Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 154South Africa
Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin and Others v Jenkins and Others (12339/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 154 (19 June 2023)
Headnotes
an appeal against that judgment. The first respondent (Mr Jenkins) applies for leave to appeal the rescission order. [2] The rescission was granted on an unopposed basis after the court had refused permission for the late filing of Mr Jenkins' answering affidavit. The application for leave to appeal is directed against that refusal. It is necessary to deal in some detail with the reasons for the refusal. [3] On 18 March 2022, Goliath DJP granted the following order:
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAWCHC 154
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin and Others v Jenkins and Others (12339/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 154 (19 June 2023)
Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin and Others v Jenkins and Others (12339/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 154 (19 June 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2023_154.html
sino date 19 June 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
Number: 12339/2022
In
the matter between:
Goringhaicona
Khoi Khoin
First
Applicant
Regent
Edmen Michael Hansen
Second
Applicant
Chief
Shiraatz Mohammed
Third
Applicant
Peter
Ludolph
Fourth
Applicant
And
Tauriq
Jenkins
First
Respondent
Delroque
Dextry Arendse
Second
Respondent
Observatory
Civic Association
Third
Respondent
The
Trustees for the time being of the
Fourth
Respondent
Liesbeek
Leisure Properties Trust
Heritage
Western Cape
Fifth
Respondent
City
of Cape Town
Sixth
Respondent
The
Director: Development Management
Seventh
Respondent
(Region
1), Local Government,
Environmental
Affairs & Development
Planning,
Western Cape Provincial Government
The
Minister for Local Government,
Eighth
Respondent
Environmental
Affairs & Development
Planning,
Western Cape Provincial Government
Chairperson
of the Municipal Planning
Nineth
Respondent
Tribunal
of the City of Cape Town
Executive
Mayor, City of Cape Town
Tenth
Respondent
Western
Cape First Nations Collective
Eleventh
Respondent
In
re:
Case
Number: 12994/2021
The
matter between:
Observatory
Civic Association and Another
First
Applicant
And
The
Trustees for the time being of the
First
Respondent
Liesbeeck
Leisure Properties Trust
and
Seven Others
JUDGMENT
ELECTRONICALLY DELIVERED
19
JUNE 2023
Baartman,
J (Slingers and Lekhuleni JJ concurring)
[1] On
8 November 2022, this court rescinded the judgment of Goliath DJP,
dated 18 March 2022 under case
number 12994/2021; simultaneously, we
upheld an appeal against that judgment. The first respondent
(Mr
Jenkins)
applies for leave to appeal the rescission order.
[2] The
rescission was granted on an unopposed basis after the court had
refused permission for the late
filing of Mr Jenkins' answering
affidavit. The application for leave to appeal is directed against
that refusal. It is necessary
to deal in some detail with the reasons
for the refusal.
[3] On
18 March 2022, Goliath DJP granted the following order:
'145.1 First Respondent
is interdicted from undertaking any further construction, earthworks,
or other works on erf 151832, Observatory,
Western Cape to implement
the River Club development as authorised by the environmental
authorisation issued in terms of the
National Environmental
Management Act, 107 of 1998
on 22 February 2021 and various
development permissions issued in terms of the City of Cape Town's
Municipal Planning By-Law, 2015
pending:
Conclusion of meaningful
engagement and consultation with all affected First Nations Peoples
as envisaged in the interim and final
comments of HWC
.
The final determination
of the review proceedings in Part B.
145.2 The three
applications to strike are dismissed.
145.3 There shall be no
order as to costs in the striking-out applications.
[4] The
above interdict halted the construction of the River Club
development. The 18 March 2022 judgment
and the 8 November 2022
judgment dealt extensively with the development; I do not repeat it.
The appeal was directed at lifting
the ban on the construction
pending the review envisaged in Part B of those proceedings. The
Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin, the first
applicant in the rescission
application, was the first applicant in the interdict application and
at the time, Mr Jenkins was the
driving force behind the first
applicant.
[5] In
the rescission application, the Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin distanced
itself from those opposed
to the development and denied that it had
resolved to bring the interdict application. It further alleged that
Mr Jenkins had fraudulently
represented the Goringhaicona Khoi
Khoin's position in the interdict application.
[6] I
deal summarily with the history of the matter as it is fully set out
in our main judgment. On
27 July 2022, the rescission application was
set down for hearing on an urgent basis. Fortuin J struck the matter
off the roll
for lack of urgency. At that stage, Mr Jenkins indicated
his intention to oppose the rescission application and obtained an
opportunity
to file an answering affidavit. He filed his Notice of
Intention to Oppose 8 weeks after the urgent application was struck
from
the roll.
[7] On
11 August 2022, Hlophe JP directed that the rescission application
should be heard together
with the appeal referred to above. Mr
Jenkins was present at that directions hearing. The Judge President
further directed that
the parties had to 'ensure that there were 3
sets of the record and that the file... in order, all... be done
timeously as the
Judges will need ample time to read... (as indicated
before, parties are to self-regulate in this regard)'.
[8] Thereafter,
the Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin's attorney of record, in correspondence,
enquired
from Mr Jenkins, on 5 and 19 August 2022, when he would file
his answering affidavit. He did not respond. Therefore, the
applicants
in the rescission application filed their replying
affidavit on 20 September 2022 without the answering affidavit having
been filed.
On 22 September 2022, the matters were allocated to us
and all the parties were informed. On 4 October 2022, my registrar
enquired
from Mr Jenkins as follows: 'Kindly advise...when you will
be filing your outstanding answering affidavit and your heads of
argument.'
I quote his response in full:
'Email of 5 October 2022
'I am currently busy
working on my outstanding answering affidavit, and will try to get it
to you as soon as possible. I will endeavour
to file it by end of
business day tomorrow.
I had raised the issue
with the Judge President that I would not be available for the court
hearing and wished for a postponement
because of a trip to a
conference where I was to deliver a paper and a keynote address. In
chambers, I objected to this being urgent,
as it was previously
struck off the roll by Judge Fortuin. However, I have self-regulated,
as was the wishes of the Judge President,
and have cancelled the trip
and will be attending court.
With regards to heads of
argument, I will be attending to them once the answering affidavit is
finalised, but will be giving oral
argument.
I would like to point out
that I do not have a lawyer, and am struggling to cope.
I am a lay litigant
without representation, and I did not receive the order from the
Judge President Hlophe when the case was put
back on the roll with
the notices and schedule for replies.
The submission I am
answering to is over 500 pages. It is an extensive and voluminous
document which concerns numerous parties and
individuals who are
stretched across the country. A document of this scale, by the looks
of it to me, would have required a professional
legal team to compile
with considerable resources and time. I am doing my best to respond
to it albeit without such resources.
I would like to alert the
court that I intend to file for notice to appeal Judge Dolamo's
order.
I am most grateful for
your patience with me.'
[9] On
the strength of that undertaking, the court set the matter down for a
directions
hearing on Monday 10 October 2022 at 08h30 in Court 18.
The parties were informed that they should be able to indicate
whether
they needed time to respond to the answering affidavit Mr
Jenkins had undertaken to file or whether the matter could proceed as
set down. Mr Jenkins neither attended the hearing nor filed his
answering affidavit as undertaken. After the usher had ascertained
that Mr Jenkins was not outside the courtroom, we directed that both
matters would be heard the following day.
[10] However,
Mr Jenkins left a voice note for my registrar,
after the hearing,
professing not to have known where the direction hearing was
being held. At the hearing, Mr Jamiee SC who appeared with Ms
Adhikari,
counsel for the seventh respondent, informed the court as
follows:
'M'Lady may I just place
on record,... After the adjournment yesterday Mr Jenkins spoke to me
outside of the court. He was, according
to him, physically in Court
but did not know where to go, and he said that he asked various
people where he should go and no one
could assist him. I informed him
expressly in our conversation that the matter would be proceeding at
10...this morning,…
both the appeal and the rescission... That
was within 10 minutes after we adjourned yesterday.'
[11]
Thereafter,
Mr Jenkins arrived and from the bar, sought permission for the late
filing of his 1 500-page affidavit. The application
was refused and
the rescission application and appeal were unopposed. However, the
Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin and the Observatory
Civic Association, the
third applicant, opposed the costs order sought against them. There
was agreement that if the Goringhaicona
Khoi Khoin succeeded in the
rescission application, no costs would be sought against it in the
appeal.
[12]
In
our view, the rescission application had to be heard before or
together with the appeal against the order sought to be rescinded
on
the basis that it had been fraudulently obtained. It was therefore
not surprising that the Judge President directed that the
matters be
heard together. The appeal was with leave of the Supreme Court of
Appeal (SCA) which directed that the appeal be dealt
with on an
urgent basis.
[13]
In
the circumstances, it is disingenuous to suggest that Mr Jenkins did
not know when to file his answering affidavit. He had considered
his
challenges when he told the court that he would file his answering
affidavit on 6 October 2022. He was granted that opportunity
and a
further opportunity to seek a postponement at the directions hearing.
Mr Jenkins knew in August 2022 that the Goringhaicona
Khoi Khoin was
alleging that he had committed fraud. He must have appreciated the
implications thereof for his person.
[14]
This court faced with the application for the late admission of the
answering affidavit had various legitimate
options. An important
consideration was the rights of all the parties to the proceedings.
Ms Nyman SC, who appeared with Ms Mashava
for Mr Jenkins, submitted
that Mr Jenkins' right of access to court had been violated. In the
circumstances of this matter, that
submission is unwarranted. Mr
Jenkins cannot be allowed to exercise his right of access to the
court in deliberate violation of
the same right of 14 parties
involved in the matter. I say that mindful of the fact that Mr
Jenkins was unrepresented at the time.
[15]
In these circumstances, the interest of justice required the court to
balance the rights of the parties to the
proceedings and consider the
prejudice each would suffer. It is correct that Mr Jenkins and the
large group that supported him
in court have the right to practise
their culture. However, even that right cannot be exercised in
violation of everybody else's
right to do the same. It is noteworthy
that the order directing: 'Conclusion of meaningful engagement and
consultation with all
affected First Nations Peoples as envisaged in
the interim and final comments of HWC' was appealed unopposed.
Evidently, the parties
to the litigation were satisfied with the
engagement and consultation that had already taken place. Even as an
unrepresented litigant,
Mr Jenkins knew what was at stake and made
his choices.
[16]
A court has a duty to protect the integrity of the process. There
comes a point at which the court must act,
however unfortunate for a
litigant, in the interest of all the parties. It is not in the
interest of justice to allow any party
to flagrantly abuse the
process and be shielded from the consequences because he/she is
unrepresented.
# Discussion
Discussion
[17] The
applicant's answering affidavit was not admitted. Therefore, it is
common cause that Mr Jenkins
must first seek the setting aside of the
condonation ruling on appeal. Once that ruling has been overturned
and the answering affidavit
admitted, the applicants must then be
afforded an opportunity to respond, if they so wish. This was
envisaged in the correspondence
in which the court called for the
directions hearing.
[18]
In
refusing condonation for the late filing of the answering affidavit,
we effectively refused the application for a postponement.
Therefore,
this application is directed at that refusal. In order to succeed on
appeal, Mr Jenkins will have to show that this
court acted
capriciously or on a wrong principle when it refused condonation and
the postponement. The Constitutional Court
[1]
held as
follows:
'[10] Both these
applications have, as their ultimate objective, the nullification of
the High Court order and a re-hearing of the
issue on the basis of
the respondents' answering affidavit. The first application is wholly
misconceived. Short of setting aside
on appeal an order made by
another court and substituting a different order, this Court has no
jurisdiction to make an order on
behalf of another court properly
seized of a matter or to condone, on behalf of such court,
non-compliance with the rules of procedure
to which such court is
subject. The second application and the ground of appeal which it
seeks to introduce, are without merit,
for the reasons which follow.
[11] A court of appeal is
not entitled to set aside the decision of a lower court granting or
refusing a postponement in the exercise
of its discretion merely
because the court of appeal would itself, on the facts of the matter
before the lower court, have come
to a different conclusion; it may
interfere
only
when it appears that the lower court had not
exercised its discretion judicially, or that it had been influenced
by wrong principles
or a misdirection on the facts, or that it had
reached a decision which in the result could not reasonably have been
made by a
court properly directing itself to all the relevant facts
and principles. On its face, the complaint embodied in the ground of
appeal sought to be introduced by the amendment does not meet this
test because it alleges only an error in the exercise of its
discretion by the High Court. Even assuming, however, that such
ground correctly formulates the test which would permit interference
by this Court, the respondents have got nowhere near to establishing
such a ground on the facts before the High Court. No such
vitiating
error on the part of the High Court was contended for by the
respondents in their written or oral argument before this
court and
none can, on the papers, be found. In fact, I am of the view that the
High Court correctly dismissed the application
for good and
substantial reasons and that both the applications in this Court
relating to such a dismissal ought to be refused.
The question of the
appropriate costs order will be dealt with at the conclusion of this
judgment.'
[19] I
am persuaded that there is no merit in the submission that this court
failed to exercise its
discretion judicially. We appreciated that the
allegations of fraud against Mr Jenkins are serious and that since 27
July 2022,
when Fortuin J struck the urgent application for lack of
urgency, he had intended to oppose the rescission application.
Therefore,
his dilatory behaviour was inexplicable.
[20] Counsel
for Mr Jenkins referred us to
Shilubana and Others v Nwamitwa
(National Movement of Rural Women and Commission for Gender Equality
as Amici Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 14
;
2007 (5) SA 620
(CC) where that respondent
sought a postponement a day prior to the scheduled hearing. The court
'criticised counsel for "doing
a disservice to his client, to
his honourable profession and to the principles his client seeks to
vindicate" [nevertheless
the court held that] the issues at
stake are too important not to factor them into the equation.'
[21] It
is relevant to bear in mind that Mr Jenkins was one of 15 parties and
that this was not
just a dispute among the members of the
Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin about its governance. However, that latter
dispute had to be determined
to deal with the appeal to which Mr
Jenkins was not a party in his personal capacity. I appreciate that
Mr Jenkins wants an opportunity
to deal with the findings of fraud
against him that formed the basis for the rescission application.
Those findings will not change
on appeal. In any event, Mr Jenkins
was aware of the allegations and the need to deal with them since at
least July 2022.
[22] We
considered the rights of all the parties to the proceedings and that
the appeal needed to be dealt with
on an urgent basis. There is no
merit in the submission that this court was influenced by wrong
principles or misdirected itself
on the facts. In the circumstances
of this matter, Mr Jenkins has failed to show that the court had
reached a decision that was
unreasonable for a court directing itself
to all the relevant facts.
[23]
It
is common cause that the rescission application is not appealable
[2]
.
Therefore, counsel for Mr Jenkins relied on the declaratory orders
for the submission that it would be in the interest of justice
to
grant leave to appeal. The following declaratory orders formed part
of the rescission order:
'30 (a) It is declared
that the 2018 Constitution document, as opposed to the document dated
31 March 2021, of the [Goringhaicona
Khoi Khoin] is the valid
constitution of the [Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin].
(b)
It is declared that the Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin did not
authorise the litigation under case number 12994/2021.
(c)
It is declared that the first and second respondents are not
the duly authorised representatives of [the Goringhaicona Khoi
Khoin]...'
[24] On
11 August 2022, the Judge President set the matter down for hearing
in the presence of Mr Jenkins who understood
that the declarators
would be sought. The declarators, if successfully appealed, would not
alter the appeal outcome. The interim
interdict was set aside on
appeal and the construction of the development continued unabated for
months. Mr Jenkins alleged that
he was in command of the majority of
the Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin and so could address the issue in a
meeting of the tribe. Mr
Katz SC, who appeared with Mr Prinsloo for
the applicants in the rescission application, submitted that Mr
Jenkins 'is not motivated
by a genuine desire to address the
interdict or the governance of the Goringhaicona, but it is a
personal endeavour...to save his
name. That is an abuse of the
process.' I agree.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[25]
In refusing condonation for the late filing of the answering
affidavit and the application for postponement,
this court exercised
a true discretion. As indicated above, a court of appeal would only
be entitled to interfere with the exercise
of that discretion if it
was done 'capriciously or upon a wrong principle, if [this court] has
not brought an unbiased judgment
to bear on the question or has not
acted for substantial reasons.' I am persuaded, for the reasons
stated above and in the main
judgment that this court exercised its
discretion judicially.
[26]
I am further persuaded that the interest of justice required the
court to have regard to the interest of
all the parties to the
litigation. Mr Jenkins' right of access to the court was not
restricted in any way. He had ample time to
place his version before
court. He must have realised the implications for him personally when
the rescission application was served.
His right to cultural practice
was a consideration but it had to be balanced against the other
competing rights. Notably, there
was no opposition to the appeal
against the order that directed: 'Conclusion of meaningful engagement
and consultation with all
affected First Nations Peoples as envisaged
in the interim and final comments of HWC.' Heritage Western Cape and
Western Cape First
Nations Collective were parties in the appeal
proceedings.
[27] The
allegations of fraud were unopposed in circumstances where Mr Jenkins
had ample opportunity
to deal with it. The last opportunity was the
directions hearing on 10 October 2022 when this court afforded Mr
Jenkins another
opportunity to request a postponement. There comes a
time when a litigant cannot hide behind being unrepresented. Counsel
for Mr
Jenkins submitted that delays are a common occurrence where
litigants are legally represented. That is an unfortunate situation;
the courts have therefore repeatedly held that there comes a time
when a litigant cannot hide behind the dilatory conduct of a
legal
representative. Mr Jenkins sought an indulgence with no explanation
of what he had done to finalise his answering affidavit
since July
2022 when he had indicated that he intended to oppose the rescission
application. His explanation, tendered in the correspondence
referred
to above, does not deal with the full period he had to file his
answering affidavit. The court has not been told what
he did about
the affidavit since the urgent application was struck from the roll.
His 8-week delay in filing his Notice of Intention
to Oppose has also
not been explained.
[28] On
11 August 2022, the Judge President emphasised that the parties
should file papers timeously.
Mr Jenkins does not explain why he did
not tell his opponents when he would file when they asked him.
Neither does he say what
he did about the affidavit during that time.
Instead, he disingenuously submits that he did not know when to file
his affidavit.
In the circumstances of this matter, tolerance of such
behaviour would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
[29] Setting
aside the declarators would have no practical effect on the interim
interdict that
had been set aside. Mr Jenkins is not precluded from
exercising his cultural practices. In the circumstances, his attempt
at vindicating
his reputation is an abuse of this process. The appeal
is moot and it is also not in the interest of justice to grant leave
to
appeal. The dispute within the Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin is not a
reason to grant leave to appeal.
## Costs
Costs
[30] The
applicants in the rescission application did not seek costs. However,
they now seek costs on a punitive
scale based on the view that Mr
Jenkins is abusing this process for personal gain. Although, I
consider the application an abuse,
I am not persuaded that a punitive
costs order is warranted in these circumstances as I intend to grant
the costs of two counsel.
## Order
Order
[31] I,
for the reasons stated above, make the following order:
(a) The application is
dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
Baartman
J
I
concur.
Slingers
J
I
concur.
Lekhuleni
J
[1]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
2000
(2) SA 1
CC.
[2]
Crockery
Gladstone v Rainbow Farms (Pty) Ltd (592118)
[2019]
ZASCA 61
(20 May 2019).
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Goringhaicona Khoi Khoin and Others v Jenkins and Others In re: Observatory Civic Association and Another v Trustees for the time being of the Liesbeek Leisure Properties Trust and Seven Others [2022] ZAWCHC 227; [2023] 1 All SA 110 (WCC); 2025 (4) SA 225 (WCC) (8 November 2022)
[2022] ZAWCHC 227High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)100% similar
G.W.X. v Magistrate of Regional Division of Western Cape Blue Downs Mashala N.O and Another (17268/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 142 (27 March 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 142High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
K2021765242 (South Africa) (Pty) Ltd v Thibault Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others - Application for Leave to Appeal (3518/2023) [2023] ZAWCHC 135 (6 June 2023)
[2023] ZAWCHC 135High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
South African Legal Practice Council v Nonxuba and Another (16777/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 410 (4 December 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 410High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar
Kotze N.O and Others v UD Boerdery CC (18631/2021) [2024] ZAWCHC 302 (8 October 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 302High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)98% similar