispute (
Van
Niekerk v Pretoria City Council
1997
(3) SA 839
(
T)
at 848G.) They would either confirm the appellant’s contentions
in which event SAA would apparently have no defence, or
they would
support the latter’s case in which event the appellant would
obviously, as his counsel said in argument, not proceed
with the
proposed litigation. SAA’s reluctance to produce the document
in these circumstances is inexplicable.”
18.3.
In
Mahaeeane v Anglogold Ashanti
Limited
2017 6 SA 382
(SCA), the majority of the SCA held as follows:
“
[19] In
this regard, the draft particulars of claim (the particulars) annexed
to the certification application achieve prominence.
The substantive
part runs to over 65 pages, although approximately half of these deal
with the asbestosis claim which does not
apply to the appellants.
They set out in detail, over nearly three pages, what the respondent
‘knew, or ought reasonably
to have known’ about the harm
of being exposed to silica dust and the manner in which silicosis can
be prevented. Arising
from that knowledge, the duties of the
respondent are pleaded, including statutory duties, the common law
duty of care and constitutional
obligations. These run to over four
pages. The particulars go on to plead the basis on which the class
action members aver that
the respondent breached its statutory
duties. These refer in detail to legislation and specific conduct
which fell short of the
statutory requirements. These breaches run to
some 18 pages. Strict liability under the statutes is then pleaded
and, in the alternative,
a negligent breach of duties which is said
to give rise to delictual liability. The particulars go on to plead
breaches of the
common law duty of care which the class members
contend were owed to them by the respondent. These run to some nine
pages. The
alleged breach of constitutional duties is then pleaded
running to one page and incorporating conduct pleaded in paragraphs
112
to 138 comprising some 35 pages. The particulars then plead the
causal connection between the silicosis contracted and the actionable
conduct of the respondent. From all of this it can be seen that the
appellants are clearly in a position to formulate their claim.
[20] The
above deals with the question of whether the records are reasonably
required to exercise or protect the right asserted
by the appellants,
to claim damages from the respondent from their having contracted
silicosis. As indicated, a right to claim
damages is invoked. This
will necessitate court proceedings. It is necessary to avoid the
unwelcome spectre of applications under
the PAIA being brought to
obtain premature discovery.
It
seems to me that a rule of thumb which will avoid this is to enquire
whether, in the context of future litigation to exercise
the right
relied on, the records requested are reasonably required to formulate
a claim. This seems to me to have been the implicit
test applied
in
Unitas
Hospital
.
If needed to formulate a claim, it can be said that they are
reasonably required under
s 50(1)
of
the
PAIA. As I have said, the appellants do not need the requested
records to formulate their claim
.”
(my underlining)
[19]
In my view, the SCA judgments establish the
following principles when the Act is used for pre-action discovery:
19.1.
Once an action is
commenced, the normal rules of discovery apply. Since the rules
of discovery “have their own built-in
measures of control to
promote fairness and to avoid abuse”, prospective litigants may
not “avoid these measures of
control by compelling pre-action
discovery under s 50 [of the Act] as a matter of course”.
[9]
19.2.
This means that
pre-
action
discovery in terms of the
Act “must remain the exception rather than the rule”.
[10]
In other words, the Act may be used for pre-action discovery in
exceptional
cases but not in
all
cases.
19.3.
What, then, determines
when it is permissible to use the Act for pre-action discovery and
when it is impermissible to do so?
In answer to this
question, the SCA has held that it is “legitimate to use s 50
[of the Act] to identify the
right defendant” but that a
potential litigant is not “entitled, as a matter of course, to
all information which will
assist in evaluating [its] prospects of
success against the only potential defendant”.
[11]
The SCA has also held that a “rule of thumb” is to
“enquire whether, in the context of future litigation
to
exercise the right relied on, the records requested are reasonably
required to formulate a claim”. In other words,
“[i]f
needed to formulate a claim, it can be said that they are reasonably
required under section 50(1) of PAIA”.
[12]
[20]
Applying these principles, I am of the view that
the Trust has not shown that the requested documents are reasonably
required for
the exercise or protection of its right to institute an
action. I reach this conclusion for the following
reasons:
20.1.
The requested documents are not reasonably required
to identify
the right defendant
(i.e. the test in
Unitas Hospital
).
If the Trust has a cause of action, it would lie against Vodacom.
Although the Trust suggested in its heads of argument
and in oral
argument that it may have also a claim against MTN on the basis that
MTN is using the Mast, the founding affidavit
makes no mention of a
potential cause of action against MTN and the notice of motion does
not refer to the position of MTN.
20.2.
The requested documents
are not reasonably required
to
formulate the Trust’s claim
(i.e.
the test in
Mahaeeane
).
On the contrary, the founding affidavit avers that “the mere
fact that the Vodacom mast remains on the property means that
the
Trust is entitled to market related rental and/or holding over
damages”.
[13]
The
founding affidavit goes on to explain that “the rental amount
for this period is R25,000 per month (excl. VAT),
which would be
increased by 7.5% per annum (first escalation taking place on 1 July
2020)”.
[14]
The
founding affidavit then concludes that Vodacom “is indebted to
the Trust in excess of R600 000,00 (excl VAT
and interest) for
market related rental and/or holding over damages for the period July
2020 to the date of this affidavit”.
[15]
20.3.
It is unnecessary for me
to express a view as regards whether the averments quoted in the
previous paragraph are well-founded in
law and I refrain from doing
so. The point for present purposes is a different one: it is
that, according to the Trust’s
own version, the Trust does not
need to know whether the Mast was decommissioned on 30 June 2020 in
order to formulate the claim
that it intends to bring against Vodacom
for holding over. In other words, since the Trust says
that it has a cause
of action based on Vodacom’s failure to
vacate the leased property when the Lease ended, the requested
records are not required
in order for the Trust “to exercise
its property rights and claim damages from the respondent for holding
over”.
[16]
If the
Trust’s claim for holding over were good, it would be good
without regard to whether Vodacom did or did not
continue to
use the Mast after 30 April 2020.
20.4.
In its founding
affidavit, the Trust says that the amount referred to in
paragraph 20.2 above “is limited solely to rental
and does
not include ancillary costs and/or damages which the Trust has
suffered as a result of the respondent’s conduct,
or the
conduct of the respondent’s agents and/or
representatives”.
[17]
The Trust elaborates on this in its replying affidavit by suggesting
that it may have “alternative claims …
founded on the
principles of unjustified enrichment and/or fraud”.
[18]
The replying affidavit does not explain the legal nature of such a
claim. It is possible that it may be based on
Hyprop
Investments Limited v NCS Carriers and Forwarding CC
2013
4 SA 607
(GSJ), where a Full Court held that “a holding over
claim can be made out either in contract or in delict”
[19]
and that “a claim under unjust enrichment is also viable”.
[20]
20.5.
Mr Felix, who appeared
for the applicant, appeared to suggest in oral argument that the
Trust would have a claim in delict or in
unjustified enrichment
in
addition to
a
claim for contractual damages. I have some difficulty in
understanding how such a claim would be formulated but it is
unnecessary
to express a final view on the issue. It suffices
to say that, if the Trust has a supplementary claim that is
additional
to its claim for damages for holding over, then the
supplementary claim would in my view be covered by the principle in
Unitas
Hospital
that
a potential litigant is not “entitled, as a matter of course,
to all information which will assist in evaluating [its]
prospects of
success against the only potential defendant”.
[21]
20.6.
When all is said and
done, the Trust’s attitude is a simple one: it says that it is
“entitled to know what the exact
position is” before it
institutes an action against Vodacom.
[22]
However, that does not accord with the jurisprudence of the SCA for
the reasons already given.
20.7.
A final observation is
that the list of requested documents in the notice of motion is
lengthy – it runs to some two-and-a-half
pages. I intend
no criticism of the drafter when I say that the list has the look and
feel of a request for further-and-better
discovery rather than
a “short sharp” request as in
Claase
.
This is exacerbated by the fact that some of the requested documents
antedate the termination of the Lease (prayers 1.1,
1.2 and 1.4).
To take one example: there is nothing in the founding affidavit
to indicate why the Trust requires copies
of all Eskom invoices
received by Vodacom pertaining to the Mast “from January 2018
to date”
[23]
since, on
the Trust’s own version, the Lease continued in operation until
30 June 2020. In other words, even
if the Trust were
correct that it has “a right to know what the property is being
utilised for”,
[24]
that
could not conceivably apply to the period
before
30 June 2020.
Moreover, some of the documents sought in the notice of motion do not
refer to any time period at all.
[25]
[21]
In short, the applicants have not shown that the
requested documents are reasonably required for the exercise or
protection of the
Trust’s right to institute an action.
The Trust knows the identity of the only potential defendant that is
mentioned
in the founding affidavit and it is able to formulate its
claim against that defendant. Once the Trust initiates an
action,
the rules of discovery will apply with all of the safeguards
that are built into that process.
[22]
The main application must therefore be dismissed.
[23]
Mr Felix argued that the Trust was justified in
bringing the main application even if it were to be unsuccessful. I
disagree for
the reasons given above. In my view, there is no
reason why costs should not follow the result.
# The
counter-application
The
counter-application
[24]
I was informed from the bar that the counter-application became moot
when Vodacom
removed the Mast and ancillary equipment from the
property. It is therefore unnecessary for me to
address the
counter-application further.
[25]
The parties were in agreement that I should order that the
counter-application
be removed from the roll with no order as to
costs.
#
# Order
Order
[26]
In the result, I make the following order:
1.
The main application is dismissed.
2.
The first to sixth applicants are to pay the
respondent’s costs in the main application on a joint and
several basis, the
one paying the others to be absolved.
3.
The counter-application is removed from the roll
with no order as to costs.
A.
COCKRELL
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Cape
Town
9
February 2024
APPEARANCES
Applicants’
counsel:
JK
Felix
Applicants’
attorneys:
Johan
Victor Attorneys
Respondent’s
counsel:
A
Coetzee
Respondent’s
attorneys:
Matopo
Moshimane Mulanga Inc t/a DM5 Incorporated
[1]
Annexure
TTMK1 to the replying affidavit.
[2]
Para
26
[3]
Para 24.
[4]
Section
50(1)(a) of the Act.
[5]
See, for
example, Unitas Hospital v Van Wyk
[2006] ZASCA 34
;
2006 4 SA 436
(SCA) paras 17 and
18; Company Secretary, ArcelorMittal South Africa Ltd v Vaal
Environmental Justice Alliance
2015 1 SA 515
(SCA) para 50; Claase v
Information Officer, South African Airways (Pty) Ltd
2007 5 SA 469
(SCA) para 9.
[6]
My
Vote Counts NPC v Speaker of the National Assembly
2016 1 SA 132
(CC) para 31.
[7]
Once the
litigation is instituted, section 7(1) is triggered. It
provides as follows:
“
This
Act does not apply to a record of a public body or a private body
if—
(
a
)
that record is requested for the purpose of criminal or civil
proceedings;
(
b
)
so requested after the commencement of such criminal or civil
proceedings, as the case may
be; and
(
c
)
the production of or access to that record for the purpose referred
to in paragraph
(
a
)
is
provided for in any other law.”
[8]
Cloete JA
agreed with “the reasoning and conclusion” of Brand
JA
(para 50). Conradie JA agreed with Brand JA and Cloete JA, but
on narrower grounds. Harms JA concurred with Conradie
JA and
Cloete JA. Cameron JA dissented.
[9]
Unitas
Hospital (supra) para 21.
[10]
Unitas Hospital
(supra) para 22. Cloete JA used the same expression in
para 55
of his separate concurring judgment.
[11]
Unitas Hospital
(supra) para 22.
[12]
Mahaeeane (supra)
para 20.
[13]
Founding affidavit
para 26.
[14]
Founding affidavit
para 27.
[15]
Founding
affidavit para 28.
[16]
Founding affidavit
para 49.
[17]
Founding
affidavit para 29.
[18]
Replying affidavit
para 10.
[19]
Para
48.
[20]
Para
44. Professor Bradfield summarises the position as follows in
The
Law of South Africa
volume
26(1) 3
rd
edition
para 107 (footnotes omitted):
‘
There
may be some confusion as to the meaning of the words “holding
over”, but they are merely a convenient label
to denote an
erstwhile lessee’s conduct in remaining in possession of
leased property after the lessee’s right to
possess the
property has been terminated and that affords the lessor a remedy in
damages. The remedy may lie in contract
for the lessee’s
breach of its contractual or common law obligation to restore the
lessor to free and undisturbed possession
at the end of the
lease, or in delict for the former lessee’s wrongful
action in remaining in occupation of the property
without legal
right to do so and in so doing causing the lessor financial
loss. The claim may equally be based in enrichment.’
[21]
Unitas Hospital
(supra) para 22.
[22]
Founding affidavit
para 50.
[23]
Prayer 1.2 of the
notice of motion.
[24]
Founding affidavit
para 51.
[25]
Prayers 1.5 to 1.8
of the notice of motion.
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