Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 234South Africa
Road Accident Fund v Kruger and Co and Others (16980/2021) [2024] ZAWCHC 234 (3 September 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Road Accident Fund v Kruger and Co and Others (16980/2021) [2024] ZAWCHC 234 (3 September 2024)
Road Accident Fund v Kruger and Co and Others (16980/2021) [2024] ZAWCHC 234 (3 September 2024)
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sino date 3 September 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 16980/2021
In the matter between
THE
ROAD ACCIDENT FUND
APPLICANT
AND
KRUGER
&
CO
1
st
RESPONDENT
SHERIFF
OF THE HIGH COURT, CAPE TOWN WEST
2
nd
RESPONDENT
FORTUNATE
DVZONGO
3
rd
RESPODENT
In re
FORTUNATE
DVZONGO
PLAINTIFF
AND
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND
DEFENDANT
Date of Hearing:
21 August 2024
Date of Judgment:
03 September 2024 (to be delivered via email to the respective
counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE J
[1] On Thursday 15 August
2024 this court issued a directive in the following terms:
“
Practice
Directive 45A of the Western Cape Division of the High Court reads:
“
45.
Reasons for Orders and Leave to Appeal
45A. Whenever reasons for
a court’s order are required (whether in a Third Division
matter, in terms of Rule 49(1)(c) or otherwise)
the legal
representative or in person litigant concerned shall file such
request for reasons with the registrar and thereupon deliver
same
together with the court file to the Judge from whom the reasons are
required.”
Communication with the
Secretary since April suggests that there was a request for reasons
filed sometime in December 2023. Despite
the earnest attempts of the
Judge’s Secretary, including reminders, the party requesting
reasons has failed to comply with
the Practice Directive, to enable
the Judge to consider the application. Against this background, it
has become necessary for the
Judge to address the problems which
cause the delay in the finalization of the request for reasons. To
that end the parties are
invited to a case management conference
calculated:
1.
To put the party(ies) on such terms as are appropriate to achieve
readiness to
provide reasons.
2.
If deemed meet, to make an order as to costs, including an order de
bonis propriis
against the party(ies) legal representatives or any
other person whose conduct has conduced unreasonably to frustrate the
objectives
of Rule 49 of the Uniform Rules of Court.
The details of the
conference are as follows:
Date: Wednesday 21 August
2024.
Time: 9:30
Place: Judge Thulare’s
chambers.”
On Monday 19 August 2024,
the Judge’s secretary received the file together with a notice
requesting written reasons for judgment,
which bore a stamp dated the
same day, to wit, 19 August 2024.
[2] The Judge was placed
in this position where it had to assert the court’s authority
through issuing directives against
the following background. The
Judge’s Secretary and the Judge, until that 19 August 2024, did
not receive the notice requesting
written reasons for judgment or the
file from the applicant (RAF) or their representatives. The Secretary
and the Judge first became
aware that RAF had allegedly filed the
notice, from the third respondent’s (Dzvongo) attorneys
(Kruger), when they complained
about the delay in furnishing the
reasons in a letter dated 23 April 2024. The Secretary immediately
advised the parties that the
notice and the reasons were never
delivered to her and the Judge, and requested that same be done. By 8
May 2024 RAF had not delivered
the notice and the file, and had been
aware that this was still not delivered. The reminders
nowithstanding, RAF’s attorneys
did not lift a finger. Even the
obvious frustrations which led to Dzvongo’s Senior Counsel,
Salie SC, enquiring why the file
had not been delivered to the Judge
by 8 August 2024, when the secretary once more indicated that the
notice and the file had not
been received, and alerting the parties
to the prejudice which such behaviour brought about to Dzvongo, RAF’s
attorneys did
not move. This was enough for the court to issue the
directives. As it showed out after the directive, it took 8 months
for RAF’s
notice and file to reach the Judge, something which
was achieved in less than 2 working days.
[3] If this conduct of
RAF’s attorneys of record was worrisome, the worse was still to
come. In trying to explain themselves
at the directives hearing, a
senior associate of RAF’s attorneys deposed to an affidavit in
which the following was said
in paragraphs 5, 6 as well as 14 and 15:
“
5.
To this end, and on 4 December 2023, I made arrangements with a
messenger of our firm to file the notice to court. The messenger
was
further instructed to ascertain whether the court file was still with
the Honourable Thulare J, failing which, arrangements
were to be made
to obtain the file and deliver the file together with the notice to
the Honourable Thulare J’s Registrar.
A copy of the request to
the messenger is annexed hereto as “A”.
6. During the afternoon
of 4 December 2023, the messenger advised that the task had been
completed, Accordingly, at this stage,
we operated on the belief that
our duty to deliver the file had been discharged and that the
Honourable Thulare J would deliver
his judgment in due course.
…
15. It has become
apparent that the task was not completed, however, we submit that the
failure to deliver the file was as a result
of miscommunication
between the parties.
16. We submit further
that the failure to deliver the file and the notice was not intended
to prejudice the plaintiff or to cause
frustration and/or delay of
the judicial process.”
Ordinarily this may make
sense. However, during the directives hearing I drew to the parties’
attention the conspicuous absence
of any evidence of the alleged
filing of the notice on 4 December 2023. RAF did not have the notice
on hand but promised to cause
it to be delivered to my chambers
without delay, and indeed the next day I received a copy of the
notice. Instead of helping RAF,
the notice adds more problems to
RAF’s attorney. The date stamp on the document delivered to my
office is 5 December 2023.
The inescapable conclusion is that RAF’s
attorneys did not investigate, since 4 December 2023 when the
instruction was given
to the messenger, as to whether the notice was
in fact filed and delivered to the Judge. If they can be pardoned for
harbouring
under a false belief from 4 December 2023 to 23 April 2024
that that was in fact done, the correspondence from Kruger and the
Judge’s
Secretary since April 2024 should have alerted them to
the mistaken belief. In my view, the failure to ensure that the
notice and
the file reached the Judge in terms of the practice
directive, can only be ascribed to the attorney being carelessly
lazy. Simple
attention to detail, after the 23 April 2024
correspondence, would have alerted a determined and enthusiastic
lawyer to check,
and it would have been noted that the instruction
given on 4 December, at least as regards filing, was only done the
next day.
It would have been impossible to then rely on the word of
the messenger, which was given on 4 December 2023 that the Judge
already
had the file by 4 December 2023, if the notice was only filed
on 5 December 2023. It would have been difficult if not impossible,
under the circumstances, to say what was said in the paragraphs cited
above, under oath, to the directives hearing. In my view,
the
frustrations of Kruger to also intervene and to commit to also ensure
delivery of the notice and the file to the Judge’s
Secretary
did not absolve RAF’s attorneys of their responsibilities as
envisaged in the practice directive. It was RAF’s
attorneys who
were obliged to deliver the notice and the file to the Judge. These
serve as my reasons for the relevant part of
the cost order.
[4] RAF brought an urgent
application to stay the operation of an order granted in favour of
Dzvongo, interdicting and restraining
the sheriff from removing its
movable property in terms if a writ, directing the sheriff to return
movable property that was attached
and removed from its premises and
directing that these terms operate as interim relief pending the
confirmation and verification
of Dzvongo’s legal entry and
continued presence in the country alternatively pending the final
determination of the matter
Mudawo v RAF and Another
issued in
the Gauteng Division of the High Court. Kruger and Dzvongo opposed
the application. Dzvongo sustained injuries arising
out of motor
vehicle crash on 8 June 2018. RAF had been unable to determine
whether Dzvongo was legal in the country at the time
of the crash.
Dzvongo lodged a claim with RAF and issued summons in 2019. The
parties settled the matter on 20 December 2022, which
was made an
order of court on 22 December 2022. RAF did not pay in accordance
with the order, which led to a writ being issued
on 24 August 2023.
It needs to be noted that it was on 21 June 2022 that RAF issued a
directive around its new approach and there
was promulgation of a new
RAF 1 claim form on 4 July 2022 that introduced a requirement that
foreigner claimants had to provide
proof that they were in the
Republic legally at the time of the injuries sustained arising out of
the driving of a motor vehicle.
The requirements were not in
existence at the time that Dzvongo sustained injuries. Moreover, RAF
only raised these issues in relation
to Dzvongo’s claim when it
had to pay, long after the settlement agreement was made a court
order. On 18 September 2023 the
sheriff attached and removed from RAF
premises movable property to the value of the judgment debt. On 17
November 2023 RAF indicated
that it attempted to process payment but
that it was unable to do so as Dzvongo failed to produce a passport
showing entry/exit
stamps which would serve as proof that he was
legal in the country at the time of the crash and that RAF required
this to comply
with the provisions of the Immigration Act 13 of 2002
(the IA). RAF indicated that the provisions of the IA were not
previously
applied but that the new administration complied hence the
change in approach from previous matters. RAF indicated that
Mudawo
was a matter in which it litigated the issue whether a foreigner
who was in the country illegally at the time of a crash was entitled
to compensation. It was for that reason that RAF requested the stay
of the sale until there was judicial clarity. KCO’s position
was that RAF’s sudden decision to apply the IA was not a ground
to stay the execution of a properly obtained court order
nor a ground
to withdraw from a compromise reached.
[5] Rule 45A of the
Uniform Rules of Court read as follows:
“
45
Suspension of orders of court
The court may suspend the
execution of any order for such period as it may deem fit.”
As a general rule, a
court will order suspension of execution of its order where injustice
will otherwise result [
Van Rensburg and Another NNO v Naidoo and
Others NNO; Naidoo and Others NNO v Van Rensburg NO and Others
2011
(4) SA 149
(SCA) at para 52
[6] RAF in essence
requested the court to suspend execution of an order so as to give it
time to construct a defence to a matter
already settled and where
there was already a court order made on the terms of such settlement.
This seems to me to be a flagrant
disregard of the sanctity of
judicial processes and the sacred nature of court orders as a final
word on the legitimate interests
of litigants. A suspension of a
court order was not meant to meet the exigencies of the situation
where a party realized, after
settlement and a court order, that it
may have made a mistake when settling and having the terms of
settlement made a court order,
and such party holds a view that it
may have a defence to the merits. RAF seeks to unscramble eggs not
only already whisked, but
which have also gone through a non-stick
pan over low heat and were already big and fluffy. RAF lagged behind
the law. It sought
to re-engage on issues on which there was a final
decision. RAF indirectly sought an advantage to which it was not
entitled, to
wit, having this court for all intents and purposes
declaring in final terms, an order of court made by a court of equal
status,
to be of no force and effect. I understand ‘where the
underlying
causa
of a judgment debt is being disputed’
in
Van Rensburg
at para 52 to be a dispute raised at the
appropriate time of legal proceedings. I do not understand the
statement to mean what RAF
wants it to mean, to say, after settling a
dispute and having the terms made an order of court, one party to the
settlement can
resuscitate the dispute through the use of Rule 45A.
RAF failed to show that real and substantial justice required a Rule
45A intervention.
I was not persuaded that RAF was entitled to the
relief it sought.
[7] For these reasons the
order was made on 30 November 2023. For the reasons at the
introductory stage of this judgment, I make
the following order:
1. RAF is exempted from
paying the fees related to the delivery of the notice requesting
reasons for judgment and the file to the
Judge’s chambers.
2. The costs of, and
those occasioned by, the delay in the timeous delivery of the file to
the Judge’s chambers, including
those of preparations related
to and of the Directives hearing, are to be paid by RAF’s
attorneys of record.
DM THULARE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
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