Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 380South Africa
Van Schalkwyk v Bredenkamp (7650/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 380 (19 November 2024)
Headnotes
judgment applications in terms of Rule 32.[1] It can hardly be argued that the defence was pleaded in a matter which appears to be needlessly bold, vague or sketchy. It would not have been sufficient for the defendant to simply state her defence without briefly stating the facts on which she relies for the defence. However, the question arises whether the defendant has put up a bona fide defence with some good prospects of success.[2]
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Van Schalkwyk v Bredenkamp (7650/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 380 (19 November 2024)
Van Schalkwyk v Bredenkamp (7650/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 380 (19 November 2024)
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sino date 19 November 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 7650/2024
In
the matter between
SONIA
VAN
SCHALKWYK
APPLICANT
And
KENNETH
JOHN
BREDENKAMP
RESPONDENT
Date
of hearing: 11 November 2024
Date
of judgment: The judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email
and
released to SAFLII. The date for hand down is deemed to be 19
November 2024
JUDGMENT
VAN DEN BERG, AJ
[1]
The applicant, who is cited as the
defendant under the above case number, applies for the following
relief:
“
1.
The bar for the service and filing of the applicant’s plea be
removed and that the applicant be
allowed to serve and file her plea
within 5 (FIVE) days from the date of the Order;
2.
The respondent shall bear the costs of this application.”
[2]
The respondent, who is the plaintiff in the
action, opposes the relief. The parties will be referred to as in the
action (
the applicant as the defendant
and the respondent as the plaintiff
).
[3]
In essence, this is an interlocutory
application for condonation in terms of Uniform Rule 27(2) and (3).
However, it is not
a simple matter. To the contrary, the 398
pages of affidavits and annexures contain highly controversial
allegations and
counter-allegations of mistrust, lies, and even
unprofessional conduct on the part of the plaintiff, who is an
attorney and officer
of this Court, as well as an advocate at the
Cape Bar.
CONTEXTUAL BACKGROUND
[4]
The plaintiff is a duly admitted attorney
practising as such under the name and style of KJ Bredenkamp
Attorneys. It is common
cause that the plaintiff acted as the
defendant’s attorney of record in an acrimonious divorce and
related proceedings, which
are still pending. These proceedings
included a Rule 43 application, a Rule 43(6) application, an eviction
application, proceedings
in the Magistrate’s Court in terms of
the Family Violence Act, and at least 2 (two) petitions to the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
[5]
In the combined summons, the plaintiff
claims payment of attorney’s fees of R168,559.58 and
R848,425.00 in respect to counsel’s
fees.
[6]
The defendant filed a notice of intention
to defend on 30 April 2024, which was followed by the plaintiff’s
service of a notice
of bar on 31 May 2024.
[7]
The defendant is currently represented by
Nabal Attorneys, who failed to file the plea timeously. Despite being
ipso facto
barred,
the defendant filed a plea and counterclaim on 10 June 2024 and
immediately directed correspondence to the plaintiff’s
attorneys requesting condonation for the late service of the plea and
tendering the wasted costs.
[8]
The explanation offered by the defendant
for the late filing of the plea is that her attorney inadvertently
overlooked the fact
that the notice of bar had already been served on
31 May 2024, as he only became aware of the notice upon receiving it
from his
correspondent on 3 June 2024.
[9]
The plaintiff opposes the application for
condonation on several bases. The plaintiff contends that the
application is not
bona fide
,
that the defendant’s version is untruthful, and that the
defendant does not provide a sufficient explanation for the default.
Additionally, the plaintiff asserts that the defendant’s
proposed plea lacks merit and fails to meet the standard for the
upliftment of the bar, namely, disclosing sufficient grounds,
including a
bona fide
defence.
[10]
The founding, answering, and replying
affidavits contain numerous irrelevant allegations of impropriety and
misconduct. The plaintiff
and the defendant’s erstwhile
counsel, whose fees the plaintiff claims in the matter, make serious,
emotionally loaded allegations
in the affidavits before the Court.
The nub of the defendant’s case is that the plaintiff and
counsel acted in contravention
of the Legal Practice Act and Code. In
particular, it is alleged that the defendant attained the services of
counsel directly,
without the intervention of an attorney, and that
counsel, after he allegedly accepted an instruction from the
defendant, subsequently
introduced her to the plaintiff.
[11]
The defendant contends that the plaintiff’s
involvement in the litigation was a mere formality, asserting that he
did not
actually render the services but that counsel managed and
performed all of the work, allegedly even coercing her into taking
actions
which she did not want to take.
[12]
The defence as formulated in the
defendant’s plea is to the effect that, in as far as a mandate
agreement was concluded with
counsel and the plaintiff to act on her
behalf, such mandate was solicited by counsel in contravention of the
referral rule, both
at common law and as encapsulated in section
34(2)(a)(i) of the Legal Practice Act and section 27(2) of the Code.
[13]
The defendant further pleads that the
demands for payment made directly to her, as well as the subsequent
payments that she made
directly to counsel pursuant to the demands,
constitute a contravention of section 27(4) of the Code and Rule
7.1.9.1 of the Uniform
Rules of Professional Conduct promulgated by
the General Council of the Bar of South Africa. As a result of the
alleged contraventions
of the Legal Practitioners Act, the Code and
rules of ethics, the defendant contends that the mandate is against
public policy,
statutorily illegal, and void from the outset.
[14]
Adv Stelzner SC, who appeared on behalf of
the plaintiff, argued that the application should be dismissed
because no proper case
has been made out for the upliftment of the
bar. He further argued that the defendant has not shown a
bona
fide
defence to the plaintiff’s
action for payment of fees. In addition hereto, it was argued that
the defence falls squarely within
the
condictio
ob turpem vel iniustam causam
rule.
The argument goes that the defendant comes to Court with unclean
hands, having been dishonest about the mandate, her
knowledge of the
fees to be charged, the involvement of other legal practitioners, who
have furnished the Court with confirmatory
affidavits, and her
acknowledgement of her indebtedness to the plaintiff. In the
alternative, Adv Stelzner SC argued that should
this Court find that,
on the evidence in these proceedings, there is some room for argument
of a
bona fide
defence
on the merits, the submission would then be that the defence ought to
be tested by way of parol evidence.
[15]
The plaintiff submits that the defendant
has perjured herself, as evidenced by the overwhelming objective
facts that are stacked
against her. These include affidavits deposed
to by 3 (three) legal practitioners, which destroy the defendant’s
version,
as well as an affidavit by the defendant’s own
brother-in-law. The evidence placed before the Court indicates that
the defendant
has, on multiple occasions, admitted her indebtedness
not only to the plaintiff and her former counsel but also to Mr
Francois
du Toit, her attorney in the proceedings before the Family
Violence Court, and to her brother-in-law, Mr Bekker.
[16]
The plaintiff argues that the Court should
adopt a robust approach in rejecting the defendant’s version
and find in favour
of the plaintiff, based upon the trite
Plascon-Evans
principle.
LEGAL REQUIREMENTS FOR
UPLIFTING THE BAR
[17]
Uniform Rule 27 requires the case for the
upliftment of the bar to be made out on the standard of good cause
shown. The requirement
of good cause has been interpreted to have 3
(three) requirements being:
[17.1]
The applicant must have a reasonable and
acceptable explanation for the default.
[17.2]
The applicant must be
bone
fide
.
[17.3]
The applicant must demonstrate a
bone
fide
defence which
prima
facie
has some prospect of success.
EXPLANATION OF DEFAULT
[18]
I am satisfied that the defendant has
offered a sufficient explanation of the default for the late filing
of the plea. As a matter
of fact, the plea was filed a mere 3 (three)
days late. I do not accept the argument on behalf of the plaintiff
that the defendant’s
attorney had more than 41 (forty-one) days
after the service of the summons to obtain instructions and prepare a
plea, and that,
therefore, the client should be penalised.
BONA
FIDE
DEFENCE
[19]
The
defendant is required to disclose facts in the application which, if
proven at trial, would constitute a defence. The test to
determine
whether the defence has been pleaded sufficiently is similar to the
test applied in summary judgment applications in
terms of Rule 32.
[1]
It can hardly be argued that the defence was pleaded in a matter
which appears to be needlessly bold, vague or sketchy. It would
not
have been sufficient for the defendant to simply state her defence
without briefly stating the facts on which she relies for
the
defence. However, the question arises whether the defendant has put
up a
bona
fide
defence with some good prospects of success.
[2]
[20]
In
Soft
Coffee (Pty) Ltd v Molai Property Development
,
[3]
Splig J held that what constitutes a
bona
fide
defence
may be informed by the similar test applied in summary judgment
proceedings in order to determine whether leave to defend,
or in this
application condonation, ought to be granted. In essence, the
plaintiff wants the Court to find, as would be the case
if the matter
was argued on exception, that the plea does not disclose any defence
on any possible interpretation thereof.
[21]
In
relying on the well-known judgments in
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Limited
[4]
and
Breytenbach
v Fiat SA (Edms) Bpk
,
[5]
the Court in
Soft
Coffee
(supra)
found that the defendant in that matter failed to disclose a
bona
fide
defence
on the basis that, having regard to all the circumstances, the
defendant had, or may have, dishonestly sought to avoid the
dangers
inherent in presenting a further or clearer version of the events
which he claims to have occurred.
[6]
[22]
In
Ferris
v FirstRand Bank Limited
,
[7]
the Constitutional Court held that lateness is not the only factor to
be considered. The party applying for condonation must prove
whether
it is in the interests of justice to grant it, which includes factors
such as the applicant’s prospects of success
and the importance
of the issue to be determined.
[23]
The strongest argument on behalf of the
plaintiff is that, on both parties’ versions, a mandate
agreement was concluded at
the first consultation held at counsel’s
chambers. The plaintiff was present at the first consultation, and a
mandate agreement
was concluded between him and the defendant.
Whatever counsel may have allegedly done subsequently, it was argued,
cannot,
per se
,
render the mandate void.
[24]
As
persuasive as this argument may be, it loses sight of the fact that
the defendant alleges that the terms of the mandate offend
against
public policy as well as the LPC Act and Code
[8]
.
In addition, the defendant boldly alleges that the mandate was not
properly performed as could be expected of an attorney and
counsel.
[25]
If
the same test as in summary judgment applications is applied, the
question to be answered is whether the plaintiff has an unanswerable
case. As a matter of law, attorneys initiate the contract between an
advocate and his client and negotiate and receive fees from
the
client on behalf of the advocate and himself. The referral rule
lies at the bedrock of the advocates' profession and
exists in the
interests of the public
[9]
.
[26]
However, the defendant’s version
under oath does not convince me, though it may be premature to reject
it altogether. It is
common cause that the defendant was referred to
counsel by a mutual friend and family member. Counsel arranged the
first consultation
at his chambers with the plaintiff and defendant,
who were in attendance. The oral mandate agreement was
concluded at this
first consultation.
[27]
These facts raise the question of whether
the mandate is against public policy because the first consultation
was, in the defendant's
words, ‘solicited’ by counsel at
the behest of a mutual friend and family member. Or could a court
find that the mandate
agreement is against public policy given its
terms, as alleged by the defendant in her plea?
[28]
The
Court has a wide discretion to be exercise judicially having regard
to,
inter
alia,
the
importance of ventilating disputes between parties and whether an
appropriate order for costs could cure prejudice.
[10]
Herein lies a further problem. The defendant says that she is an
unemployed ‘stay-at-home’ mother. The defendant does
not
dispute that she does not have the means to pay any costs order
granted against her. Therefore, the plaintiff’s prejudice
cannot be countered by an order for costs.
[29]
In light of the aforesaid, I am not
convinced that the application is
bona
fide
or that there are good prospects
of success. I will, however, grant the defendant the benefit of the
doubt. She seeks an indulgence
for her attorney’s failure to
have filed a plea timeously. I cannot merely refer the dispute for
oral testimony, as this
would inevitably lead to nothing more but a
full-blown trial without the parties having exchanged pleadings. The
relief sought
is not final, but only interlocutory. The situation
would have been different if, as is the case in many of the
authorities previously
referred to, the Court was called upon to
decide both an application for default judgment and an application
for condonation simultaneously.
[30]
I am also mindful that the parties are
still in the initial stages of the proceedings, the substantial
amount involved and the importance
of ventilating the true disputes
at trial. The court has a wide discretion and the defendant did not
recklessly disregard the rules.
The defendant is anxious and serious
about proceeding to trial, even though the plaintiff and counsel,
with reason, question her
motive for doing so. Opposed hereto, the
plaintiff suffers prejudice because he incurred the costs of opposing
this application.
He will also expend costs in proceeding to trial
against a litigant whose financial position seems doubtful. However,
the defendant’s
financial position was known to the plaintiff
and counsel, yet they willingly litigated in the fashion and to the
extent they did.
In the premises, I cannot shut the proverbial court
doors in the face of the defendant, and she will proceed at her
peril.
COSTS
[31]
The
Court appreciates the serious nature and potential implications of
the allegations made by the defendant, particularly against
her
erstwhile counsel. However, the defendant’s erstwhile
counsel filed a confirmatory affidavit in support of the
plaintiff’s
answering affidavit. In this affidavit, counsel makes statements that
I believe are regrettable. Two wrongs do
not make a right. The
starting point should be that advocates, as members of an honourable
profession, render fees honestly and
behave ethically
[11]
.
Advocates and attorneys are as much a part of the court where
they practise as the judges who preside over them.
[12]
Unfortunately, the legal representatives allowed the contents of the
affidavits to become overly contentious and detract from the
matter
at hand. This is an important factor in considering the appropriate
scale of costs in terms of Uniform Rule 67A(2)(c) and
(d) read with
Uniform Rule 69(7).
[32]
Irrespective of which of the parties will
ultimately succeed, there is no reason why the plaintiff should be
out of pocket with
any of his legal expenses. The defendant seeks an
indulgence and should, therefore, be held liable for at least payment
of the
party and party costs occasioned by the application for
condonation on Scale A.
[33]
However, should the Trial Court reject the
defendant’s defence or the action be decided in favour of the
plaintiff, the defendant
should be penalised with the costs of this
opposed application with an attorney and client costs order on Scale
C.
[34]
In the premises, I reserve the question of
costs to be determined by the Trial Court on the basis as set out
herein. The following
order is granted:
1)
The applicant is granted condonation in
terms of Uniform Rule 27 and the notice of bar is uplifted.
2)
The applicant served a plea and
counterclaim while ipso facto barred from doing so. Such plea and
counterclaim are deemed to have
been filed on the date of this order,
and the usual time periods per the Uniform Rules shall apply for the
further exchange of
pleadings.
3)
The costs are reserved.
VAN DEN BERG, AJ
For the applicant/
Defendant
:
Mr Nabal
Nabal Attorneys
For respondent/
Plaintiff
:
Adv Stelzner SC
KJ
Bredenkamp Attorneys
[1]
Ford
v Groenewald
1977 (4) SA 224
(TPA) at 226B to G
[2]
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Limited trading as Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA) at para 12 and 13
[3]
2015
JDR 1250 (GJ)
[4]
1976
(1) SA 418 (A)
[5]
1976
(2) SA 226 (T)
[6]
Soft
Coffee
at p 9
[7]
2014 (3) SA
39 (CC)
[8]
Pretoria
Society of Advocates v Ndleve 2013 JDR 1295 (GNP) at [10] –[14]
[9]
De Freitas
and Another v Society of Advocates of Natal and Another
2001 (3) SA
750
(SCA) at [17] and [18]
[10]
Smith
N.O. v Brummer N.O. and another Smith, N.O. v Brummer, N.O. and
another Smith, N.O. v Brummer
1954 (3) SA 352
(O) at 357 to 358
[11]
Van
Pletzen v Taxing Master o f the High Court (Free State Society of
Advocates Amicus Curiae) 2021 JDR 1236 (FB)
[12]
Herbstein
and Van Winsen, The Civil Practice of the High Courts and the
supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa, Volume 1 pp40
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