Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 87South Africa
Minister of Water and Sanitation v Clackson Power(Pty) Ltd and Another (4438/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 87; 2024 (5) SA 280 (WCC) (20 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
20 March 2024
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAWCHC 87
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Minister of Water and Sanitation v Clackson Power(Pty) Ltd and Another (4438/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 87; 2024 (5) SA 280 (WCC) (20 March 2024)
Minister of Water and Sanitation v Clackson Power(Pty) Ltd and Another (4438/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 87; 2024 (5) SA 280 (WCC) (20 March 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2024_87.html
sino date 20 March 2024
FLYNOTES:
.
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Authority to act –
Deponent
for minister
–
Authority
of deponent to act on behalf of minister challenged – Based
authority on false statement that he is Director-General
of DWS –
No explanation is provided by minister – Authority of
attorney to act on behalf of litigant must be
distinguished from
authority of person providing instructions on behalf of litigant
who is not a natural person – Whether
authority to institute
proceedings can only be challenged in terms of Uniform Rule 7(1) –
Proceedings were not properly
authorised – Special costs
order warranted – Application dismissed.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
CASE NO: 4438/2023
In the matter between:
THE MINISTER OF WATER
AND SANITATION
Applicant
and
CLACKSON POWER (PTY)
LTD
First Respondent
CEDERBERG LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
Date of hearing: 7
February 2024
Date of judgment: 20
March 2024
JUDGMENT HANDED DOWN
ELECTRONICALLY ON 20 MARCH 2024
BACKGROUND FACTS
1.
In
this opposed motion, the Minister of Water and Sanitation (“the
Minister”) cited in his official capacity as “the
Minister charged with the administration and implementation of the
National Water Act, 36 of 1998 (“the NWA”)”,
seeks
the following relief:
1.1
That
the first respondent (“Clackson”) be ordered to stop
operating the hydro-power plant at Clanwilliam Dam, Western
Cape;
1.2
That
Clackson be ordered to remove all its assets and to vacate the
premises at the Clanwilliam Dam;
1.3
That
Clackson complies with the orders in paragraphs 1.1 and 1.2 above
within 30 days of the court order;
1.4
That
Clackson be liable for the costs of this application on an attorney
and client scale.
2.
Clackson
is an independent power producer. It holds a NERSA (National Energy
Regulations of South Africa) licence for the operation
of power
generation facilities in terms of which it operates,
inter
alia
, a hydro-power plant at the
Clanwilliam Dam (“the dam”) and supplies electricity to
its clients, which include the
second respondent (“the
Municipality”). The licence is valid for 20 years, until
approximately the end of March 2028.
3.
Clackson
purchased the hydro-power plant from the
Municipality
in May 1998
, with
which it then concluded a Power Purchase Agreement (“the PPA”)
in terms of which it would sell all power generated
from the power
station to the Municipality.
4.
The
generation of power by the hydro power plant is made possible by
permanent water releases from the dam, which is under the control
of
the Department of Water and Sanitation (“the DWS”). On 17
April 2001 Clackson concluded an Operations Agreement
(“the
OA”) with the DWS to operate the hydro-power plant, in terms of
which,
inter alia
,
Clackson would only use water released from the dam down to the
Bulshoek Dam to drive the power station turbine.
5.
The
DWS has approved and embarked upon a project to raise the dam wall by
13m which would increase the yield of the dam by about
70 million
cubic meters per annum. This is needed to augment the water supplies
to the Olifants River Irrigation Scheme as well
as to assist the
development of resources for poor farmers. Remedial work to improve
the safety of the dam is also required. All
of this involves major
construction works.
6.
The
raising of the dam wall project implementation is already at 12%
completion, which includes site establishment, access roads,
support
infrastructure, upgrades to the N7 National road, etc, and will be
followed by Phase Two which includes the upgrading and
expansion of
the conveyance network downstream of the Bulshoek Dam.
7.
According
to the Minister’s founding papers, the project requires
termination of the OA. Consequently, the DWS has addressed
correspondence to Clackson terminating the OA, the termination
to take effect on 29 February 2022. Follow-up letters were sent to
Clackson, the latest being a letter dated 13 September 2022 in which
Clackson was again requested to cease the power station operations
and to remove all the machinery from the site within 14 days of the
letter.
8.
Clackson
responded per letter dated 19 September 2022 in which it denied the
DWS’s competence to terminate the OA and refused
to cease
operation and vacate the property.
9.
An
impasse was reached, which gave rise to these proceedings.
THE COMPETING
CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES
10.
The
OA contains no provisions relating to its termination whatsoever. The
Minister contends that it is accordingly a contract of
unspecified
duration and that it is therefore a question of interpretation to
ascertain what the intention of the parties was regarding
termination.
11.
Having
regard to the other terms of the OA, the Minister points out that it
contains no indication that the parties intended to
be bound in
perpetuity and that, on a proper interpretation, a tacit term must be
imported into the OA to the effect that the OA
would be terminable on
reasonable notice by either party. The Minister contends further that
reasonable notice of termination was
given, that the OA has
accordingly been lawfully terminated and that the DWS, as owner of
the property, is entitled to obtain an
order that Clackson must cease
its operations and vacate the property.
12.
Clackson
raises the following grounds of opposition to the application:
12.1
That
the Minister’s deponent “
lacks
the necessary authority to bring this application or depose to the
affidavit on behalf of the applicant
”
;
12.2
That
Clackson is in possession of a NERSA licence which is valid until
March 2028, which authorises it to operate the hydro-power
plant and
sell electricity to the Municipality as well as four other clients;
12.3
That
Clackson has a right to occupy the property and possess the land,
based on an agreement of servitude dated 31 March 1998, the
contract
of sale between it and the Municipality dated 27 February 1998, the
PPA dated 8 December 2011, and the OA dated 17 April
2001;
12.4
That
an “arrangement” has been reached that the DWS’
construction works will be managed in such a manner that
Clackson
will be able to proceed with its established business with minimal
interruption;
12.5
That
the DWS’ intended construction works are unlawful.
13.
For
reasons that will become apparent, I deal with the issue of authority
first.
THE AUTHORITY OF THE
DEPONENT TO INSTITUTE PROCEEDINGS OR TO DEPOSE TO FOUNDING AFFIDAVIT
ON BEHALF OF THE MINISTER
Relevant facts
14.
The
Minister’s deponent, Mr Aloious Muwengwa Chaminuka, in his
founding affidavit stated that he is “
an
adult male Director-General of the Department of Water and
Sanitation
”
and further that “
I
am duly authorised to depose to this affidavit and to institute the
current application on behalf of the Department
”
.
15.
In
the statement quoted above, Mr Chaminuka professed to institute the
proceedings on behalf of the DWS and not the Minister but
nothing
turns on this. Proceedings on behalf of the State may be commenced
both in the name of the State or the Government and
in the name of a
nominal plaintiff or applicant, usually the Minister as the
embodiment of the Department. Proceedings may also
be commenced by
the administrative head of the Department.
[1]
16.
In
its
answering affidavit
, Clackson denied
those averments and attached a document titled “Department of
Water Affairs and Forestry General Power of
Attorney” (“the
GPOA”). It obtained the GPOA from the Minister’s
attorneys in response to a specific request
for the letter of
appointment or written delegated authority / delegation of authority
in terms of which Mr Chaminuka claims to
be authorised to bring the
application and to depose to the founding affidavit on behalf of the
Minister.
17.
In
the GPOA, the then Minister of the Department of Water Affairs and
Forestry nominated and appointed certain functionaries “
to
perform and exercise on my behalf and in my place the actions and
powers set out herein
”
. The power
“
To institute any legal action or
defend any legal action instituted against myself, and to sign any
documents, applications, pleadings,
notice and sworn affidavits in
connection with such legal action
”
is
given to various incumbent and future officials, including the
Director-General.
18.
In
Clackson’s
answering
affidavit
,
its deponent, Mr Clack, denied that Mr Chaminuka is the
Director-General
of the DWS, it being public knowledge that such position and
appointment is actually held by Dr Sean Phillips.
Mr Clack further
pointed out that it appears from one of the documents annexed to the
Minister’s own founding papers,
[2]
that
Mr Chaminuka is actually the “Chief-Director: Engineering
Services” which contradicts and disproves the statement
made by
him under oath in his founding papers and also shows that he was in
fact not clothed with the necessary authority to bring
the
application on behalf of the Minister or to depose to the affidavit.
19.
In
his replying affidavit, Mr Chaminuka described himself as the Chief
D
irector: Engineering Services of the
Department of Water and Sanitation. In response to Clackson’s
attack on his authority
as referred to above, he stated in reply that
the proceedings are instituted by the Minister in terms of the
State
Liability Act, 20 of 1957
, that he is
“
merely
a witness used by the Minister in advancing the Department’s
case
”
and that
“
accordingly
it is incorrect to suggest that I have brought proceedings on behalf
of the Minister or the applicant herein
.”
20.
He
stated further that he has been advised that a deponent to an
affidavit does not need to be authorised as he is merely a witness
like any other.
21.
It
is surprising, to say the least, that there was no attempt at
explaining the false evidence given in his founding affidavit
relating to his designation nor the purpose and effect of the GPOA.
There was also no attempt at ratifying Mr Chaminuka’s
actions
by an authorised official.
22.
Moreover,
it is simply incorrect to deny, as he did in his
replying
affidavit, that he brought the proceedings on behalf of the Minister.
As I have pointed out, he stated in his founding
affidavit that he
brought the proceedings on behalf of the DWS, but in the context he
clearly made no distinction between the Minister
and the DWS. He
based his authority on the false statement that he is the
Director-General of the DWS.
23.
No
explanation is provided by the Minister in the heads of argument
filed by his counsel either. Instead a new basis is offered
on which
it must be accepted that the institution of the proceedings were
properly authorised, namely that “
The
current application is instituted by the Office of the State Attorney
on the instruction of the Minister of Water and Sanitation
and such
authority has not been challenged as per the prescripts of Rule 7(1)
of the Uniform Rules of Court
”
.
24.
It
must be pointed out that not even after the authority of Mr Chaminuka
was challenged, was there any statement made in the Minister’s
papers to the effect that the application was instituted by the State
Attorney on his behalf. In any event, as will be seen from
the
discussion below, the authority of an attorney to act on behalf of a
litigant must be distinguished from the authority of the
person
providing the instructions on behalf of a litigant who is not a
natural person. It is the latter that is under challenge
by Clackson
in this matter.
25.
It
is necessary to examine the submissions made by the Minister
regarding this issue.
The Minister’s
submissions
26.
First,
with reference to the judgment of the
Constitutional
Court in
President of the Republic of
South Africa and Others v M&G Media Ltd
2012
(2) SA 50
(CC), it is submitted on behalf of the Minister that the
key question is whether or not the deponent would in the ordinary
course
of his or her duty or as a result of some other capacity
described in the affidavit have had the opportunity to acquire
information
or knowledge alleged. Reference is also made to the case
of
Barclays National Bank Ltd v Love
1975 (2) SA 514
(C).
27.
However,
those cases did not deal with, and have no bearing on, the issue at
hand at all. In
President of the
Republic of South Africa
the issue was,
in the context of an application in terms of the
Promotion of Access
to Information Act, 2 of 2000
, whether an affidavit by an official
discharged the State’s burden to provide information. In
Barclays National Bank
the
context was whether an affidavit in support of summary judgment on
the face of it complied with the requirement that it must
be by a
person who can positively swear to the facts.
28.
Second,
reference is also made to the following oft-cited dictum in the case
of
Ganes and Another v Telkom Namibia
Ltd
2004 (3) SA 614:
“
It
is irrelevant whether Hanke had been authorised to depose to the
founding affidavit. The deponent to an affidavit in motion
proceedings need not be authorised by the party concerned to depose
to the affidavit. It is the institution of the proceedings and
the
prosecution thereof which must be authorised.
”
29.
However,
that passage merely establishes the principle that a deponent need
not be authorised to depose to an affidavit. Indeed,
the last
sentence makes precisely the point taken by Clackson, namely that it
is the institution of the proceedings and the prosecution
thereof
that must be authorised.
30.
Lastly,
the Minister refers to the provisions of Uniform
Rule 7(1)
and the
judgments in the cases of
Eskom v Soweto
City Council
1992 (2) SA 703
(WD) and
Administrator, Transvaal v Mponyane and
Others
1990 (4) SA 407
(WLD) for the
submission that
“
In
any event,
Rule 7
provides a procedure to be followed by a respondent
who wishes to challenge the authority of an attorney who instituted
motion
proceedings on behalf of an applicant.
”
31.
I
have already pointed out that Clackson’s challenge is not to
the authority of the State Attorney. However, since its amendment
in
1987,
Rule 7(1)
in clear terms applies not only when the authority of
an attorney is challenged but when the authority of anyone acting on
behalf
of a party is challenged. The Rule now provides as follows:
“
7(1)
Subject
to the provisions of subrules (2) and (3) a power of attorney to act
need not be filed, but the authority of anyone acting
on behalf of
the party may, within ten days after it has come to the notice of the
party that such person is so acting, or with
the leave of the court
on good cause shown at any time before judgment, be disputed,
whereafter such person may no longer act unless
he satisfied the
court that he is authorised to act, and to enable him to do so the
court may postpone the hearing of the action
or application
.”
32.
As
I have also already alluded to, by seeking to shift the focus to the
authority of the State Attorney, the Minister, wittingly
or
unwittingly, overlooks the distinction between the two types of
authority that are at issue in these matters, namely (a) the
authority of the legal practitioner who instutes or defends legal
proceedings on behalf of a party and (b) the second type of
authority, which is relevant to this matter, namely whether, in the
case of the litigant that is not a natural person, the institution
of
the proceedings were properly authorised by the party itself. Put
differently, the second type of authority involves the question
as to
whether the person who instructed the legal practitioner had proper
authority to give such instructions.
[3]
33.
The
Minister’s submission referred to in paragraph 30 above is not
unequivocally to the effect that an authority to institute
proceedings can only be challenged by using the procedure prescribed
in
Rule 7(1)
, but my understanding is that that is, in effect, the
Minister’s case, or part of his case. In any event, the issue
is the
subject of some judicial discord and accordingly requires
closer scrutiny.
Can authority to
institute proceedings only be challenged in terms of Uniform
Rule
7(1)?
34.
The
starting point of this enquiry is what was long considered to be an
uncontentious rule that an applicant must make out a case
in the
papers that the person who instituted the proceedings was duly
authorised by the applicant (when it is not a natural person)
to do
so. This rule was articulated as follows by a Full Court of this
Division in the case of
Mall (Cape)
(Pty) Ltd v Merino Ko-operasie Bpk
1957
(2) SA 347
(C):
“
There
is a considerable amount of authority for the proposition that, where
a company commences proceedings by way of petition,
it
must appear that the person who makes the petition on behalf of the
company is duly authorised by the company to do so
(see
for example Lurie Brothers Ltd v Arcache
1927 NPD 139
, and the other
cases mentioned in Herbstein & Van Winsen, Civil Practice of the
Superior Court in South Africa at pp 37-38).
This
seems to me to be a salutary rule and one which should also apply to
notice of motion proceedings where the applicant is an
artificial
person. In such cases some evidence should be placed before the Court
to show that the applicant has resolved the instituted
proceedings
and that the proceedings are instituted at its instance
.
Unlike the case of an affidavit,
the
mere signature of the notice of motion by an attorney and the fact
that the proceedings purported to be brought in the name
of the
applicant are in my view insufficient
.
The best evidence that the proceedings have been properly authorised
would be provided by an affidavit made by an official of
the company
annexing a copy of the resolution but I do not consider that that
form of proof is necessary in every case. Each case
must be
considered on its own merits and the Court must decide whether enough
has been placed before it to warrant the conclusion
that it is the
applicant which is litigating and not some unauthorised person on its
behalf.
”
[Emphasis
provided.]
35.
Mall
(Cape)
was
decided before the amendment to
Rule 7(1)
, but it was referred to
with approval after the amendment by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
the case of
Tattersall
and Another v Nedcor Bank Ltd
1995
(3) SA 222 (A).
[4]
36.
As
is pointed out by the learned authors in
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
(
supra
),
[5]
the
position as set out above was followed and applied in motion
proceedings for almost fifty years, up to 2005 when the waters
became
somewhat muddied by the judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
the case of
Unlawful
Occupiers, School Site v City of Johannesburg
2005
(4) SA 199
(SCA) in which, with reference to the judgments in
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
1992
(2) SA 703
(W) and
Ganes
(
supra
)
it was
inter
alia
held
by Brand JA that:
“
The
import of the judgment in
Eskom
is
that the remedy of the respondent who wishes to challenge the
authority of a person allegedly acting on behalf of the purported
applicant is provided for in Rule 7(1) of the Uniform Rules of
Court…
”
[6]
and
“…
now
that the new Rule 7(1) remedy is available, a party who wishes to
raise the issue of authority should not adopt the procedure
followed
by the appellants in this matter, i.e. by way of argument based on no
more than a textual analysis of the words used by
a deponent in an
attempt to prove his or her own authority
.”
[7]
37.
Although
Mall (Cape)
and
Tattersall
were
included in the list of authorities referred to by counsel in
School
Site
, those cases were not referred to
by Brand JA in the judgment. Moreover, the passages quoted above did
not in my view unequivocally
introduce a rule that authority to
institute proceedings can only be challenged by using the Rule 7(1)
procedure. The statement
that a party “should not” follow
the old procedure does not necessarily mean a party “may not”
do that.
38.
However,
in the case of
ANC Umvoti Council Caucus
and Others v Umvoti Municipality
2010 (3) SA 31
(KZP) the Full Court relied on
those passages to expressly decline to follow
Mall
(Cape)
and unequivocally hold that Rule
7(1) now provides the only procedure by which the authority for
institution of the proceedings
can be challenged. Gorven J for the
Full Court,
inter alia
held
that
“
I
am therefore of the view that the position must change, since
Watermeyer J set out the approach in the Merino Ko-operasie Bpk
case.
The position now is that, absent a specific challenge by way of Rule
7(1), ‘the mere signature of the notice of motion
by an
attorney and the fact that the proceedings purport to be brought in
the name of the applicant’ is sufficient
.
It
is further my view that the application papers are not the correct
context in which to determine whether an applicant which is
an
artificial person has authorised the initiation of application
proceedings. Rule 7(1) must be used.
”
[8]
39.
The
Court rejected the attack on the authority of the acting municipal
manager to bring the application on behalf of the
Umvoti
Municipality
despite expressing “…
grave
reservations whether the court a quo was correct in its conclusion
that a case was made out on the papers that the manager
had authority
to institute the proceedings, this despite the fact that certain
averments in the replying affidavit relating to
authority went
unanswered
”
, on the mere basis
that the Rule 7 procedure had not been used.
40.
Respectfully,
that approach appears to disregard the principle that the Rules are
not an end in themselves.
[9]
It
must also be pointed out in this regard that Rule 7(1) does not
provide any specific procedure for its implementation.
41.
In
Lancaster
101
(
supra
)
this Division referred with approval to a view expressed by the
learned author
Van
Loggerenberg
(
supra
)
that a challenge to Authority “…
may
be raised in a variety of ways, inter alia in appropriate
circumstances by notice, with or without supporting evidence, in a
defendant’s plea or special plea; in an
answering
affidavit or orally at the trial
”
.
[10]
42.
It
must be noted that the learned author
Van
Loggerenberg
(
supra
)
in the latest revision, namely Service 22, 2023, retracted that view
“…
in
the light of the cases referred to in the notes to Rule 7 SV
‘General’ above
”
being
the cases of
Eskom
v Soweto City Council
,
School
Site
,
Ganes
and
ANC
Umvoti
.
[11]
43.
On
the other hand, the learned authors of
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
(
supra
)
have stridently criticised the judgment in
ANC
Umvoti
and
reiterated the position that: “
Rule
7(1) does not say how the challenge to the authority of the person
acting for a party should be made. It is submitted that
it may be
made by way of a special plea, in an affidavit or by notice
.”
[12]
44.
To
the criticism of
ANC
Umvoti
expressed
in
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
[13]
may be
added that the Court gave no recognition of the fact that
Mall
(Cape)
was
approved and applied by the erstwhile Appellate Division in
Tattersall
,
which was decided after the amendment to Rule 7(1). The Court (in
ANC
Umvoti
)
relied heavily on the judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
School
Site
but,
as I have already mentioned, that case did in my view not expressly
bring about the change suggested by the Court. This proposition
is
confirmed by the fact that Brand JA did not refer to
Mall
(Cape)
and
Tattersall
in
his judgment at all. Had the intention of the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
School
Site
been
to bring about such a change, it would have dealt with
Tattersall
,
at least, extensively.
45.
The
authors of
Herbstein and Van Winsen
in my view correctly point out that Brand JA had
earlier in the judgment referred to the fact that it was conceded by
counsel for
the appellant that she could not support the submission
that the deponent had failed to prove that he was duly authorised.
His
remarks regarding Rule 7(1) were accordingly not necessary for
the outcome of the case, and thus
obiter
.
46.
ANC
Umvoti
appears to be the only case in
which
Mall (Cape)
was
expressly not followed and it, in turn, appears not to have been
followed in any reported judgments. It has however also not
expressly
been criticised or rejected by other courts.
47.
In
the case of
Boerboonfontein
BK v La Grange NO en ‘n Ander
2011
(1) SA 58
(WCC), Binns-Ward J for a Full Court of this Division,
without discussion, applied the rule in
Mall
(Cape)
.
[14]
In the
case of
Graham
v Park Mews Body Corporate and Another
2012
(1)SA 355 (WCC), Henney J, in a slightly different context, referred
with approval to both
Mall
(Cape)
and
Tattersall
.
[15]
In
Lancaster
101
(
supra
)
Kusevitsky J had no hesitation in referring to
Mall
(Cape)
with
approval. However, in that case a Rule 7(1) notice had been filed
which was followed by a Rule 30A notice and application.
48.
More
recently,
Mall
(Cape)
and
Tattersall
were
followed in the case of
HR
Computek v Dr WAA Gouws
2023
(6) SA 268
(GJ) at para 28.
[16]
49.
ANC
Umvoti
,
being a judgment of a Full Court of another Division must be given
its due respect but this Court is not bound by it and I respectfully
decline to follow it. In doing so, I am mostly persuaded by the fact
that in
School
Site
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal did not even mention
Mall
(Cape)
or
Tattersall
.
In terms of the
sub
silentio
principle,
[17]
School
Site
does
not serve as precedent for the conclusion reached in
ANC
Umvoti
.
50.
It
can in my view accordingly safely be said that the rules and
principles set out in
Mall (Cape)
and
Tattersall
still
apply, and that the authority of the person instituting the
proceedings on behalf of a litigant can be challenged on the papers.
Rule 7(1) provides the benefit to the party challenging the authority
that the proceedings are effectively stayed until the Court
has been
satisfied of the authority, but a litigant can in my view elect not
to make use of that benefit. There may be circumstances
in which
challenging the authority in the papers instead of Rule 7(1) might
warrant an adverse costs order, but in my view this
is not such a
case.
51.
When
it appears so clearly from the papers, including the applicant’s
own papers, that the proceedings were not properly authorised,
as it
does in this matter, the application should be dismissed on that
basis, and I do so.
52.
It
is accordingly neither necessary nor sensible to deal with the
remaining issues raised in this case.
Costs
53.
The
Minister’s deponent falsely testified that he is the
Director-General of the DWS, and on that basis alleged authority
to
institute the proceedings on the Minister’s behalf. When this
was challenged by Clackson in its answering papers, one
would have
expected not only an explanation for the false evidence but also an
apology, together with an attempt to rectifiy the
problem by way of
ratification of the proceedings by an authorised official. None of
that was forthcoming and instead the Minister’s
deponent simply
changed tack by contending that the proceedings were instituted by
the State Attorney on behalf of the Minister.
In my view, this is the
kind of conduct in litigating a matter that is deserving of an
adverse special costs order.
CONCLUSION
54.
Accordingly,
I make the following order:
54.1
The
application is dismissed with costs on the scale on the scale as
between attorney and client.
DC JOUBERT AJ
Applicant’s
counsel: Adv
HA Mpshe
Adv M
Jiana
Respondent’s
counsel: Adv
M Tsele
[1]
Farocean
Marine (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Trade and Industry
2007
(2) SA 334
(SCA) para 8
[2]
Namely
Annexure “FA3” which is a letter from the DWS to
Clackson dated 11 December 2018.
[3]
Herbstein and Van
Winsen: Civil Practice of the Superior Courts of South Africa
,
Vol 1, 6
th
Ed.at p 6-2. See also
Lancaster
101 (RF) (Pty) Ltd v Steinhoff International Holdings
[2021] 4 All SA 810
(WCC) at para [13] where the authority of an attorney is described
as an “extension” of the authority to institute
proceedings.
[4]
At 228F – 229D
[5]
At p
6-3 a.f.
[6]
At
206G-H
[7]
At
207F-G
[8]
At
para 28
[9]
Van Loggerenberg:
Erasmus
Superior Courts
Practice
,
2
nd
Ed, Vol 2 p D107;
Centre
for Child Law v Hoërskool Fochville
2016
(2) 121 (SCA) at 131G-H
[10]
At
para 22
[11]
At pp
D7-6 – 7-7
[12]
At p
6-9
[13]
Supra
[14]
At para [16]
[15]
At para [21]
[16]
In
that case, the court declined to strike out the affidavits of the
respondent on the basis that the attorneys were not properly
authorised without first providing them with an opportunity to
provide proof of their authority and mandate, but that was not
on
the basis that Rule 7(1) must be followed.
[17]
Santam
Insurance Co Ltd v Vilakasi
1967
(1) SA 246
(A) at 259A-B
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Minister in the Department of Public Works and Infrastructure v Tuiniqua (Pty) Ltd t/a Tuiniqua Consulting Engineers (15113/2020) [2025] ZAWCHC 412 (5 September 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 412High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure v Tempani Construction (Pty) Ltd (Leave to Appeal) (16571/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 545 (24 November 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 545High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Bewley v Minister of Home Affairs and Another (2025/019372) [2025] ZAWCHC 477 (15 May 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 477High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Njwaxu v Minister of Home Affairs and Others (23272/24) [2025] ZAWCHC 319 (29 July 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 319High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Beukman (17538/24) [2025] ZAWCHC 284 (11 July 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 284High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar