Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 144South Africa
Tekete and Others v Minister of Safety and Security - Quantum Judgment (8042/2007) [2024] ZAWCHC 144; 2024 (5) SA 325 (WCC) (22 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
12 December 2019
Headnotes
over, as costs in my view cannot be dealt with on a piecemeal basis. The following cost considerations require determination:
Judgment
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## Tekete and Others v Minister of Safety and Security - Quantum Judgment (8042/2007) [2024] ZAWCHC 144; 2024 (5) SA 325 (WCC) (22 May 2024)
Tekete and Others v Minister of Safety and Security - Quantum Judgment (8042/2007) [2024] ZAWCHC 144; 2024 (5) SA 325 (WCC) (22 May 2024)
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sino date 22 May 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case Number: 8042/2007
In
the matter between:
NOSISANA
MERCY TEKETE
First
Plaintiff
NTOMBIZODWA
JENNETE VAROYI
Second
Plaintiff
TSHEPHISO
JAMES TEKETE
Third
Plaintiff
and
MINISTER
OF SAFETY AND SECURITY
Defendant
QUANTUM JUDGMENT
Andrews
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The Plaintiffs instituted action against the
Defendant for damages arising out of
a shooting incident which
occurred on 2 October 2005 in Khayelitsha, Cape Town, Western Cape
when Mr Johannes Tekete (“the
deceased”), was shot by a
member of the South African Police Service and who later died on 31
December 2005 as a consequence
of his injuries. The deceased, at the
date of his death, was married in community of property to the First
Plaintiff and was the
father of the Second and Third Plaintiffs.
[2]
Judgment on liability was handed down on 12
December 2019 where Samela J, found the
Defendant to be liable to the
Plaintiffs for loss of support as a consequence of the shooting of
the deceased, by a member of the
South African Police Service at Site
C, Khayelitsha.
[3]
The matter proceeded before this Court for the
determination of quantum. The crisp
issue for determination was
essentially the amount of damages, more particularly in relation to
loss of support, the Defendant
is liable to pay to the Plaintiffs.
There is no dispute regarding the actual loss in respect of the claim
for funeral expenses.
After considering the evidence on quantum, the
court handed down the following order on 7 May 2024:
‘
In the result,
the following order is made:
1.
The matter is adjourned sine die;
2.
The Court directs the parties to instruct ARCH Actuarial
Consulting CC to calculate the loss of support in respect of the
First,
Second and Third Plaintiffs on the following terms:
(a)
That
the Plaintiffs were dependent on the deceased’s income at the
time of his death on 31 December 2005;
(b)
The
Plaintiffs’ dates of birth are:
(i)
First Plaintiff: 29 April 1968;
(ii)
Second Plaintiff:
16 October 1995;
(iii)
Third Plaintiff: 23 May 2003.
(c)
The deceased’s income and probable career path would have
been as follows:
(i)
The deceased would have earned R41 500 per annum as at 31
December 2005;
(ii)
The deceased’s income would have progressed to a current
amount of R150 000 per annum as per the 2024 values;
(iii)
The deceased’s income would have progressed to an income of
R218 000 per annum as per the 2024 levels at the age of 45
years;
(iv)
Increases would have been coupled with earnings inflation;
(v)
The deceased would have retired at the age of 65 years.
(d)
The
First Plaintiff’s income at the time of the deceased’s
death is determined to be R1350 per month.
(e)
The
Second and Third Plaintiffs’ dependency age is determined to be
18
years.
(f)
General contingencies of 5% for past loss of support and 10% for
future loss of support are to be applied.
3.
The matter is to be re-enrolled upon receipt of the actuarial
report to deal with the remaining issues on quantum and costs.
4.
Costs are to stand over for later determination.
Actuarial
Loss of Support Calculation
[4]
Pursuant
to the aforegoing Court Directions, the parties instructed Arch
Actuarial Consulting CC to calculate the loss of support
in respect
of the First, Second and Third Plaintiffs. An actuarial report dated
8 May 2024 was prepared which quantified the present
value of the
loss of support suffered by the Plaintiffs after contingencies in the
amount of R1 436 937 calculated as
follows:
[1]
(a) First
Plaintiff
R965 658
(b) Second
Plaintiff R111 867
(c) Third
Plaintiff
R359 412.
[5]
The Defendant does not challenge or dispute the
loss of support computation recommended
by the Actuary and the
concomitant relief sought by the Plaintiffs, in relation thereto.
Costs
[6]
The issue of costs was held over, as costs in my
view cannot be dealt with on a piecemeal
basis. The following cost
considerations require determination:
(a) The costs of
the trial on merits;
(b) The Calderbank
Offer;
(c) Rule 67A.
(a)
Costs of the trial on merits
[7]
Samela J, in the judgment handed down on 12
December 2019, ruled that the issues
of the costs of the hearing of
the matter in respect of the merits be determined at a later stage.
[8]
Counsel on behalf of the Plaintiffs contended that
the Defendant should be held liable
for the costs relating to the
merits trial on a party-and-party scale, which costs should include
the costs of counsel together
with the costs of the expert witnesses,
Dr Linda Liebenberg (pathologist) and Miss E P Van Wyk (forensic
examiner).
[9]
The orders sought by the Plaintiffs in relation to
the costs of the trial are in
keeping with the accepted legal
principle that costs ordinarily follow the event and is in my view
appropriate.
(b)
The Calderbank Offer
[10]
At the outset of the hearing the Court’s attention was drawn to
the fact that the Plaintiffs
had previously provided the Defendant
with a Calderbank Offer. It was submitted that the said offer will be
disclosed to the Court,
if so required, following the judgment in
this matter. The Plaintiffs indicated that argument will be
presented, in the event that
the amount awarded by the Court is in
excess of the Calderbank Offer, to motivate why the Plaintiffs would
be entitled to costs
on the attorney and client scale as from when
the Calderbank Offer was served on the Defendant.
[11]
Counsel on behalf of the Plaintiffs placed on record that the
Plaintiffs sent a formal Calderbank offer
to the Defendant on 3
October 2022, notifying the Defendant of the willingness to settle
the issue of costs in respect of the merits
on a party-and-party
scale.
[2]
The Plaintiffs
indicated that they were not intent on pursuing this Calderbank
Offer.
[3]
[12]
A second Calderbank offer was served on the Defendant on 13 December
2022, in terms of which the Plaintiffs
indicated that they were
willing to accept settlement of their claims on the following
basis:
[4]
(a) Defendant to
pay the total capital amount R540 098;
(b) Payment to be
made within 14 calendar days of the acceptance of the offer;
(c) The
Defendant to pay the Plaintiff’s taxed or agreed
party-and-party costs on the High Court scale, which
costs were to
include the costs of Counsel and the costs of the experts.
[13]
Reference to what has been termed as “The Calderbank Offer”
emanates from a judgment of
the English Court of Appeal in
Calderbank
v Calderbank
[5]
.
Rogers J, as he then was, in the seminal judgment of
AD
v MEC For Health
[6]
quoted what Cairns LJ
stated in this regard that:
‘…
he saw
no reason in principle why, in cases not covered by the rules of
court permitting secret offers, a litigant should not be
permitted to
make a settlement offer “without prejudice save as to costs”
and rely on such offer, once judgment has
been granted, in support of
a particular cost order. This view was approved and acted upon in
Cutts v Head
[1983] EWCA Civ 8
;
[1984] 1 All ER 597
(CA). The courts in Australia, New
Zealand and Canada have followed suit. In some jurisdictions the
rules relating to secret offers
have been amended to fill the gaps
where Calderbank offers previously operated. In these jurisdictions
it is accepted that a Calderbank
offer by a plaintiff can, after
judgment, be adduced in support of a request for what we would call
attorney/client costs.’
[7]
[14]
Rogers J, after considering how English law and other Commonwealth
jurisdictions approached “without
prejudice communications”,
concluded that he saw no reason ‘
why
our law, based as it is on English law, should not recognise the same
exception as has found favour in England and other Commonwealth
jurisdictions. The considerations of public policy in favour of
settlements and
discouraging
costly litigation
are
as compelling now as they ever were.’
[8]
(my
emphasis)
[15]
In principle, Calderbank offers, which are akin to Rule 34 offers,
are admissible in relation to costs
and may be disclosed to the Court
for that purpose after judgment has been handed down.
[9]
In
casu,
it is
uncontroverted that the respective offers made by the Plaintiffs were
without prejudice offers, as contemplated in
Calderbank
v Calderbank
(supra)
[10]
.
Thus,
the disclosure of the two “without prejudice offers” as
per Annexures “A” and “B”, respectively,
after judgment has been pronounced becomes now become a crucial
consideration, in light of the history of this matter and submissions
by the Plaintiff in this regard.
[16]
It was submitted that the Plaintiffs properly placed the Defendant at
risk with its timeous Calderbank
offer, reserving explicitly the
issue of costs and the scale thereof. Counsel on behalf of the
Plaintiffs furthermore contended
that the Defendant was guilty of
allowing litigation to proceed when it could and should not have done
so, and by incurring costs
at the expense of public funds.
[11]
It was further mooted that the Plaintiffs will be out of pocket in
the recovery of the costs on a party-and-party scale should
they not
be awarded costs on an attorney-and-client scale.
[17]
In response, Counsel for the Defendant argued that the court is to
take into consideration that the
State Attorneys Office is
“dysfunctional” and that there were logistical challenges
in the process of securing instructions.
It was further mooted that
the Plaintiffs will not in essence be prejudiced as they are
receiving substantially more compensations
to that contained in the
Calderbank offer. Furthermore, it was submitted that the effect of
making a punitive costs order would
in effect result in more money
being taken from the fiscus. Counsel on behalf of the Defendants
requested that the cost order be
ordinary costs on a party-and-party
scale.
[18]
Counsel on behalf of the Plaintiffs in response, contended that the
argument proffered by the Defendant
cannot be regarded as an excuse
insofar as it relates to the State Attorneys offices being in
disarray. It was emphasised that
the court is to have regard to the
fact that the offer that the Plaintiffs wish to pursue, was made on
13 December 2022 and nothing
was done. In essence, the Plaintiffs
ought not to be prejudiced because the State Attorneys do not have
their proverbial house
in order. Counsel on behalf of the Plaintiff
strongly argued that it is precisely for this reason that the court
should send a
clear message by awarding costs on a punitive scale.
[19]
Rogers J, in
AD v MEC For Health
(supra),
succinctly
sets out the considerations and guidelines in contemplating a
Calderbank offer on costs as follows:
‘
As to the
effect of a Calderbank offer on cost, the Commonwealth cases
emphasise that a plaintiff who has made such an offer is
not entitled
to attorney/client costs merely because he made a secret offer which
was less that what the court awarded. The court
must consider whether
the defendant behaved unreasonably, and thus put the plaintiff to
unnecessary expense, by not accepting the
offer or making a
reasonable counter-offer. Factors mentioned in the Commonwealth cases
are whether the defendant has engaged reasonably
in attempting to
settle; whether the plaintiff was offering a fair discount based on a
realistic assessment of the case rather
than holding out for the best
conceivable outcome; whether the plaintiff allowed the defendant a
reasonable time to consider the
offer; the extent of the difference
between the amount of the offer and the amount of the award; and the
nature of the proceedings
and resources of the litigants.’
[12]
[20]
The chronology of the litigation paints a stark picture of a family
who, after having lost the breadwinner
of the family at the hands of
a member of the South African Police Services in 2005, have waited
almost 17 years for closure after
instituting action in 2007. There
were at least 12 court hearings in the action on the merits leading
up to judgment and another
7 court hearings in respect of quantum.
This type of protracted litigation cannot be in the public interest
and neither can it
serve the interest of justice. It is precisely for
this reason that public policy considerations frowns upon costly
litigation.
It therefore follows that protracted cases cause an
escalation in costs; which may have been curtailed had the Calderbank
offer
been considered.
[21]
Whilst this is the starting point, a one size fits all approach could
never have been envisaged as
is evident from the list of
considerations illuminated by Rogers J. It would therefore be
incumbent of this court to also
acknowledge that matters are
distinguishable, being informed by plausible reasons why matters
cannot be finalised within the shortest
possible period of time. I am
unable to comment on the reasons for the delays during the trial on
the merits, but in relation to
the trial on quantum it was evident
that there were reservations expressed by the Defendant as to the
deceased’s former employment
in the South African Police
Services. Further information came to light during the quantum trial
that necessitated further investigation.
This information was not
known to the Defendant at the time when the Calderbank offer was made
on 13 December 2022. Furthermore,
issues raised by the Defendant
during the hearing of the quantum trial were relevant to considering
what the deceased’s income
and probable career path would have
been. Other unknowns included, a determination of the First
Plaintiff’s income at the
time of the deceased’s death,
which differed from what was projected by the Industrial
Psychologist, Dr Hannes Swart. The
Defendant’s own expert, who
was eventually not called to testify also differed in certain
respects with the Plaintiff’s
expert.
[22]
It therefore begs the questions whether the Defendant was ultimately
vexatious or unreasonable by not
considering the Calderbank offer. In
this regard, was the Defendant in a position to have made a
counter-offer in the circumstances
presented in this matter and could
there have been further meaningful engagement between the parties in
the circumstances of this
case? On a realistic assessment of this
matter, it is my view that settlement could not be approached
simplistically, given the
unique facts of this matter. The court did
not get the impression that the Defendant was opposed to settlement,
it was ultimately
a question of whether the parties could meet each
other at a reasonable point. Litigation in my view, was thus
unavoidable and
as such, I cannot find any reason why the Defendants
should be sanctioned with a punitive cost order when information came
to light
at a very late stage of the proceedings.
[23]
Finally, the resources of the litigants are also a pivotal
consideration. It is trite that the matter
of cost remains in the
discretion of the court. It is therefore incumbent on this court, in
exercising its discretion to carefully
weigh the issues, the conduct
of the parties and unique circumstance of this matter which may have
a bearing on the issue of cost
to ultimately make an order that would
be fair, just and reasonable.
[24]
After considering the arguments by the parties, I am of the view that
imposing a punitive cost order
against the State Attorney in the
circumstances of this case would be misplaced and inappropriate for
the reasons set out earlier.
(c)
Rule 67A of the Uniform Rules of Court
[25]
Rule 67A(3) which came into effect on 12 April 2024, requires that
part-and-party costs in the High
Court be awarded on Scale A, B or C,
respectively. This amendment applies prospectively in relation to
work done on a matter after
12 April 2024. Rule 67A addressed itself
only to awards of costs as between party-and-party with the purpose
to exercise control
over the rate at which counsel’s fees can
be recovered under such an award.
[26]
Counsel for Plaintiffs and Defendants were
ad idem
on the
appropriate scale. I find no reason to differ from them in this
regard and accordingly order that Counsel’s fees be
taxed on a
Scale “B” given the clearly identified features of this
case that were unusually complex, important and
valuable to all the
Plaintiffs who have patiently waited for closure.
Order
[27]
In the result, the following order is made:
1.
The Defendant is ordered to pay to the Plaintiffs the sum of
R1 436 937 (One million four hundred
and thirty-six
thousand nine hundred and thirty-seven rand) by means of electronic
transfer to the Plaintiffs’ Attorneys
of record, within 14
(fourteen) court days from date of this order, which amount is
calculated as follows:
(a) For the First
Plaintiff the sum of R965 658 (nine hundred and sixty-five
thousand six hundred and fifty-eight rand);
(b) For the Second
Plaintiff the sum of R111 867 (one hundred and eleven thousand
eight hundred and sixty-seven rand);
(c) For the
Third Plaintiff the sum of R359 412 (three hundred and
fifty-nine thousand four hundred and twelve
rand).
2.
The Defendant is to pay to the First Plaintiff the sum of R10 270
(Ten thousand two hundred and
seventy rand) for funeral expenses by
means of electronic transfer to the Plaintiffs’ Attorneys of
record within 14 (fourteen)
court days from date of this order;
3.
The Defendant is ordered to pay the Plaintiffs’ costs relating
to the merits of the of trial on
a party-and-party scale, which costs
should include the costs of counsel together with the costs of the
expert witnesses, Dr Linda
Liebenberg (pathologist) and Ms EP van Wyk
(forensic handwriting examiner), which cost shall include the trial
costs incurred for
the following trial dates including the dates of
postponements which were 2 March 2017, 6 March 2017, 7 March 2017, 2
May 2017,
4 May 2017, 14 August 2017, 4 December 2017, 7 December
2017, 26 March 2018, 28 March 2018, 29 March 2018 and 13 August 2019,
respectively;
4.
The Defendant is ordered to pay the Plaintiffs’ costs incurred
for the quantum trial on a party-and-party
scale for the following
trial dates including dates of postponement which were, 23 November
2023, 30 November 2023, 13 March 2024,
14 March 2024, 17 April 2024,
22 April 2024 and 20 May 2024; which costs shall include the costs of
Counsel together with the costs
of the experts, Dr Hannes Swart and
Arch Actuarial Consulting CC.
5.
In terms of Rule 67A(3), it is ordered that the recovery of Counsel’s
fees following 12 April 2024
is directed to be on Scale “B”.
ANDREWS,
AJ
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Advocate
E Benade
Instructed
by:
Lester
and Associates
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Advocate
Van J van der Schyff
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney
Heard
on:
20
May 2024
Delivered:
22
May 2024
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email.
[1]
Actuarial
Report: Arch Actuarial Consulting CC, 8 May 2024.
[2]
Plaintiffs’
submissions in respect of the quantum of costs, para 10, page 4.
[3]
Plaintiffs’
submissions in respect of the quantum of costs, para 11, page 4 and
Annexure “A”.
[4]
Plaintiffs’
submissions in respect of the quantum of costs, para 12, page 4 and
Annexure “B”.
[5]
[1975]
3 All ER 333 (EWCA).
[6]
2017
(5) SA 133.
[7]
At
para 41.
[8]
At
para 50.
[9]
AD
v MEC For Health (supra),
at
para 60.
[10]
See
also
Van
Reenen v Dr Lewis & Life Rosebank Hospital
(case
no: 2302/2014)
[2019] ZAFSHC 55
(14 May 2019), para 8 ‘
It
is well established that vexatious conduct, even if it was not
intended to be vexatious, may well be the basis for an order
awarding costs on an attorney and client scale. Where a litigant was
able to, but fails to take steps to curtail proceedings
and thus
causes an escalation in costs, he may similarly fact the prospect of
paying costs on the attorney and client scale,
on the basis that his
conduct was unreasonable.’
[11]
Plaintiffs’
submissions in respect of the quantum of costs, para 22, page 7.
[12]
At
para 61.
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