Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 247South Africa
L.C v J.C and Others (17335/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 247 (9 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
9 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## L.C v J.C and Others (17335/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 247 (9 September 2024)
L.C v J.C and Others (17335/2022) [2024] ZAWCHC 247 (9 September 2024)
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sino date 9 September 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
FLYNOTES:
FAMILY – Divorce –
Settlement
agreement
–
Claim
for damages based on fraudulent misrepresentation –
Res
judicata
raised
by defendants – Exception to plaintiff’s amended
particulars of claim – Relief sought by plaintiff
not same
as when settlement order was made order of court –
Completely predicated on different cause of action –
Not
res
judicata
–
Matter has not already been adjudicated by court – Raised a
bona fide cause of action against exception
– Exception
dismissed.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 17335/2022
In
the matter between:
L[…]
A[…] C[…]
Plaintiff
/ Respondent
And
J[…]
C[…]
First
Defendant
FREDERICK
PAULSE STEYN INC
Second
Defendant
FREDERICK
PAULE STEYN
Third
Defendant
INSITU
CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Defendant
PROPERTY
FUTURES CC
Fifth
Defendant
THE
RETAIL MAGAZINE CC
Sixth
Defendant
MOIGYN
(PTY) LTD
Seventh
Defendant
Before
the Honourable Ms Acting Justice Mthimunye
Date
of hearing: 22 August 2024
Delivered
Electronically: 9 September 2024
JUDGMENT
MTHIMUNYE,
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an exception application in which the First to Seventh
Defendants except to
the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim on
the basis that it lacks averments to sustain a cause of action and
that the matter
is
res judicata.
[2]
Initially, the two issues in dispute were whether the plaintiff
failed to disclose
a cause of action and whether the matter was res
judicata. On 18 July, the plaintiff filed a notice to amend her
particulars of
claim, setting out in detail her claim for damages and
a prayer for a proper accounting to determine the true and correct
value
of the joint estate of the plaintiff and the first defendant at
the time of divorce. The Defendants did not object to the amendment
of the Plaintiff’s particulars of claim and by agreement
between the parties, the court granted the Plaintiff’s
application
to amend her particulars of claim.
[3]
Accordingly, the defendants’ complaint regarding the failure of
the Plaintiff’s
particulars of claim to disclose a cause of
action was then removed and the court was only seized in determining
whether the action
of the Plaintiff was
res iudicata.
[4]
For convenience, I will refer to the parties as they are cited in
convention.
Background
[5]
The Plaintiff and the First Defendant concluded and signed a divorce
settlement agreement
on 16 October 2019, which was subsequently made
an order of the court. On 14 October 2022, the Plaintiff instituted a
claim for
damages arising from an alleged fraudulent
misrepresentation of the First, Second or Third Defendant during the
negotiations and
signing of the settlement agreement.
[6]
The Fourth Defendant (Insitu Construction (Pty) Ltd, Fifth Defendant
(Property Futures
CC, Sixth Defendant (The Retail Magazine) and
Seventh Defendant (Moigyn (Pty) Ltd) were financial entities in which
the First Defendant
had either directly or indirectly profitable
interest which, according to the Plaintiff, formed part of the joint
estate. The First
to the Seventh Defendants then entered an
appearance to defend the action. The First, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth and
Seventh Defendants
raised an exception on the grounds that the
particulars of claim of the Plaintiff failed to disclose a cause of
action and that
the matter was
res iudicata
. This exception
was electronically served on the Plaintiff on 15 February 2023.
[7]
Similarly, the Second and Third Defendants also raised an exception
on the grounds
that particulars of claim of the Plaintiff lacks
averments which are necessary to sustain the cause of action. They
served their
notice of exception on the Plaintiff on February 2023 to
remove the cause of the complaint.
[8]
As a result of the Plaintiff’s failure to remove the cause of
the complaint,
the Defendants set the matter down for hearing.
Subsequent thereto, the Plaintiff filed a notice of opposition in
relation to both
exceptions. The exception brought by the Second and
Third Defendants for a lack of critical averments were subsequently
withdrawn.
[9]
On the day the exception was to be heard, the parties agreed to the
amendment of the
Plaintiff’s particulars of claim being made an
order of court. Consequently, the complaint that the Plaintiff’s
particulars
of claim failed to disclose a cause of action was removed
and the issue of
res iudicata
remained to be determined. I now
turn to deal with the averments made in the Plaintiff’s amended
particulars of claim.
Plaintiff’s
Amended Particulars of Claim
[10]
It is common cause that the Plaintiff and the First Defendant were
married in community of property.
They entered into a settlement
agreement on 16 October 2019 which was made an order of court on 14
October 2022. The Plaintiff
in her amended particulars of claim
pleaded that the misrepresentations made by the First, and /or Second
(as the agent of the
First Defendant) and/or Third Defendant were
false and intended to mislead the Plaintiff into entering into a
divorce settlement
agreement. The Plaintiff further avers that as a
result of the Defendants’ false misrepresentations, she was
coerced into
accepting the terms of the said settlement agreement
reflecting the incorrect total gross assets of the joint estate of
the First
Defendant and herself.
[11]
Furthermore, that at the time these fraudulent misrepresentations
were made by the First and
Third Defendant, she was unaware that the
First Defendant owned undisclosed immovable property and other
assets.
[12]
The Plaintiff asserts that if she had known the real and current
status of the joint estate,
she would not have agreed to the
settlement as it is. She believed that the joint estate only included
the following:
12.1 An
immovable property known as
[…] O[…] Grove, V[…]
Heights
,
Brackenfell,
of which, in terms of the settlement
agreement, she was to remain a joint owner and continue to reside on
the property. Furthermore,
in terms of the suspensive condition of
the settlement agreement, if the Plaintiff should remarry or become
involved in a co-habitive
relationship, the property is to be sold
and the proceeds of the sale to be divided equally between the
Plaintiff and the First
Defendant. In addition, the Plaintiff was to
be liable for the municipal rates, homeowner’s insurance,
general and major
repairs of the said property.
12.2 An
immovable property situated at
[…] S[…] Close, V[…]
Heights,
Brackenfell,
of which in terms of the settlement
agreement the First Defendant were to retain sole and exclusive
ownership of the said property.
The Third Defendant, (FPS Attorneys)
were appointed to effect transfer of the Plaintiff’s undivided
quarter share of said
property to the First Defendant.
12.3 An
amount of
R400 000.00
(Four hundred thousand rand) that
was in the joint bank account of the parties, which were to be
withdrawn and retained by the
First Defendant.
12.4
Furthermore, a
Suzuki Ignis
motor vehicle
which would
remain in her possession and in terms of the settlement agreement the
outstanding amount of the instalment sale agreement
were to be
settled by the First Defendant upon the divorce between the parties.
[13]
The following paragraphs of the Plaintiff’s amended particulars
of claim sums up the basis
for her claim as follows:
“
9.
At the time that the misrepresentations were made the First Defendant
owned undisclosed immovable
property and other assets of value either
directly or indirectly via and in various entities, including but not
limited to Insitu
Construction (Pty) Ltd, Property Futures CC, The
Retail
Magazine
CC
and Moigyn (Pty) Ltd. Plaintiff was by virtue of her marriage in
community of property with the First Defendant a fifty percent
owner
of these assets or the value of the assets.
10.
If the Plaintiff was aware of the true and correct position she would
never have entered into
the settlement agreement. Accordingly, the
Plaintiff has suffered damages arising from the fraudulent
misrepresentations of the
First Fourth, Second and or Third
Defendants the quantum of which is unknown to the Plaintiff.
Wherefore
Plaintiff
prays for an order against the First Defendant on the following
terms:
(a)
That the First Defendant personally and in his capacity as the
controlling interest in the
entities referred to in clause 9 above,
account to the Plaintiff for the assets, liabilities and financial
records of his personal
estate and those entities referred to in
clause 9 above as 16 October 2019 within a time as determined by the
honourable court.
(b)
That there be a proper debatement of accounts to determine the true
and correct value of
the joint estate of Plaintiff and the First
Defendant at the time of divorce.”
[14]
The Plaintiff further sought relief in her amended particulars of
claim in terms of the following
prayers:
“
(a)
That the First Defendant personally and in his capacity as the
controlling interest in Fourth,
Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Defendants
account to the Plaintiff for the assets, liabilities and financial
records of his personal
estate and those the Fourth, fifth, Sixth and
Seventh Defendants as 16 October 2019, within a time determined by
the honourable
court.
(b)
That there be a proper debatement of account to determine the true
and correct value of
the joint estate of Plaintiff and First
Defendant at the time of divorce.
[15]
As a result, the plaintiff prayed for an order against the First,
Second and / or Third Defendant,
jointly and severally or on such
terms as the Honourable court deems fit for payment of the
outstanding balance together with costs
and interest.:
Submissions
by the parties
Defendants’
submissions
[16]
The Defendants submitted that the allegations of fraud made by the
Plaintiff was vague and unsubstantial.
Further that the Plaintiff
cannot use these allegations to launch an action for damages as the
matter had already been adjudicated
on by another court when the
divorce settlement agreement was made an order of court. In other
words, meaning that the matter is
res iudicata.
The Defendants
referred the court to paragraph 10 of the Supreme Court of Appeal
judgment of
Moraitis Investments (Pty)
Ltd v Montic Diary (Pty) Ltd
(799/2016)
[2017] ZASCA 54
(18
May
2017),
where the court
was seized with deciding whether the grounds advanced by the
applicant justified the rescission of the consent judgment.
“
[10] In my view
that was not the correct starting point for the enquiry, because it
ignored the existence of the order making the
agreement an order of
court. Whilst terse the order was clear. It read:
’
The Agreement
of Settlement signed and dated 05 September 2013 is made an order of
court.’
For so long as that
order stood it should not be regarded. The fact that it was a consent
order, is neither here nor there. Such
an order has exactly the same
standing and qualities as any other court order. It is res judicata
as between the parties in regard
to the matters covered thereby.
[3]
The Constitutional Court has repeatedly said that court orders may
not be ignored. To do so is inconsistent with s 165(5) of the
Constitution, which provides that an order issued by the court binds
all people to whom it applies
. [4]
The necessary
starting point in this case was therefore whether the grounds
advanced by the applicants justified the rescission
of the consent
judgment. If they did not then it had to stand and questions of the
enforceability of the settlement agreement became
academic.”
[17]
The Defendants contended that, akin to the current case, a settlement
agreement was signed by
the First Defendant and the Plaintiff and
subsequently made an order of the court on 04 November 2019 by Hlophe
JP, as he then
was. In addition, they argued that the settlement
agreement, which formed the basis of the plaintiff's claim, is not
just an ordinary
contractual agreement, but rather a legitimate
standing order of the court.
[18]
The Defendants further submitted that the Plaintiff must have a right
to claim in order to be
able to seek the following relief, that:
(a)
The First Defendant renders the accounts of the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth
and Seventh to the Plaintiff
in order for the Plaintiff to determine
the Defendants assets, liabilities and financial records which they
held in the First Defendants
personal estate; and
(b)
There be a proper debatement of these accounts in order to determine
the true and correct
value of the joint estate as at the time of
divorce.
[19]
Additionally, the Defendants submitted that the Plaintiff should have
applied to court to have
the court order of 4 November 2019 set
aside, varied or amended on the alleged grounds of fraud claimed by
the Plaintiff. However,
the defendants admitted that this is not the
relief sought by the plaintiff from this court.
[20]
In conclusion, the Defendants submitted that the case made out by the
Plaintiff in her amended
Particulars of Claim is fatally flawed while
the original dispute between the parties remains
res iudicata
.
Furthermore, they submitted based on their submissions made to this
court, their exception on behalf of the First, Fourth, Fifth,
Sixth
and Seventh Defendant should be upheld with costs.
Plaintiff’s
submissions
[21]
Counsel for the Plaintiff submitted that firstly the court in
considering whether the exception
should be upheld or dismissed, the
court need to take cognisance of the fact that we are dealing with a
matter where the parties
were married in community of property and
that the joint estate was not divided equally due to a
misrepresentation perpetuated
by the First Defendant and / or the
Third Defendant.
[22]
Further that the Plaintiff in paragraphs 11.1 to 11.9 of her amended
Particulars of claim succinctly
sets out on what her claim is based.
Counsel further submitted that it is clear by looking at the Deed of
Settlement that was made
an order of court on 4 November 2019, no
mention is made of the other shares or entities owned by both
Plaintiff and the First
Defendant at the time of the dissolution of
the joint estate.
[23]
Counsel further submitted that this was as a result of the
misrepresentation of the attorney,
the Third Defendant who had a
vested interest in the outcome of the case.
[24]
Counsel referred the court to
Eke v
Parsons
(CCT214/14)
[2015] ZACC 30
,
where Mr
Parsons sought an order directing Mr Eke to pay a fixed sum of money
which was a debt owing in terms of the parties’
sale agreement.
He submitted that the Constitutional Court held that a settlement
agreement is like any order once it has been
made an order of court.
[25]
Counsel for the Plaintiff submitted that contrary to what the
Defendants have argued, the Plaintiff
in this matter is not seeking
to set aside or rescind the court order granted on 4 November 2019,
but instead seeks damages on
new facts that came to light after the
settlement agreement between the parties had been made an order of
court. He passionately
submitted that as a result of the information
that was previously withheld from the Plaintiff, she did not receive
her full fifty
percent of the joint estate as per their marriage
regime of in community of property.
[26]
He further submitted that the reason they are seeking the relief for
a debatement of the assets
is because the Plaintiff is unaware what
the correct value of the assets were in 2019 and this has to be
established in order to
quantify their claim for damages.
[27]
In conclusion, counsel submitted that the relief sought by the
Plaintiff is that the First, Fourth,
Fifth, Sixth and Seventh
Defendants be held liable jointly and severally, the one absolving
the other. He requested that the exception
be dismissed with costs,
including all costs of previous occasions on a scale C.
Issues
to be determined
[28]
The issue to be determined by this court is
res iudicata.
Applicable
Legal Principles:
[29]
The principles applicable in the adjudication of exceptions are well
established.
“
An exception is a
pleading in which a party states his objection to the contents of a
pleading of the opposite party on the grounds
that the contents are
vague and embarrassing or lack averments which are necessary to
sustain the specific cause of action or the
specific defence relied
upon.
(
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
–
The
Civil Practice of the High Courts and Supreme Court of Appeal of
South Africa 5
th
Ed, 2009
Chapter 22 p630)
“
An exception is a
legal objection to the opponent’s pleading. It complains of a
defect inherent in the pleading: admitting
for the moment that all
the allegations in a summons or plea are true, it asserts that even
with such admission the pleading does
not disclose either a cause of
action or a defence, as the case may be. It follows that where an
exception is taken, the court
must look at the pleading excepted to
as it stands”
(Erasmus
Superior Court Practice
D1-
293).
[30]
An exception is a process where the court weeds out claims without
legal merits. Furthermore,
it is to prevent a claim or defence being
persisted with on pleadings that are vague and embarrassing. Ponnan,
JA observed in
Luke M Tembani and Others
v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another
[2022] ZASCA 70
,
2023 (1) SA 432
(SCA) (20 may 2022)
at
para 14
that:
“
[14] Whilst
exceptions provide a useful mechanism ‘to weed out cases
without legal merit’, it is nonetheless necessary
that they be
dealt with sensibly.
8
.
It
is where pleadings are so vague that it is impossible to determine
the nature of the claim or where pleadings are bad in law
in that
their contents do not support a discernible and legally recognised
cause of action, that an exception is competent.
9.
The
burden rests on an excipient, who must establish that on every
interpretation that can reasonably be attached to it, the pleading
is
excipiable.
10
The test
is whether on all possible readings of the facts no cause of action
may be made out; it being for the excipient to satisfy
the court that
the conclusion of law for which the plaintiff contends cannot be
supported on every interpretation that can be put
upon the facts.”
[31]
When a special plea of exception is raised by a Defendant relying on
res iudicata,
the onus is on the Defendant to prove (a) that a
final and definitive prior judgment or order; has been, (b) given in
litigation
to which the current parties or their privies were
parties; and (c) the cause of action in both cases must be the same,
and the
same relief must, or may, have been in both cases
.
T
echnical
Systems (Pty) Ltd and RTS Industries and Others
(5288/2020) WCHC (1 March 2021)
at para 15
.
[32]
I pause to point out, that the inherent jurisdiction of the High
Court does not include the right
to tamper with the finality of
judgments, other than in specific circumstances provided for in the
rules or common law. This is
because of the importance of litigation
being brought to finality and because a court becomes
functus
officio
once it has pronounced a final judgment. It is however a
trite principle of our law that the privity and sanctity of a
contract
should prevail. Parties are to observe and perform in terms
of their agreements and should only be allowed to deviate therefrom
if it can be demonstrated that the contract is tainted with fraud or
a particular clause in the agreement is unreasonable and or
so
prejudicial to a party that it is against public policy. Against this
background I will now turn to deal with the issue of res
iudicata.
Analysis
[33]
In the instant case,
ex facie
the amended particulars of
claim, it is clear that the relief sought by the Plaintiff is not the
same when the settlement order
was made an order of court.
Furthermore, the parties in the claim for damages, is not the same
parties as they appeared in the
divorce proceedings. Previously, the
divorce case was between the Plaintiff and the First Defendant.
Before the court now it is
different parties. This is diametrically
opposed to the requirements of res iudicata. We are dealing in the
present matter with
a claim for damages as a result of a fraudulent
misrepresentation, whereas the previous matter on which the court
adjudicated were
the patrimonial consequences of the parties’
marriage. It is apparent that certain entities which were part of the
Plaintiff
and the First Defendant joint estate was not included in
the original settlement agreement that was made an order of court on
4 November 2019.
[34]
The Plaintiff’s amended particulars of claim clearly contain
averments alleging all the
material facts that give rise to an
enforceable claim for damages that is based on misrepresentation or
conduct of the Defendants
that resulted in the Plaintiff not being
aware of the full gross value of the joint estate at the time she
entered into the settlement
agreement. The plaintiff clearly sets out
that she was made to believe that the assets mentioned in the
settlement agreement was
the only assets in the joint estate. It
cannot therefore be said that the cause of action raised by the
Plaintiff is
res iudicata
under the circumstances. It is
completely predicated on a different cause of action.
[35]
It is trite that a misrepresentation is a false statement of a
material fact by one party which
affects the other party’s
decision in agreeing to a contract. If the misrepresentation is
discovered, the contract can be
declared void. The Plaintiff has
raised all the facts in her amended particulars of claim, and I am
satisfied that a cause of action
has been made out.
[36]
For the excipient to be successful in his defence, he needs to show
that even if evidence was
presented sufficient to prove the facts set
out in the pleadings, no cause of action or defence would be
disclosed. I do not agree
with the argument raised by the Defendants
that the plaintiff’s action for damages against the defendants
is
res iudicata.
[37]
I am more inclined to agree with counsel for the
Plaintiff that this is a new action for damages due to
a
misrepresentation made by the First Defendant and / or the Third
Defendant as his agent. It must be emphasised that the First
Defendant and the Plaintiff were married in community of property and
that the entities mentioned at paragraph 7.5 to 7.9 in the
amended
particulars of claim was never part of the settlement agreement that
was made an order of court on 4 November 2019. In
MD
v ND
(A176/2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 304
(29
November 2023)
,
para 32 were I said:
“
It bears
emphasis that the consequences of the marriage in community of
property entered into by the appellant and the respondent
was that
they became co-owners in undivided and indivisible half shares of all
the assets and liabilities they had at the time
of their marriage as
well as the assets and liabilities they acquired during the marriage.
(See
Heaton
J and Kruger H South African Family Law 4ed (2017) at 62.)
Expressed
differently, upon marriage, the parties' separate estates
automatically merged into one joint estate. Upon dissolution
of the
marriage, all liabilities had to be settled from the joint estate,
and the balance of the joint estate, including their
respective
pension interests, had to be distributed equally between them or as
they otherwise agree”
[38]
Taking into consideration that this is a considerable large part of
the joint estate that was
excluded at the time the settlement
agreement was entered into by the parties.
[39]
I find no merit in the Defendants’
argument that this matter has already been adjudicated by this court.
Even though the parties
are the same and the Plaintiff's claim for
damages is a result of the settlement agreement that was made a court
order on 4 November
2019, the relief sought in the damages action is
different. This was explained in the matter of
Technical
Systems (Pty) Ltd
(supra) From the
pleadings and all the documents attached thereto placed before this
court is not in dispute that the disputed
financial entities were not
incorporated in the settlement agreement that was incorporated into
the final divorce order.
[41]
It is evident from the Plaintiff’s amended particulars of claim
that if the Plaintiff had
known the true and exact facts about the
status of the joint estate, she would not have entered into the
settlement agreement.
[42]
Our law is clear that in terms of the law of contract, the Plaintiff
only has to prove the existence
of the fraudulent misrepresentation,
once she has done so she can elect whether to resile from the
agreement or to continue with
the agreement. It is clear from the
submissions of counsel for the Plaintiff that the Plaintiff do not
intend to vary or rescind
the original court order dated 4 November
but merely intends to sue the Defendants for damages by defrauding
her of her full and
correct half share of the joint estate.
[43]
In
Namasthethu Electrical (Pty) Ltd v
City of Cape Town and Another
(201/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 74
(29
June 2020)
at
para 29
,
the Supreme Court of
Appeal made the following observation:
“
29
It is trite that fraud is conduct which vitiates every transaction
known to the law. In affirming
this principle, this court, in
Esorfranki Pipelines (Pty) Ltd, referred with approval to Lord
Denning’s dicta in Lazarus
Estates Ltd v Beasley, when he said:
‘
No court in
this land will allow a person to keep an advantage which he has
obtained by fraud.
No
judgment of a court
,
no order of a Minister, can be allowed to stand if it has been
obtained by fraud. Fraud unravels everything. The court is careful
not to find fraud unless it is distinctly pleaded and proved; but
once it has been proved it vitiates judgments, contracts and
all
transactions whatsoever…”
[44]
I am of the view that the present case falls into the realm of the
circumstances described in
Namasthethu [supra]
mentioned
above. It is apparent that the Plaintiff had suffered loss as she
alleged she acted on the basis of a fraudulent misrepresentation
by
the Defendants when she entered into the settlement agreement that
was made an order of court. I, further find that the averments
made
by the Plaintiff in her amended particulars of claim is sufficient
for the purposes of instituting a claim for damages and
is raising a
bona fide cause of action against the exception raised by the
Defendants’.
[45]
A court has a statutory power and discretion to override any
agreement when it is contrary to
public policy. Public Policy
requires that this court afford the Plaintiff an opportunity to be
placed in possession of the financial
documents requested in order
for her to establish what the true and correct value of the joint
estate was on the date of divorce,
in order for her to be able to
quantify her claim for damages. That being the case the Defendants’
exception that the matter
is
res iudicata
is misconceived. The
Defendants have failed to establish that the particulars in support
of a claim for damages were excipiable.
I am inclined to agree with
the Plaintiff this is a new action based on a fraudulent
misrepresentation by the First and / or Third
Defendant as his legal
representative at the time settlement agreement was entered into. It
is on this basis that the exception
of the Defendants is dismissed.
[46]
Counsel for the Plaintiff correctly pointed out that neither of the
cases referred to by him
or the Defendants related to any of the
circumstances as before this court as the Constitutional Court in
Eke
[supra]
did not concern an action for damages on a settlement
agreement that had been fraudulently concluded and subsequently made
an order
of court , but rather on whether the parties contracting
outside of the context of litigation may approach the court via a
rescission
application and request the court that their agreement be
made an order of court.
[47]
The issue of whether the Plaintiff can claim damages arising form a
fraudulent misrepresentation
based on a settlement agreement that was
made an order of court is not for this court to decide and will be
dealt with by the court
seized with the trial.
[48]
Therefore, for the reasons alluded to about and the principles laid
down in the authorities mentioned
above, it follows that the
exception must be dismissed. The Plaintiff seeks a punitive cost
order. In the exercise of my discretion
I do not believe that such an
order is appropriate.
The
following order is made:
[49]
The Defendant’s exception is dismissed with costs on the scale
as between party and party
as taxed or agreed, including costs of
previous occasions and including cost to counsel on scale B.
MTHIMUNYE,
AJ
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