Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 17South Africa
Obiang v Van Rensburg and Others (A119 / 2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 17; [2023] 2 All SA 211 (WCC) (3 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
3 February 2023
Headnotes
the appellant deliberately turned his back on the extensive then-current litigation by terminating the services of his then-attorneys of record. The appellant should have appointed new attorneys and only did so after eleven (11) months and adopted a head-in-the-sand approach to the action proceedings which were continuing against him. The appellant resurfaced when a warrant was executed upon his immovable properties situated in Cape Town.[2] [3] The appellant’s application for rescission of judgment consisted of two parts, namely: (a) he sought a rescission of the
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Obiang v Van Rensburg and Others (A119 / 2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 17; [2023] 2 All SA 211 (WCC) (3 February 2023)
Obiang v Van Rensburg and Others (A119 / 2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 17; [2023] 2 All SA 211 (WCC) (3 February 2023)
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sino date 3 February 2023
SAFLII
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Certain
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FLYNOTES:
HEAD IN THE SANDS APPROACH TO
ACTION PROCEEDINGS
CIVIL
PROCEDURE – Rescission – Absence of party –
Litigant terminating attorneys and taking 11 months to
appoint new
ones – All reasonable steps taken by plaintiff to encourage
defendant to participate fully in the proceedings
– Uniform
Court Rule 42(1)(a).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Appeal
Case Number: A119 / 2022
In
the matter between:
TEODORIN
NGUEMA
OBIANG
Appellant
and
DANIEL
WELMAN JANSE VAN RENSBURG
First Respondent
SHERIFF,
CAPE TOWN
WEST
Second Respondent
THE
REGISTRAR OF DEEDS WESTERN CAPE
Third Respondent
Coram: Le
Grange J
et
Wille J (majority)
et
Thulare J
(dissenting)
Heard: 16
January 2023
Delivered: 3
February 2023
JUDGMENT
# WILLE, J:(majority)
WILLE, J
:
(majority)
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal piloted against dismissing the appellant’s
application for
a rescission of judgment. The appellant is the
vice president of the Republic of Equatorial Guinea. The first
respondent
was imprisoned at the command of the appellant in
Equatorial Guinea. He was incarcerated for four hundred and
twenty-three
(423) days at a prison in Equatorial Guinea.
[1]
The second and third respondents take no part in these proceedings.
[2]
The first respondent instituted action proceedings and obtained a
judgment against
the appellant for damages for his unlawful
incarceration, torture and assault in prison. In dealing with
the application
for rescission of judgment, the court of first
instance held that the appellant deliberately turned his back on the
extensive then-current
litigation by terminating the services of his
then-attorneys of record. The appellant should have appointed
new attorneys
and only did so after eleven (11) months and adopted a
head-in-the-sand approach to the action proceedings which were
continuing
against him. The appellant resurfaced when a warrant
was executed upon his immovable properties situated in Cape Town.
[2]
[3]
The appellant’s application for rescission of judgment
consisted of two parts,
namely: (a) he sought a rescission of the
order in terms of which the appellant’s defences to the action
proceedings were
struck out, and (b) he sought a rescission of the
order awarding damages in favour of the first respondent in the total
sum of
R39 88 2000,00 plus interest and costs.
[4]
In addition, the appellant applied to have specific allegations and
annexures struck
out from the first respondent’s answering
affidavit, which affidavit was filed in opposition to the application
for the recission
of the judgment.
[3]
Overview
[5]
After the hearing of the rescission application (in the court
a
quo
) and the second application to strike out, an order was
granted in the following terms, namely: (a) that the appellant’s
application to rescind the order made in connection with the striking
out of his defences was dismissed; (b) that the appellant’s
application to rescind the order made in connection with the judgment
and damages award granted against him was dismissed; (c)
that the
appellant was partially successful in his second striking-out
application in that some of the averments in the first respondent’s
answering affidavit were struck out with the balance to remain, and
(d) that the appellant was ordered to pay the first respondent’s
costs.
[6]
The appellant sought leave to appeal, which was granted on limited
grounds. The
appellant took no issue with any of the findings
dealing with the common law grounds of the application for the
recission of the
orders. The appellant squarely challenged the
results of the rescission application in terms of the court rules.
[4]
The appellant now contends for the scope of his appeal to
include an appeal against the order made in connection with the
application to strike. This was impermissible as leave to
appeal in this connection was not granted, and this latter issue
was
not before us on appeal. This much was wisely conceded by the
appellant’s counsel at the outset of the hearing of the
appeal.
[7]
After that, an application for a stay of the execution proceedings
against the appellant’s
two (2) immovable properties was
launched by the appellant, pending the outcome of these appeal
proceedings, and this stay was
granted.
[8]
The appellant’s non-compliance with the court rules featured
heavily in this
appeal. The first respondent argued that the
appeal piloted by the appellant had lapsed. Despite being
acutely aware
of his failure to comply with several court rules
regarding the prosecution of his appeal, the appellant initially
failed to apply
for condonation. It is trite that it is
incumbent upon a party who knows that a court rule has not been
complied with to
seek condonation for such non-compliance without
delay.
[9]
The first respondent advances the following irregularities and
difficulties with the
appeal proceedings. Firstly, the
appellant’s notice of appeal was not delivered in time.
Secondly, the appellant
did not comply with the period for
delivering the record of appeal. Thirdly, the appellant failed
to comply with the correct
format required for an appeal record,
which requires every tenth line on every page to be numbered.
Fourthly, the appellant
failed to lodge the necessary security
for the first respondent’s costs of the appeal. Fifthly,
the appellant’s
heads of argument were not filed timeously.
Finally, the appellant’s attorney had neglected to file a power
of attorney
authorising his attorney to prosecute the appeal.
[10]
These alleged defects initially seemed to have primarily been left
uncured save for the fact
that in the appellant’s practice
note, he refers to an application for condonation concerning certain
aspects intended to
regularise his intended appeal and also indicates
that ‘other’ heads of argument would be filed, once
further affidavits
had been exchanged. A belated condonation
application was subsequently filed to deal with the procedural
difficulties regarding
the appeal and the record filed.
Condonation was also sought for the late filing of the appellant’s
heads of argument.
Background
[11]
Before the action proceedings commenced, the first respondent
attached the appellant’s
immovable properties to found
jurisdiction. A final order of attachment was obtained in
connection with one of the appellant’s
immovable properties.
[5]
The appellant unsuccessfully attempted to appeal this
attachment order. The appellant’s application for special
leave to appeal was refused, and the appellant’s application to
our apex court for leave to appeal was also dismissed.
[12]
The appellant should have made complete ‘documentation
discovery’, which he did not
do, leading to his defences being
struck out.
[6]
Of prime
importance is the fact that the order compelling the appellant to
file his discovery affidavit was made before the
mandate of his
erstwhile attorneys of record was terminated at the instance of the
appellant.
[7]
More
importantly, this order was granted by agreement between the parties.
Put another way, the appellant undoubtedly knew
that he had to file
his discovery affidavit by 26 June 2020. This he did not do.
No explanation was offered for this
failure. Approximately a
month later, after this period had expired and unbeknown to the first
respondent, the appellant
terminated his mandate with his then
attorneys of record.
[13]
It is common cause that the appellant was aware that his former
attorneys of record did not represent
him since his unilateral
termination of their services. This is significant because the
appellant contends that the first
respondent should have been aware
that the appellant was an unrepresented foreigner. This in the
context of the appellant
terminating his mandate with his erstwhile
attorneys and not
vice versa.
[14]
Some cause for concern is that the appellant, in his letter of
termination, refers to the actual
appointment of his new lawyers.
However, he simply failed to do this for about eleven (11) months.
The appellant now
advances that he was hoping to appoint
attorneys. This is in total contrast to the terms of his
letter, which stated that
he had already appointed a new legal
representative. As a direct result of the appellant’s
termination letter, the
appellant’s erstwhile attorneys of
record filed various notices of withdrawal.
[8]
They indicated that the ‘Embassy of Equatorial Guinea’
was the appropriate reachable address for delivery of
further court
processes on the appellant. Reference was also made explicitly
to the ‘Second Secretary’ at the
embassy as the person
through which the appellant would be reachable, as stated in the
notice of withdrawal.
[9]
The appellant’s erstwhile attorneys of record also sent an
email to no less than three (3) email addresses at the embassy
in
July 2020, attaching the notices of withdrawal as attorneys of record
and requesting (as a matter of urgency) which attorneys
would be
dealing with the litigation on behalf of the appellant. The
appellant does not engage with this at all.
[15]
Out of caution, the appellant’s erstwhile attorneys also
communicated with the ‘Director
General of Foreign Security’
of Equatorial Guinea, recording their withdrawal as attorneys of
record and again sought the
identity of the new attorneys of record
who would be acting on behalf of the appellant.
[10]
The first striking-out application was delivered to the embassy
following the reachable address provided and served on the
appellant’s erstwhile attorneys of record. It was also
sent via email to the address provided by the appellant’s
erstwhile attorneys of record, as indicated in their notice of
withdrawal as attorneys of record.
[11]
The appellant attempted vainly to explain that these latter notices
may or may not have come to his attention.
[16]
The appellant says nothing more and nothing less. This issue
bears further scrutiny as
a warrant of execution against the
appellant’s immovable properties was brought to his attention
on the same day that service
thereof was effected on the same
addresses provided by the appellant’s erstwhile attorneys of
record. Again this is
not engaged with and left unexplained by
the appellant.
[17]
The
first striking
-out
application was unopposed, and the appellant’s defence was
struck out.
[12]
The
judgment sought by the first respondent was postponed for hearing to
a date to be determined by the registrar of the
court. This
last order was similarly served at the last known address as provided
by the appellant’s erstwhile attorneys.
After that, the
registrar issued a notice of set-down, and the matter was set down
for hearing in March 2021. This latter
notice was also served
at the last known address as provided by the appellant’s
erstwhile attorneys.
[18]
In addition, an associate of the first respondent’s attorneys
sent an email confirming
service, among other things, of the notice
of set-down. Moreover, certain amendments were effected to the
first respondent’s
claims. Since no objection was received, the
appropriate amended pages were similarly served and filed at the
appellant's last
known address. This aspect is of vital
importance. An admitted attorney from the first respondent’s
offices personally
served on the delegated embassy official the
notice of intention to amend with the proposed amended pages as early
as 9 February
2021.
[13]
This attorney deposed to a service affidavit in this connection.
The delegated embassy official signed for the court
process and
indicated that she was the appellant’s personal assistant and
that she bore knowledge of the matter. The
proposed amendment
highlighted the potential liability of the appellant in the sum of R
70 200 000,00.
[14]
[19]
The trial action commenced, and a judgment was delivered in June
2021. A copy of the judgment
was similarly emailed to the last
known address provided, which eloquently summarised the narrative
detailing the sequence of events
from the initial unlawful arrest of
the first respondent, his multiple periods of detention and all the
attempts to secure the
first respondent’s release from his
unlawful incarceration.
[20]
This judgment also referenced the
s
equelae
of the first respondent’s torture and detention, including his
inability to work, resulting from the post-traumatic stress
syndrome
from which he suffers. The appellant pinned his hopes on a
single return of service by the sheriff early in the
proceedings
indicating that the sheriff affected service on the embassy at a
different address on the same street in Pretoria.
[15]
The sheriff does say that service was at the correct embassy and
correctly identifies the person upon whom he served the
court
process. I am of the view that this is a red-herring and is
opportunistic, to say the least. This, in my view,
makes no
difference at all.
Execution
[21]
The first respondent initiated execution proceedings against the
appellant’s two immovable
properties. Upon receipt
thereof, the appellant had no problems urgently instructing his
current attorneys of record. Service
was effected in
essentially the same manner as all the prior procedural notices were
served and filed. This level of alacrity
casts some serious
doubt upon the appellant’s versions about his alleged failure
to receive a host of the prior procedural
notices, including the
notice of set-down for the hearing. Curiously, the appellant’s
erstwhile attorneys were again
appointed as the local attorneys of
record and remained so appointed even for this appeal. In
addition, many emails were
sent to the embassy email addresses, which
are left unexplained by the appellant.
Consideration
[22]
A court cannot set aside or alter its final order as a general
proposition. This must be
so because once a court has
pronounced a final judgment, it becomes
functus officio
and
its authority over the subject matter ceases. Further, as a
matter of pure logic, is the principle of the finality of
litigation.
[23]
This principle of finality has been expressed as follows in our apex
court:
‘…
Like
all things in life, like the best of times and the worst of times,
litigation must, at some point, come to an end…for
the
principles of legal certainty and finality of judgments are the
oxygen without which the rule of law languishes, suffocates
and
perishes…’
[16]
[24]
No doubt, there are limited exceptions to this rule created by
legislative intervention. The
appellant has wisely abandoned
his reliance on the common law grounds for the rescission of the
judgment of the court of the first
instance. Further, leave to
appeal was only granted concerning a specific rule created by
legislative intervention. In this
connection rule 42(1)(a) indicates
as follows:
‘…
.(1)
The court may….rescind or vary:
(a)
An order or judgment erroneously sought or erroneously granted
in the absence of any party affected thereby….’
Absence
[25]
Our apex court in
Zuma
emphasised that one of the most
important factors to be taken into account in the exercise of this
residual discretion, given to
a court when dealing with an
application for rescission, was to determine whether the applicant
had demonstrated that the ‘default’
was neither wilful
nor due to gross negligence. If this cannot be demonstrated,
the court should not come to an applicant’s
assistance.
The applicant’s specific conduct in this connection bears
further scrutiny and this involves a number of
discrete enquiries.
[26]
The first enquiry is whether the applicant was ‘legally’
absent from the court when
the matter was determined.
Undoubtedly
, the appellant’s ongoing pattern of
defiance and obstruction portrays an assumption that he is somehow
above the law, a sentiment
alien to our constitutional order. The
words ‘
granted in the absence of any party affected thereby’
must, as a matter of logic, exist to protect litigants whose presence
was precluded rather than those whose absence was elective.
[27]
The
appellant did not work in ignorance
of the proceedings against him but consciously turned his back on the
proceedings. Shortly
before his erstwhile attorney's mandate
terminated, an order was granted compelling the appellant to file a
discovery affidavit.
After that, in a letter, the appellant
indicated to his erstwhile attorneys that he had found new attorneys
whom he suggested
would better defend his interests than his former
attorneys. In these circumstances, the appellant acquired a
duty of vigilance.
[28]
This duty of vigilance has been eloquently formulated as follows:
‘…
A
litigant is not entitled to sit back indefinitely without proactively
enquiring as to progress in the matter or preparation for
trial. On
the applicant's version, he made no attempt to speak to his former
attorney of record or any other attorney until
he realised for the
first time that default judgment had been granted against him…’
[17]
[29]
The appellant primarily advances that he was ignorant of the law and
that his staff at the official
embassy let him down. He also
alleges that his attorneys left him in the lurch. Further, as
far as he was aware, he
may have received the striking-out
application from his erstwhile attorneys. This is a highly
vague and ambiguous allegation.
Put in another way, this either
did or did not happen.
[30]
His erstwhile attorneys could have efficiently handled this in their
affidavit filed of record.
For
the
appellant to make out a case for rescission, the appellant
must
come forward with all the necessary affidavits from the relevant core
third parties supporting his case. By elaboration,
at one stage
and many months before the trial action, the appellant received a
‘consolidated bundle’ consisting of
a host of procedural
notices, expert notices, and expert summaries. The appellant
did nothing and was obliged to do something
or speak in the
circumstances.
[31]
Our jurisprudence dictates
that there is
no place for equivocation and the withholding of readily available
information in a rescission application. The
appellant must
play open cards with the court and reveal his full hand. The
appellant was fully aware that the relevant address
of the embassy
was stipulated in the withdrawal notices.
[32]
The position adopted by the appellant is strikingly similar to that
adopted by the main character
in the celebrated novel ‘
The
Catcher in the Rye’
.
[18]
The appellant resolves not to tell the whole story, which mixes one
up more than you were before. I say this because
the appellant
claims uncertainty as to whether the embassy officials forwarded to
him the court documents received by them from
time to time.
Surprisingly he suggests that such documents may have been so
forwarded and that he regrets that these documents
were not brought
to his attention. Thus, he was reachable at the address
provided.
[33]
These mere averments, in isolation, are entirely unsatisfactory.
Many emails and documents
were sent and delivered to the various
officials at the embassy. No explanations regarding what was
done with these emails
and the documents so delivered were ever
forthcoming. Further, no affidavits were filed in support of
the appellant regarding
how the officials at the embassy dealt with
these emails and documents.
[34]
In this regard, the court
a quo
found that the officials at
the embassy were silent on whether or not they received the
application to strike out the appellant’s
defence. They
were also silent on whether or not they received the notice of set
down delivered to the embassy. This
notwithstanding, when the
warrant of execution was brought to the appellant's attention, the
appellant elected to respond without
delay. Undoubtedly, this
was so because the appellant made a positive election not to ignore
the warrant of execution.
[35]
By elaboration, there are no facts to show that the service of the
application to strike out
and the notice of set down should be
declared not to be good service. There is abundant authority
supporting the principle
that a litigant cannot benefit from his
negligence. It was not open for the appellant to adopt a supine
position and sit
passively by while the litigation unfolded around
him for almost one (1) year.
[36]
In these circumstances, the appellant was obliged to approach the
first respondent’s attorneys
or appoint his attorneys (as he
said he had done), to establish the status of the pending litigation
against him.
[19]
It
would have been a relatively simple exercise and a crucial one
bearing in mind that two (2) of his immovable properties
were being
held under attachment by the first respondent.
[37]
In my view, the appellant’s failure to do anything about this
matter for nearly one (1)
year did not render him absent as envisaged
by the legislative intervention rule. In this connection, the
court of first
instance correctly held that the appellant:
‘…
elected
not to appoint a new legal representative nor to stay abreast of
developments in his active litigation, it can be said that
he seeks
to rely on his own conduct (or lack thereof) to plead the “absent
victim” and thus to scupper the legal process,
which in all
other respects has been carried out with the utmost degree of
regularity…’
[20]
[38]
Put in another way, the issue of presence or absence for the rule has
less to do with the actual
presence of the appellant and more with
the procedures followed to ensure the appellant’s presence.
None of the procedures
followed by the first respondent had the
effect of precluding the appellant’s presence. To the
contrary, all reasonable
steps were taken to encourage the appellant
to participate fully in the proceedings.
Erroneous
[39]
The appellant advances that the orders against him were erroneously
granted. The rescission
rule is used to rescind judgments
granted due to a mistake in the proceedings. Ultimately, an applicant
seeking to do this must
show that the judgment against which they
seek a rescission was erroneously granted because:
‘…
there
existed at the time of its issue a fact of which the Judge was
unaware, which would have precluded the granting of the judgment
and
which would have induced the Judge, if aware of it, not to grant the
judgment…’
[21]
[41]
The core complaint by the appellant is that he did not receive notice
of any court process or
document following the termination of his
erstwhile attorney’s mandate to represent him. The
appellant contends that
after this termination by him, the first
respondent was obliged to effect service on him strictly following
the court rules.
[22]
It
is necessary to consider the provisions of the court rule in this
connection as this is the only peg on which the appellant
hangs his
coat.
[42]
Rule 16(2) provides for the scenario where the mandate of an attorney
is terminated as follows:
‘…
Any
party represented by an attorney in any proceedings may at any time,
subject to the provisions of rule 40, terminate such attorney’s
authority to act, and may thereafter act in person or appoint another
attorney to act in the proceedings, whereupon such party
or the newly
appointed attorney on behalf of such party shall forthwith give
notice to the registrar and to all other parties of
the termination
of the former attorney’s authority, and if such party has
appointed a further attorney to act in the proceedings,
such party or
the newly appointed attorney on behalf of such party shall give the
name and address of the attorney so appointed…’
[43]
Of crucial importance is the fact that the appellant terminated his
erstwhile attorney’s
mandate. This is on 16 July 2020.
Pursuant to this termination, the appellant was obliged to
elect whether to act in
person or appoint another attorney.
According to the appellant, he did not, for a period of eleven
(11) months, appoint a
new attorney despite his letter, which said he
had already appointed alternative legal representation. This he
does not engage
with or explain in any significant manner.
[44]
This is precisely why the court of first instance held that the
appellant needed to set out reasons
and explanations in his founding
affidavit why he took no steps to appoint new legal representatives
following the termination
of the mandate of his erstwhile
attorneys’. The only possible explanation by the
appellant surfaces in reply where
he alleges that he ultimately chose
not to appoint new attorneys and proceeded unrepresented. This
is highly improbable and
difficult to believe as his two (2)
luxurious immovable properties remained under threat and attachment
during this time.
The appellant remained obliged to stipulate
an address in his notice of termination for service of all future
documents in the
proceedings.
[45]
Moreover, rule 16(3) specifically caters for the situation where a
party does not appoint a new
address in these circumstances as
follows:
‘…
Upon
receipt of a notice in terms of subrule (1) or (2), the address of
the attorney or of the party, as the case may be, shall
become the
address of such party for the service upon such party of all
documents in such proceedings, but any service duly effected
elsewhere before receipt of such notice shall, notwithstanding such
change, for all purposes be valid, unless the court orders
otherwise…’
[46]
Thus any service duly effected by the first respondent elsewhere
before receipt of the notice
from the appellant would be valid unless
the court ordered otherwise. This must be so. Otherwise,
a litigant could
unilaterally change the address for service without
notice to the other litigants, thereby rendering himself immune from
service
by unilaterally changing his attorney from time to time and
at a whim. The effect would be to unravel the framework created
under the rules to allow litigation to continue smoothly if a
litigant elected to switch jockeys midstream. This as a matter
of pure logic could never have been the intention for the existence
of the applicable court rule.
[47]
Notwithstanding the appellant’s termination of authority of his
erstwhile attorneys, they
correctly performed acts necessary to
prevent harm to the appellant by providing a reachable address for
the appellant.
[23]
In
their notices of withdrawal, the appellant's erstwhile attorneys
provided an address where the appellant was reachable.
I am
confident that service on the address stipulated in the withdrawal
notices constitutes service duly effected elsewhere for
three (3)
discrete reasons.
[48]
Firstly, the appellant was fully aware of the embassy address
stipulated in the withdrawal notices.
The appellant argues that
this was done without his input or instruction. This
explanation is made in isolation without
supporting evidence, even
though the appellant received the withdrawal notices. Moreover,
an error caused by the internal
affairs of the appellant's erstwhile
attorneys is not a mistake in the proceedings. Manifestly, this is
not a procedural irregularity
and cannot be a mistake.
[24]
[49]
Secondly, the embassy official cited as the contact person in the
withdrawal notices was a link
in the communication channel to the
appellant. Accordingly, service on her was a method of bringing
the other process to
the appellant’s attention. This view
is fortified by the service of the warrant of execution which was
brought to the
appellant’s attention within twenty-four (24)
hours.
[50]
Thirdly, when the judgment was granted against the appellant in
connection with the claims founded
in delict, the court was
manifestly alive to the fact that embassy officials were the extant
links in the communication channel
to the appellant. Even
though the appellant’s erstwhile mandate was terminated and
they did not withdraw of their own
volition, they nevertheless filed
notices of withdrawal, explicitly drawing the appellant’s
attention to the fact that he
was obligated to send out a notice in
terms of the court rules.
[51]
The rescission court of the first instance
found that the
appellant had disputed that he received the notices of withdrawal of
attorneys of record. It matters not, as
it was he who
terminated his attorney’s mandate; therefore, he was at all
times aware that they had ceased acting for him.
There was no
reason for the first respondent to doubt that the delivery of further
process on the embassy officials would not come
to the appellant's
attention. Thus, there was no reason to seek any further
assistance from the court.
[52]
The appellant concedes the default of his obligations under the court
rules but, in the same
breath, wishes to leverage this delinquency to
his advantage to the manifest detriment of the first respondent.
The service
of the process was not geared at initiating proceedings
as the appellant had been party to this litigation for more than five
(5)
years by the time he terminated the mandate of his erstwhile
attorneys.
[25]
[53]
The principle that an applicant for rescission may not shift the
blame to his attorney also applies
to errors arising from
non-compliance with the court rules. The general principle is
that parties cannot avail themselves
of the fact that their attorney
needs to comply with all the requirements of the rules.
[26]
[54]
In summary, the appellant contends that subsequent court papers
should have been directly served
on him from the termination date of
his erstwhile attorney's mandate by him. Having received none,
he still needed to engage
another attorney despite his unequivocal
statement in his letter of termination that he had done so.
This was not attended
to for eleven (11) months and only when the
warrant of execution was served. .
[55]
This shield is very similar to the shield raised in
Mkwananzi
.
[27]
On this score, it
was held as follows:
‘…
If
the applicant terminated his mandate of the attorney…he should
nevertheless have enquired… as to what the status
of the claim
against him was. Applicant does not, in any way, explain his
own omission not to have taken steps in the appointment
of a new
attorney. He simply accepted that papers would in future be
served upon him. I am of the opinion that the
applicant has not
succeeded in showing, on a balance of probabilities, that he was not
acting in a manner which could only be described
as totally
indifferent to the consequences of what was happening to the case
against him…’
[28]
### Discretion
Discretion
[56]
The court has the discretion not to order a rescission under the
legislative rule. As pointed
out in our apex court, the wording
of the rule postulates that a court may rescind or vary its order.
The rule is an empowering
provision, and the court’s discretion
must be exercised judicially. The court retains its inherent
jurisdiction.
[57]
One factor a court will consider in exercise of its discretion is the
prejudice accruing to the
first respondent if rescission is granted.
The granting of the rescission sought by the appellant will run
up substantial
further costs in addition to the long series of appeal
costs connected to the initial attachment to confirm jurisdiction
which
are estimated to be in excess of millions of rands.
[58]
Service is a matter within the discretion of the court. This
was made abundantly clear
in
Kemp
[29]
,
where
service was affected by serving the summons on the security guard of
a residential complex as the sheriff could not obtain
access to the
complex. The court found that although the service was not
strictly in terms of the rules, it was not automatically
void.
[59]
After discussing the difference between no service and defective
service, the court found that
even defective service could be
condoned and that, given the arrangement that the defendant lived in
a security complex where access
to his specific front door was
blocked, it was a case where defective service should be condoned.
The court noted that handing
the summons to a security guard
who is familiar with the residents is much more likely to be
effective than affixing the summons
to an outside gate or door.
In this case, most of the court processes were delivered to the
embassy official, who stated
that she was aware of the litigation
between the parties. This was good service following the rules and
our jurisprudence.
The reasoning in
Kemp
has also very recently been re-affirmed in
Sibeko.
[30]
[60]
The court adjudicating the first striking-out application and the
court adjudicating damages
in the action proceedings exercised their
discretion by condoning (consciously or unconsciously) any defect
that there may have
been in the service because they granted the
default orders. Therefore, the orders were not granted
erroneously because the
service needed to be validated.
While the first respondent does not concede that any service was
defective, even if
it was defective, it was not invalid.
[61]
It should be condoned, given the circumstances of the appellant’s
non-compliance with the
court rules. No formal condonation
application is required to condone any defects in service. Service
is at the court's
discretion, and the court has the inherent
jurisdiction to regulate its process. Whether or not the
appellant was present
at the embassy at the time of service is
irrelevant because the service was at the embassy address and on the
designated embassy
official. There is nothing suspicious in the
manner of service of the other process by the first respondent, this
after the
termination of the services of the appellant’s
erstwhile attorneys of record at the instance of the appellant.
[62]
It must be stressed that the appellant tries to cast doubt on whether
he received the first striking-out
application by saying that he may
or may not have received it. There needs to be more. There is
nothing advanced to doubt
the first respondent’s evidence, and
the first respondent’s version must stand.
[63]
Simply put,
the appellant
cannot succeed
in rescinding the extant orders because the rule is designed to
correct an ‘obviously’ wrong judgment
or order. All
the previous orders in this matter must have been correctly granted
within the meaning and scope of the rule.
This must be so,
mainly because there is no objective evidence on behalf of the
appellant to gainsay this position which
carries any probative
weight.
Costs
[64]
The appeal ‘record’ is unfortunate. It has been
incorrectly put together and
paginated with missing pages of
documents, copies of unsigned affidavits and illegible documents.
I mention but one document
that raises an issue of concern. The
appellant put up a document styled a power of attorney that consists
of one page and
is undated and unsigned.
[65]
The document purports to be a power of attorney in favour of the
appellant’s current attorneys
of record. The document is
for the appellant's current attorneys of record to approach the
Supreme Court of Appeal and the
Constitutional Court on appeal.
A better ‘copy’ was handed up to the court during the
hearing, dated June 2021.
This muddied the waters even further
for the appellant. This is because these avenues of appeal had
already been exhausted
when the appellant (on his version) approached
his current record of attorneys for the first time in June 2021 and
signed a power
of attorney. No explanation on this issue was
forthcoming, and no supplementary affidavit or further note was filed
to explain
this anomaly. This is left entirely unexplained on
the papers.
[66]
The first respondent filed a substantive application to strike the
appeal from the court roll
based on the cumulative significant
procedural defects and averred that the appeal had lapsed
accordingly. The appellant
countered this by filing a belated
substantive application seeking condonation. At the inception
of the hearing, it was agreed
that the appeal should be disposed of
without further delay, save that the first respondent reserved his
rights to address these
procedural defects under the flag of costs.
Undoubtedly, the appellant sought to postpone his day of reckoning
indefinitely
through repeated default and strategic avoidance. Once
these evasive tactics failed, he terminated the mandate of his
attorneys.
The appellant simply walked away from the lawsuit,
with his two (2) multimillion-rand properties still under attachment.
[67]
All of this is characteristic of what our courts have dubbed a
strategy increasingly employed
by litigants who, like the appellant,
have the advantage of almost unlimited wealth at their disposal to
fund their dilatory strategy
in the hope that their opponent runs out
of money.
[31]
[68]
Only once his two properties were on the verge of being sold in
execution did the appellant suddenly
reappear, appointing new
attorneys to replace those he had terminated one (1) year before to
apply for a stay of execution. The
appellant seemed to place
reliance on the alleged defects in the appellant’s erstwhile
attorney's notice of withdrawal.
In my view, this was a red
herring. I say this because the appellant terminated the
mandate of his erstwhile attorneys, and
the onus was on him and
solely on him to comply with the court's rules. The appellant
advanced a highly technical argument
that the appellant’s
erstwhile attorneys of record filed a notice of withdrawal in terms
of the old rules and not the new
rules. This argument is
difficult to follow as the only important part of the notice of
withdrawal was the last known reachable
address of the appellant that
was provided, coupled with gratuitous information given to him
regarding the appointment of a new
attorney of record.
[69]
That having been said, the core issue in connection with costs
remains the manner and form in
which this appeal ‘record’
was compiled and presented, read together with all the numerous other
defects raised in
the application to strike the appeal from the
roll. These cumulatively warrant a costs order on a punitive
scale in respect
of certain aspects of the litigation advanced by the
appellant on appeal.
Order
[70]
Thus, I would propose an order in the following terms, namely:
1.
That the application to strike the appeal from the court roll is
dismissed.
2.
The appellant shall be liable for the costs of and incidental to the
application
to strike the appeal from the court roll (including the
costs of two counsel, where so employed) on the scale between
attorney
and client, as taxed or agreed.
3.
That the application for condonation is granted.
4.
The appellant shall be liable for the costs of and incidental to the
condonation
application (including the costs of two counsel where so
employed) on the scale between attorney and client, as taxed or
agreed.
5.
That the appeal is dismissed.
6.
The appellant shall be liable for the costs of and incidental to the
appeal (including
the costs of two counsel where so employed) on the
scale between party and party, as taxed or agreed.
WILLE,
J
I
agree, and it is so ordered.
LE
GRANGE, J
THULARE,
J:
[71]
I have read the judgment of Wille J, and with respect, I am unable to
agree only with terms 5
and 6 of his proposed order, which are simply
the dismissal of the appeal and the order as to costs thereon. He has
summarized
the facts and as such I will deal with the facts in so far
it is necessary for this judgment. It is apposite to start where he
ends. In their article “
The sanctity of secrecy, the
arbitrators’ deliberations and the administration of justice”,
Frank Snyckers SC and Daniel Sive said:
“
There
is a strong policy axiom in our legal culture that the products of
the threatre of justice that carry the force of law, namely
judgments, must speak for themselves and not be seen to comprise of
elements other than what they contain.” [
Advocate
,
Volume 35, number 2, August 2022 at p. 29].
The authors refer to the
Constitutional Court judgment in
Hellen Suzman Foundation v
Judicial Service Commission
2018 (4) SA 1
(CC) at para 126 where
it was said:
“
[126]
Reasons for a decision are a crucial indicator to why a particular
decision was taken. The light they shed on the decision
far exceeds
any light flowing from the record, which may merely be reflective of
the information that was placed before the decision-maker.
The
record, in contradistinction to the reasons, does not show why, on
the facts, a particular decision was taken. Unless, of course,
a
record incorporates reasons. The significance of reasons may be
underscored with reference to a judicial process pertaining to
leave
to appeal. Ordinarily an application for leave to appeal is not
required to include the entire record of the proceedings
but a copy
of the judgment appealed against must be incorporated. This is
because such judgment must contain the full reasons for
the court's
decision. And the validity of that decision is evaluated with
reference to the judgment only. Usually it is not permissible
for a
judicial officer to augment the reasons in the judgment by pointing
to a separate document.”
[72]
In a later edition, Tembeka Ngcukaitobi SC wrote:
“
The
essence of judicial functions is to protect and promote the
Constitution. This is to be achieved by speaking forcefully, clearly
and plainly in judgments. Ordinarily – and this is not an
absolute rule – judges are not at liberty to defend or even
to
debate their decisions in public: “judges speak in court and
only in court. They are not at liberty to defend or even
debate their
decisions in public. It requires little imagination to appreciate
that the alternative would be chaotic.” Arthur’s
Constitutional Court explained the need for public confidence in the
judiciary: “In the final analysis it is the people who
have to
believe in the integrity of their judges. Without such trust, the
judiciary cannot function properly; and where the judiciary
cannot
function properly the rule of law must die.” Because of this,
in political cases, judges must provide clear, logical
reasons.
Providing reasons is also about accountability to the political
process. This means that a judge’s decision must
be accessible,
deliberative and illustrate that the arguments have been seriously
taken into consideration. Judges should not bend
their judgments, the
timing of their judgments, or their rules according to the prevailing
political climate.” [
The rule of
law in times of political crisis
,
Advocate,
Volume
35, number 3 December 2022 at p. 66].
[73]
The appellant terminated the relationship between him and his then
attorneys of record on 13
July 2020. On 20 July 2020 the attorneys
filed notices of withdrawal. When the first respondent instituted his
application for
the striking out of the appellant’s defences
and served that application on the erstwhile attorney, he was simply
kicking
dust to becloud the manner of service. The first respondent
was legally represented and his representatives ought to have been
aware that the appellant’s erstwhile attorneys were neither
entitled nor obliged to accept service of any document in the
case
and that such service on the attorneys would not be valid and
effectual service on the appeIlant [
Pugin v Pugin
1963 (1) SA
791
(W) at 793H;
Barclays Bank D.C.O. v Van Niekerk
1965 (2)
SA 78
(O) at 78H-79A]. I am not aware of any logical explanation for
this step, other than to becloud the question of service,
deliberately,
designed to acquire an advantage to which the first
respondent is not entitled. He was busy with nothing.
[74]
The further dust into the service question is kicked by the sheriff’s
return of service on the striking
application before Dolamo J. The
relevant parts of the return of service read as follows:
“
IT
IS HEREBY CERTIFIED:
That on 27 July 2020 at
14H00 at MARIA DEL PILAR SOLSONA HOMBRIA SECOND SECRETARY, EMBASSY OF
EQUITORIAL GUINES, 3[…] F[…]
STREET, C[…]
PRETORIA GAUTENG being the place of employment of the Respondent a
copy of the Notice of Motion Affidavit –Amish
Chandrakant Kika,
Annexure “A-J” was served upon MRS UNCHANA ABESO
(MANAGER), after the original document was displayed
and the nature
of the contents thereof was explained to her. MRS ABESO apparently
not less than sixteen years of age and apparently
in authority at the
Respondent’s place of employment, accepted service in the
temporary absence of the Respondent. Rule 4(1)(a)(iii).”
It is common cause that
the address of the Embassy of Equitorial Guinea is at 4[…]
F[…] Street, C[…], Pretoria.
It is further common cause
that the embassy is not the appellant’s place of employment.
This return, without more, is problematic
to qualify as duly effected
service on the appellant.
[75]
I will just highlight one material problem each with the order of
Dolamo, J and judgment of Lekhuleni,
J respectively. An elementary
check on the internet, publicly accessible, showed that 3[…]
F[…] Street, C[…],
Pretoria is a private house, a
residential dwelling in the same street and not far from 4[…]
F[…] Street, C[…],
Pretoria which is the address of the
Embassy of Equatorial Guinea. If Dolamo J condoned service at this
private dwelling as service
on the appellant, he did not have a right
to remain silent under the circumstances. He had a reputational duty
to himself and a
Constitutional duty to other Judges and the Republic
of South Africa, on whose behalf he spoke as an arm of the State, the
Judiciary,
to articulate his reasons for such a conclusion. On the
other hand, on 7 January 2021 the first respondent caused the
Registrar
of the High Court to issue a notice titled: “NOTICE
OF SET DOWN (EXCEPTION)” for Monday 8 March 2021 at 10H00.
Nothing
on this notice alerts anybody that this is a set down for the
hearing of the main action. The evidence before us showed that after
service on the erstwhile attorneys of this notice, they were taken
aback about a set down of an exception and actually enquired
from the
first respondent’s attorneys whether there was an exception in
the matter, and the answer was in the negative. If
these facts were
before now Lekhuleni J, when he considered the main action, and he
had found that irrespective of these facts,
this was a proper notice
of set down of the hearing of the main action, he had a duty to
speak, under the circumstances, and to
say so publicly in his
judgment.
[76]
Against this background, I am not at liberty to attribute any
discretion exercised by both Dolamo
J and now Lekhuleni J, as regards
any defects in the service of process, or their condonation thereof.
The order of Dolamo J does
not have any reasons. The judgment of
Lekhuleni J is not deliberative and illustrative that the defects in
the service were placed
before him for judicial consideration. The
records and both the order of Dolamo J and the judgment of Lekhuleni
J does not leave
me with the impression that the two judges
individually deliberated upon and considered service of process and
responded thereto.
I am unable to share in the conclusion that they
condoned any defects on the service of the processes before them. If
they did,
in my view, they would have said so.
[77]
The issue that then remains on the facts, in my view, is whether,
service at the embassy constituted
“duly effected service
elsewhere” on the appellant and was “valid, unless the
court ordered otherwise.”
The two questions that now need to be
answered is whether there was a valid service duly effected
elsewhere, and whether there
are reasons for the court to order
otherwise.
The Concise Oxford English Dictionary,
Tenth
Edition, Revised, Edited by Judy Pearsall, 2002 (the Dictionary)
defines the word “duly” as an adverb which means
“in
accordance with what is required or appropriate or as might be
expected”.
[78]
I have carefully considered Rule 16 of the Uniform Rules of Court,
and I am unable to trace any
authority for the address provided by
the attorney whose authority to act was terminated, or who ceases to
act for a party, to
become the address of the former client for the
service upon such former client, of all documents in such
proceedings. The provision
of the last known address or in the
terminology employed in this matter, where the former client was
reachable, is generally a
practice out of courtesy to assist the
other party with the contact details of an erstwhile client. Contrary
to Slingers J and
Wille J, I do not regard the provision of a former
client’s contact details by an erstwhile attorney as sufficient
to impute
any adversity for the erstwhile client. I regard this as a
noble practice in law necessary for collegiality, simplicity,
accountability
and progressive responsiveness far removed from a
client’s instructions. It has to do with the integrity of the
erstwhile
attorney and the decorum of court litigation. I am unable
to support a proposition that the contact details so given must
somehow
be elevated to an address chosen by the erstwhile client for
service of all documents in court proceedings on such erstwhile
client.
[79]
The applicable portion of the appellant’s erstwhile attorneys’
notice of withdrawal
reads:
“
KINDLY
TAKE NOTICE FURTHER that the appellant is reachable through MS MARIA
DEL PILAR SOLSONA HOMBRIA, SECOND SECRETARY, EMBASSY
OF EQUITORIAL
GUINEA, PRETORIA, 4[…] F[…] STREET, C[…],
PRETORIA.”
Amongst others
definitions, the word ‘reach” is defined as to “make
contact with”. “Reachable”
is indicated as an
adjective and derivative. None of the definitions come closer to what
the first respondent sought the word “reachable”
to mean,
to wit, the appellant’s appointed address for the service upon
appellant of all documents in such proceedings. In
my view, to
suggest that there could be an inference that this was an address
given by the appellant for purposes of service on
him of all
documents in the proceedings, is simply to attempt to stretch the
facility of the word “reachable”. Nothing
suggests that
the provision of the address where he was “reachable” was
his instructions. I have already indicated
why it was noble for the
erstwhile attorneys to demonstrate fine personal qualities and high
moral principles by providing the
address out of own volition.
Nothing that the erstwhile attorney said, can lead anyone, let alone
a court, to conclude that this
was the appellant’s appointed
address for service.
[80]
I do not understand Rule 16(3), read with Rule 16(1) and 16(2) to
mean anything more than that
before receipt of notice, in particular
of the address of the new attorney or of such former client, the
appellant in this instance,
for the service on appellant of all
documents in the applications, any service on him in accordance with
the rules was valid, unless
the court ordered otherwise. This view is
fortified by the provisions of Rule 16(4)(b) which reads:
“
16
Representation of parties
(4)(b) The party formerly
represented must within 10 days after notice of withdrawal notify the
registrar and all other parties
of a new address for service as
contemplated in sub-rule (2) whereafter all subsequent documents in
the proceedings for service
on such party shall be served on such
party in accordance with the rules relating to service: Provided that
the party whose attorney
has withdrawn and who has failed to provide
an address within the said period of 10 days shall be liable for the
payment of the
costs occasioned by subsequent service on such party
in terms of the rules relating to service, unless the court orders
otherwise.”
For the service to be
valid as envisaged in in Rule 16(3), it should be duly effectively
served in accordance with the rules. I
understand the last part of
Rule 16(3) to make provision for circumstances where the service was
in accordance with the rules,
but the facts showed that it was not
effective in that it clearly did not come to the knowledge of the
party, and in such circumstances
for the court to order otherwise
than that the service was valid.
[81]
I am not inclined to rely on the comments of Gamble J in para 103 of
Scholtz v Merryweather
2014 (6) SA 90
(WCC) in the context
that Wille J does, for the simple reason that in that matter,
Merryweather
did what the first respondent did not do in this
matter, which is to approach the court for an order for substituted
service on
Scholtz.
The high water-mark of the distinction on
the facts was that
Scholtz
knew, whilst in the United Kingdom,
that the summons claiming R15,5 million from him had been served on
his father in Constantia,
Cape Town, following a court authorized
service at the Constantia address and publication in a newspaper in
the United Kingdom.
It is this basic distinction, including the
nothingness of the service on the erstwhile attorney and at a
different address than
the embassy address, which renders me unable
to agree with the finding that none of the procedures followed by the
first respondent
had the effect of precluding the appellant’s
absence and that he took all reasonable steps to encourage the
appellant to
participate in the proceedings.
[82]
The following does not constitute reasonable steps to effectively
serve, in my view:
(a) Serving process on an
attorney who no longer has the authority to represent the appellant;
(b) Serving a process at
a private residence whose connection to the appellant is unknown save
that it is in the same street as
the address of the embassy of the
appellant’s country;
(c), Serving a notice of
exception and then arguing the main action on the day of set down,
and
(d) Unilaterally electing
an address in South Africa without the authority of the court whilst
aware that where you serve, the appellant
is not ordinarily present
and is in a foreign country.
In my view, these actions
do not demonstrate an honest and earnest attempt to make another
aware of the proceedings against them.
[83]
In
Steinberg v Cosmopolitan National Bank of Chicago
1973 (3)
SA 885
(RA) at 892C it was said:
“
It
is a cornerstone of our legal system that a person is entitled to
notice of legal proceedings instituted against him.”
I am unable to share in
the distinction that Wille J seeks to draw on the nature of the
process. The service was indeed not geared
at initiating proceedings.
It was respectively to strike out his defence, and for default
judgment against him. These are court
proceedings with serious
consequences.
[84]
I am unable to follow the reasoning of Wille J’ on the reliance
on
Tshabalala and Another v Peer
1979 (4) SA 27
(T). For the
sake of completion I will set out my understanding. Unlike in the
present matter, Geffen and Belnick had not served
a notice of
withdrawal as attorneys of record at the time of the service of the
set down in the
Tshabalala
matter, although they had informed
the other side about such withdrawal. Furthermore, although there had
not been any formal substitution
of attorneys, the other side engaged
the attorneys Oosthuizen who were pointed out by communication as the
new attorneys, as well
as Geffen and Belnick in ensuring that they
were aware of the set down. The two sets of attorneys had deposed to
affidavits, not
in support of the former client, but in favour of the
other side relating to the party’s knowledge of the
proceedings. This
is a material distinction with this matter. Geffen
and Belnick had confirmed that they had withdrawn as attorneys for
the applicants
and that they had learnt that Oosthuizen attorneys
were acting for the applicants. Oosthuizen attorneys in their
affidavit averred
that they had notified,
inter alia,
the
applicant who was the father to the other applicant, that the action
was due to be heard on 10 April 1978. The father defendant
undertook
to go into the matter but did nothing. He was found to be
grossly-negligent about the whole matter. The son, having chosen
to
leave his father in charge of the litigation, it was found, must
suffer the consequences of his father’s negligence.
[85]
It is against this background that I understood when the majority
said at p. 30E-F:
“
I
cannot however accept the submission that the order of MARGO J was
“erroneously sought or erroneously granted.” The
plaintiff was fully within his rights in pressing for judgment at the
hearing. He had done all that the procedural Rules required
of him.
Even if the defendants had changed their attorneys (a matter on which
I share the doubts entertained by KRIEGLER AJ), plaintiff
was
entitled to adopt the attitude that, until there was compliance with
Rule 16, service of the notice of trial on Geffen and
Belnick was
adequate.”
In the matter before us,
there is no evidence from anyone who the first respondent
unilaterally elected to serve the process on,
which service was
outside the regulation of the Uniform Rules of Court on the
Vice-President of the Republic of Equitorial Guinea
who was
ordinarily resident in Malabo, Equitorial Guinea. There is no basis
on which it can be found that the appellant had been
aware of the
application and the trial date that had been issued against him,
respectively, before the respective judgments were
granted. In my
view there had not been service of the application and the trial
dates on the appellant and the two judgments respectively
should not
have been granted against him and consequently the judgments were
erroneously granted in the absence of the appellant
and both are
liable to be set aside [
Fraind v Nothmann
1991 (3) SA 837
(WLD) at 839H.
[86]
The comments of Van Rooyen AJ in
Mkhwanazi and Another v Manstha
and Another
[2003] 3 All SA 222
(T) are not on point. This is
simply because especially around and in para [25] the Judge was
dealing with the decision as to whether
a reasonable explanation for
the default was given. This question, in my view, only arises if it
is shown that there was a service
duly effected. In
Mkhwanazi
there was some doubt whether the attorney’s mandate was
terminated. There is no such doubt in the matter before us. The
cornerstone
of our legal system that a person is entitled to notice
of legal proceedings instituted against him, is unlike a golden star
sticker
on the forehead at a nursery school. It is not reserved for
good behaviour in litigation. There is no reason in this case to
conclude
that although the service was not in accordance with the
Rules, it was nevertheless effective. This is so because the
appellant
did not receive the application or the notice of set down
for trial, as a result of which he suffered prejudice in that
judgments
were granted against him striking out his defence and
denying him the opportunity to be heard before he was condemned.
[87]
Insofar as the substantive law is concerned, the requirement is that
a person against whom legal
proceedings are initiated should receive
notice of that fact. If the person has knowledge of the process,
albeit not in terms of
the rules, there has been proper service. The
court should take into account the true intention of the fairness of
the rules of
court and the realities of the situation [
Protea
Assurance Co Ltd v Vinger
1970 (4) SA 663
(O);
Wiehahn
Konstruksie Toerustingmaatskappy (Edms) Bpk v Potgieter
1974 (3)
SA 191
(T);
Northern Assurance Co Ltd v Somdaka
1960 (1) SA
588
(A) at 595. The effectiveness issue, that is, knowledge of the
process, is the central underlying purpose of service [
Investec
Property Fund Limited v Viker X (Pty) Limited,
the unreported
judgment of the South Gauteng High Court, Case No. 2016/07492 dated
10 May 2016 at paras 7-19]. Failure to comply
with the rules should
not necessarily be visited with nullity. The court has a discretion
to condone a breach of the Rules [
Northern Assurance Co Ltd v
Somdaka
1960 (1) SA 588
(A) at 594H-595B]. In this case, where
the service was not effective, I am unable to support condonation of
the breach of the Rules.
[88]
In advancing a principle, the Setswana commentator for Motsweding FM
and SABC TV Sport, the late
Cebo Manyaapelo, used to say: “There
is no ‘therefore’ in soccer.” The principle is
simply that whether
this was between the same teams or different
teams, the past games were not a measure for what would happen in the
next game between
two teams in a soccer match. In further exposition
of the principle, in judicial decision-making, different disciplines
may lead
to different outcomes, the context and the facts being the
relevant factors. It is not inconsistency for a Judge to agree with a
mathematician when they say 1 plus 1 is 2 in mathematics, and the
next day agree with a theologian when they say 1 plus 1 is 1
in a
marriage. 1 plus 1 is not always 2 as judgment is not a scientific
theorem in the natural law. This principle, that what happened
one
day does not therefore become a conclusion that it is what will
happen the next day, even within the same parties on the same
subject-matter, is in my view a rule within the principle that each
case is judged on its own merits.
[89]
The appellant under oath said that the sheriff attended to his house
in Clifton on 23 June 2021
and provided his caretaker with a copy of
the writ which directed the sheriff to attach, remove and take into
execution the appellant’s
movable property to realise by public
auction the sum of R39 882 000-00. Ms Benbeche took photographs of
the writ and sent them
to Ms Hombria who is s secretary employed at
the Embassy of Equitorial Guinea in Pretoria at the address of the
Embassy. Ms Hombria
forwarded the photographs of the writ to Mr Medja
in Equitorial Guinea, who was the Director-General of Foreign
Security and reported
to the Minister in the Presidency, Mr
Nchuchuma. Mr Medja alerted Mr Nchuchuma to the writ and Nchuchuma
brought the writ to the
attention of the appellant who then engaged
his new attorneys of record on 24 June 2024. It was subsequent to the
investigation
by the current attorneys that the appellant became
aware of the order by Dolamo J and Lekhuleni J and the reasons for
the writ.
Hombria and Medja deposed to confirmatory affidavits of his
evidence.
[90]
The first respondent’s answering affidavit, does nothing more
than to suggest that the
processes were served at the Embassy of
Equitorial Guinea. From that point onwards, the respondent present
arguments and opinions,
and not facts which may lead me to conclude
that the appellant knew about the proceedings against him, and find
that there was
effective service. It is the first respondent’s
case that the appellant knew about the proceedings against him. I
struggle
to understand how it becomes the duty of the appellant to
set out the trail of the processes once they were sent to the
Embassy,
which he did not appoint as his address for service of
process upon him. The first respondent elected to serve the process
not
in accordance with the Rules where the assistance of the court
was one avenue and resource available. With open eyes he elected
to
throw his processes against a private person within a government
system where some decisions are taken by State officials and
others
by elected representatives.
[91]
It is a fact of life that government systems have excessively
complicated administrative procedures
which include administrative,
social impact, legal and political considerations. Hombria has no
overall authority of these realities.
The first respondent elected to
throw his processes into that complex and it was up to him to show
the thread of his proceedings
to the knowledge of the appellant, not
up to the door of the Embassy, but through the complexity of
governance up to the appellant.
I am unable, like my sister Slingers
J in the court
a quo
and Wille J in this appeal, to shift the
obligation through the excessively complicated administrative
procedures of the service
of the process to the appellant. I am
unable to use what happened with the writ to conclude that it
happened with the other processes,
without any factual basis.
[91]
With respect, in my view, except a strong suspicion, there are no
facts on the processes trail,
after the delivery of the processes at
the Embassy, on the basis of which Slingers J could conclude that the
appellant probably
received the processes. What I can see, is the
entry point through the Embassy and I am unable to follow the path,
through the
Equitorial Guinea’s government administrative maze,
leading up to the appellant for me to conclude that he knew of the
processes.
The object of service is knowledge. From the Embassy to
the appellant, as regards the processes, I am in what Bapedi call
“
Kua Sethokgeng
”. The English equivalence may be
“a pathless wilderness”.
[92]
As regards costs my approach would be that the appellant did not
provide an address as required
by the Rules. The first respondent did
not effectively serve in accordance with the Rules. For these reasons
I would make the following
order:
The appeal is upheld.
No
cost order is made in respect of the appeal.
THULARE,
J
[1]
At ‘Black Beach’ prison in Malabo.
[2]
A
property in Clifton on the Atlantic Seaboard and in Bishop’s
Court in the Southern Suburbs.
[3]
For
the purposes of convenience this will be referred to as the second
striking out application.
[4]
Uniform Court Rule 42(1)(a).
[5]
The immovable property situated in Clifton on the
Atlantic Seaboard.
[6]
The
first striking-out application.
[7]
The
order to compel discovery was granted on 19 June 2020.
[8]
This
on 23 July 2020.
[9]
The
notice of withdrawal listed the physical address to be 4[…]
F[…] Street, C[…], Pretoria.
[10]
Again,
this is never dealt with or engaged with by the appellant.
[11]
This
is also not engaged with by the appellant.
[12]
This was served on the correct reachable address, on the appellant’s
erstwhile attorneys of record and via email.
[13]
This
was about four (4) months prior to the trial action.
[14]
The
record contained no less than four (4) service affidavits of a
similar nature deposed to by officers of the court.
[15]
The
sheriff went to 3[…] F[…] Street, C[…],
Pretoria and served on the Secretary of the identified Embassy.
[16]
Zuma
v The Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry Into
Allegations of State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public
Sector Including Organs of State and Others
[2021] ZACC 28.
(“
Zuma”
).
[17]
Pikwane
Diamonds (Pty) Ltd v Anro Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd
2019
JDR 1861 (GP) at para [38].
[18]
J
D Salinger
,
1951.
[19]
Scholtz
and another v Merryweather and others
2014 (6) SA 90
(WCC) at para [103].
[20]
The judgment of Judge Slingers at para [21].
[21]
Selota
Attorneys and Another v ONR and Others
[2020] 4 All SA 569
(GJ) (21 August 2020), at para [7].
[22]
This
in terms of court rule 4 and/or rule 5 and/or by edictal citation.
[23]
Unidroit
Principles of International Commercial Contracts (Article 2.2.10).
[24]
Van
Heerden v Bronkhorst
2020 JDR 2363 (SCA) at para [18].
[25]
Tshabalala
and Another v Peer
1979 (4) SA 27 (T)
[26]
De
Wet and Others v Western Bank Ltd
1979 (2) SA 1031
(A) (1038D-H)
[27]
Mkwananzi
and Another v Manstha and Another
[2003] 3 All SA 222 (T).
[28]
Mkwananzi
and Another v Manstha and Another
[2003] 3 All SA 222
(T) at para [25].
[29]
Kemp
v Knoesen
[2007]
JOL 19194 (T).
## [30]Sibeko
vs Shackleton Credit Management (Pty)Ltd and Another(3664/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1036 (21 December 2022).
[30]
Sibeko
vs Shackleton Credit Management (Pty)Ltd and Another
(3664/2015) [2022] ZAGPJHC 1036 (21 December 2022).
##
[31]
The
‘Stalingrad’ strategy.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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