Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 98South Africa
Julius v Namaqua Wines (Pty) Ltd and Another (5399 / 2012) [2023] ZAWCHC 98 (9 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
9 May 2023
Headnotes
no instructions from Vredendal Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Julius v Namaqua Wines (Pty) Ltd and Another (5399 / 2012) [2023] ZAWCHC 98 (9 May 2023)
Julius v Namaqua Wines (Pty) Ltd and Another (5399 / 2012) [2023] ZAWCHC 98 (9 May 2023)
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sino date 9 May 2023
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Summons – Amendment – Claim
for damages arising out of forklift accident –
Incorrect
company cited – Companies related and operated from same
address – Prejudicial effect of amendment
such as running of
prescription – Absence of notice to correct company –
Judgment in application to amend summons
to stand over –
Copy of papers to be served on correct company which is to be
afforded opportunity to consent to be
bound – Uniform Rule
28(4).
Republic of South
Africa
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No. 5399 / 2012
Before: The Hon. Mr
Justice Binns-Ward
Date of hearing: 8
May 2023
Date of judgment: 9 May
2023
In the matter between:
AUBREY
SAMUEL JULIUS
Plaintiff
/ Applicant
and
NAMAQUA
WINES (PTY) LTD
First
Defendant
NAMAQUA
WINES LTD
Second
Defendant / Respondent
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD J:
[1]
In this matter the plaintiff, in an action in
which he claims compensation for bodily injuries allegedly sustained
when he was run
down by a forklift, cited Namaqua Wines Ltd as the
second defendant. He alleged that the second defendant, as the
employer
of the forklift driver, was vicariously liable for the
consequences of the negligence of its employee. It is common
ground
that the forklift driver’s employer was Vredendal
Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd, not Namaqua Wines Ltd (which has since changed
its
name to Namaqua Wines (RF) (Pty) Ltd).
[2]
Vredendal Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd is a subsidiary of
Namaqua Wines Ltd. Service of the summons was effected by the
deputy sheriff
on a certain Mr Arniel du Toit at 17 Sirkel Road,
Vredendal, which is the registered address of both Namaqua Wines Ltd
and Vredendal
Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd. Mr du Toit is employed by
Namaqua Wines Ltd in the capacity of group financial manager.
[3]
Namaqua Wines Ltd entered appearance to defendant
the action, and in due course delivered a plea, dated 6 June 2012.
The plea
raised the special defence of misjoinder on the grounds that
the company was not the employer of the forklift driver. It
also pleaded over, however, in regard to the plaintiff’s
allegations of negligence on the part of the forklift driver. The
plea did not state who the driver’s employer was.
[4]
At the time of the exchange of the aforementioned
pleadings, the plaintiff was represented by a different attorney.
His then
legal representative appears to have overlooked, or done
nothing about, the indication in the plea that Namaqua Wines was not
the
forklift driver’s employer. It would appear that the
issue only enjoyed attention several years later (in 2021) when
the
plaintiff’s current legal representatives were pointed to it at
a pretrial meeting with the legal representatives of
Namaqua Wines
Ltd. Namaqua Wines Ltd also made discovery, in terms of Uniform
Rule 35, of a payslip that identified Vredendal
Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd
as the driver’s employer.
[5]
The plaintiff contends that notwithstanding that
Namaqua Wines Ltd was named in the summons as the second defendant,
it was evident
ex facie
the
content of the pleading that the debtor was the forklift driver’s
employer, and that the citation of a related company
that was not the
employer was an obvious misdescription. He sought to amend the
summons by the deletion therein of the name
of Namaqua Wines Ltd as
the second defendant and its replacement with the name Vredendal
Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd.
[6]
Notice of the plaintiff’s intention to amend
was given, in terms of Uniform Rule 28, to the attorneys of record of
Namaqua
Wines Ltd. There was no notice to Vredendal Wynkelders
(Pty) Ltd. Namaqua Wines Ltd objected to the proposed
amendment.
The plaintiff consequently applied to court, in
terms of rule 28(4), for leave to amend the summons in the respect
mentioned.
Notice of the application was served on the
attorneys of record for Namaqua Wines Ltd. Notice was not given
to Vredendal
Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd.
[7]
The application was predicated, as it had to be in
the circumstances, on the assertion by the plaintiff that
notwithstanding the
incorrect naming of Namaqua Wines Ltd as the
second defendant, the summons had in fact been served on a person
entitled to accept
service on behalf of the actual debtor, Vredendal
Wynkelders, who, so it was alleged, must have appreciated from the
content thereof
that the process was intended for the latter company,
not Namaqua Wines Ltd.
[8]
When the application was called, Mr
MacWilliam
SC appeared as counsel for Namaqua Wines Ltd.
He made it plain that he held no instructions from Vredendal
Wynkelders (Pty)
Ltd.
[9]
I raised with counsel at the commencement whether
the application could validly be adjudicated in the absence of notice
to Vredendal
Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd. I pointed out that there was
nothing before the court to indicate that Vredendal Wynkelders was
aware
of the application. It seemed to me that that company had
a vital legal interest in the proceedings. This was because
if
the relief sought by the plaintiff were granted, its inherent effect
would be tantamount to a declaration that, notwithstanding
appearances to the contrary, that company, not Namaqua Wines Ltd, had
been joined from the outset as the second defendant in the
action.
It appeared to me that the failure to join Vredendal Wynkelders (Pty)
Ltd as a respondent in the application exemplified
a classic case of
non-joinder.
[10]
Counsel on both sides appeared to be initially
resistant to the proposition. Mr
van
der Merwe
SC, who appeared, together
with Ms
van Wyk
,
for the plaintiff-applicant, on mature consideration changed his
mind, and cited the comparable matter of
Mutsi
v Santam Versekeringsmaatskappy Bpk en ’n Ander
1963
(3) SA 11
(O), on which he also relied to support his submissions on
the merits of the application, as an illustration of a case in which
both the allegedly erroneously cited party and the actual debtor were
joined as respondents in the application to amend the summons
by
correcting the alleged misdescription.
[11]
Mr
MacWilliam
,
however, persisted in his stance that joinder of Vredendal Wynkelders
(Pty) Ltd was unnecessary. As I understood his argument,
it was
that the application to amend was lacking in merit because it failed
to establish that the summons had been served on Vredendal
Wynkelders
(Pty) Ltd, and that in the circumstances no purpose would be served
by the delay entailed in the postponement that would
be necessary in
order for that company to be given notice of the application.
The argument was misplaced, in my judgment.
[12]
The test for joinder has nothing to do with the
eventual result of the case. It is determined rather by the
potential effect
of the relief that is sought in the case.
Joinder of a party is necessary (not optional) if judgment in the
matter could,
not would, bear prejudicially on an issue in which that
party has a direct legal interest.
[13]
There is no doubting that were the application to
amend granted, the result would give rise to a situation in which
Vredendal Wynkelders
(Pty) Ltd has a direct legal interest. It
would imply that the company has been from the outset a party to the
action, notwithstanding
the lack of any indication thus far by the
company that it is, or has ever been, cognisant of the fact.
The potentially prejudicial
effect of such an outcome is obvious.
It would imply that the running of prescription in respect of the
plaintiff’s
claim against Vredendal Wynkelders had been
interrupted on 26 March 2012 when Mr du Toit accepted service of a
summons made out
in the name of a different company.
[14]
It is clear from the judgment of the late
Appellate Division in
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949
(3) SA 637
(A) that non-joinder can be raised at any stage, even on
appeal, and that the court has a duty to do so
mero
motu
where the parties themselves have
failed to recognise it as a pertinent issue. In
Amalgamated
Engineering
, where the court itself
raised the issue when that matter reached it on appeal, and where,
the matter having been fully argued,
the court found itself in a
similar situation to that in which this court finds itself in the
current matter, Fagan AJA, writing
for a unanimous bench, dealt
with it as follows (at p.663):
‘
It
is clear to me that the Council should have been cited as a party in
the first instance. The difficulty is to know what to do
now that the
matter has reached the appeal stage. One wishes to avoid, as far as
it may be at all possible, the necessity of causing
the parties
unnecessary trouble, expense and delay. The furthest, however. that I
think we are able to go to meet the parties is
to let the final
judgment in this matter stand over so as to give them an opportunity
of ascertaining from the Council whether
it is prepared to file with
this Court, through its own attorneys, a consent to be bound by our
judgment notwithstanding the fact
that it has not been cited as a
party. If such consent is filed, we shall give final judgment without
hearing further argument,
as the merits of the matter have been fully
argued before us by counsel for the two parties who are appearing.
If, however, no
such consent is filed within two months of the
delivery of this interim judgment, or if at any time before the
expiry of the two
months the appellant's attorneys intimate to the
Registrar of the Court that no such consent can be obtained, we shall
give directions
as to the course the proceedings will then have to
take
.’
[15]
It seems to me that equivalent instructions are
called for in the current matter. An order will therefore issue
in the following
terms:
1.
Judgment in the plaintiff’s application to
amend the summons shall stand over, subject to, and pending execution
of, the further
provisions of this order.
2.
The plaintiff is directed through the offices of
the Sheriff of the Court to serve a copy of the papers in the
application, including
the heads of argument, together with a copy of
this order, on the registered office of Vredendal Wynkelders (Pty)
Ltd within 10
days of the date of this order.
3.
Vredendal Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd is afforded an
opportunity to deliver notice that it consents to be bound by the
judgment of this
court in the plaintiff’s application to amend
the summons in case no. 5399/2012 notwithstanding that it has not yet
formally
been joined as a party in that application.
4.
Vredendal Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd is called upon, if
so advised, within 10 days of the service upon it of this order, to
deliver such
notice of consent by filing the original with the
registrar of this Court (per Ms Ely-Hanslo, registrar to Mr Justice
Binns-Ward)
and serving a copy thereof on the plaintiff’s
attorneys of record, Scheibert & Associates Incorporated, Suite
401, 4
th
Floor,
42 Keerom Street, Cape Town and the attorneys acting for Namaqua
Wines (RF) (Pty) Ltd, Spamer Triebel Incorporated c/o Norman
Wink &
Stephens, 2
nd
Floor,
The Chambers, 50 Keerom Street, Cape Town.
5.
Leave is granted for the notice of consent to be
delivered by email, in lieu of physical delivery, to the following
email addresses:
***@judiciary.org.za
(registrar to Mr Justice Binns-Ward)
***@scheibert.com
(plaintiff’s attorney)
***@spamertriebel.co.za
(Namaqua Wines (RF) (Pty) Ltd’s attorney).
6.
If no such notice of consent is delivered by
Vredendal Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd within the period stated in paragraph
4 of this order,
the plaintiff and/or Namaqua Wines (RF) (Pty) Ltd
are granted leave to request the presiding judge, in writing, within
5 days of
the expiry of the period stated in paragraph 4, for
directions as to the course the proceedings will then have to take.
7.
If no notice of consent is delivered by Vredendal
Wynkelders (Pty) Ltd and no approach for directions, as contemplated
in terms
of paragraph 6 of this order, is made, the application for
leave to amend the summons will thereupon be deemed to be struck from
the roll.
A.G. BINNS-WARD
Judge of the High
Court
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