Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 49South Africa
Boerdery v Matsepe N.O and Another (A79/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 49 (19 April 2022)
Headnotes
before Allie J on 23 April 2019. The pre-trial was postponed to 24 May 2019. Ultimately the parties agreed to postpone the pre-trial to 3 March 2020. In a Rule 30A notice dated 5 September 2019, the respondents called upon the appellant to make specific admissions. In the notice, the respondents notified the appellant that they intended, after the lapse of 10 days, to apply for an order that the plaintiff’s notice in terms of Rule 37(4) be complied with or that the appellant’s defence be struck out.
Judgment
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## Boerdery v Matsepe N.O and Another (A79/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 49 (19 April 2022)
Boerdery v Matsepe N.O and Another (A79/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 49 (19 April 2022)
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sino date 19 April 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: A79/21
In
the matter between
KATLOU
BOERDERY
APPELLANT
AND
TSIU
VINCENT MATSEPE N.O.
FIRST
RESPONDENT
PIERRE
DE VILLIERS N.O.
SECOND
RESPONDENT
Date of hearing: 19
January 2022
Date of Judgment: 19
April 2022 (to be delivered via email to the respective counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE J
INTRODUCTION
[1] This is a full court
appeal against the judgment wherein an order was made striking out
the respondent’s defence in the
action between the parties and
directing the respondent to pay the costs of the application on
attorney and client scale as well
as the order of the dismissal of
the respondent’s counter-application for rescission of an
earlier order granted by another
Judge. The appellants were granted
leave to appeal to the full court.
THE ISSUES
[2] The issues to be
determined are:
(a) Whether the
respondents were entitled, by virtue of the provisions of Rule 30A to
compel compliance with Rule 37(4) pre-trial
questionnaire which
resulted in an order granted in the absence of the respondents.
(b) Whether there were
any Rule 37(8) directives issued and whether the respondents could
compel compliance therewith.
(c) Whether the delivery
of formal notices and replies thereto in terms of Rule 37(4)
constituted an abuse of the court process.
(d) Whether the appellant
was entitled to rescission of the order in terms of the provisions of
Rule 42(1)(a) by virtue of the fact
that it was erroneously sought
and granted in the absence of the appellant.
(e) Whether the court
correctly exercised its discretion to strike out the appellant’s
defence.
(f) Whether the court
correctly exercised its discretion to award punitive costs against
the appellant.
[3] The appellant’s
case was that the court erred by striking out the appellant’s
defence where such an order constituted
the most drastic relief that
a court could grant, and that Rule 30A did not apply by virtue of the
fact that Rule 37 provided its
own remedy for non-compliance. The
case was further that the court had erred in dismissing the
appellant’s application for
rescission of an order in that the
respondents were not procedurally entitled to the relief obtained
pursuant their application
in terms of Rule 30A.
[4] The respondents’
case was that in this Division Rule 30A may be used to compel
compliance with directives made by Judges
at Rule 37(8) conferences
and in particular so where the directive made concerned a step agreed
to between the parties in writing.
It is the respondents’
case further that the appellant incorrectly sought to rely on Rule
42(1)(a) for rescission of the
judgment granted in their favour and
that there was no procedural irregularity in respect of the order of
the court.
THE FACTS
[5] The respondents are
trustees in the insolvent estate of AF Malan whose estate was finally
sequestrated on 26 February 2015.
Malan was a dairy farmer. Malan
entered into a sale agreement with the appellant in 2011 wherein he
purchased 317 jersey dairy
cows. In line with the terms of the sale
agreement, five head of cattle were delivered by the appellant to
Malan monthly and an
agreed monthly payment was also accordingly
made. In terms of the agreement, ownership of the cattle would vest
in the appellant
until the full purchase price was paid. In the event
that Malan was to default on the terms of the agreement, the parties
agreed
that the appellant would be entitled to take delivery of the
cows delivered to Malan.
THE 23 APRIL
DIRECTIVES
[6] Malan allegedly
abandoned his farming operation and on or about 25 February 2015 the
appellant’s representative arrived
on the farm, rounded up the
remaining cattle and removed 194 head of cattle and took them to the
appellant’s farm. The respondents’
issued summons against
the appellant on 23 November 2016 and their case was that the
appellant took possession of the 194 cattle
of which ownership vested
in the insolvent estate and earnings thereof vested in them. The
respondents, in the alternative, claimed
that if the appellant was no
longer in possession of the cattle, then it disposed of them with the
knowledge of the insolvent estate’s
ownership. The respondents
prayed for the delivery of the cattle alternatively payment of the
value thereof amounting to R1 940 000-00
plus interest and
costs.
[7] The appellant filed a
plea wherein it admitted that it rounded up 194 head of cattle, but
denied that ownership thereof vested
in the insolvent estate. After
the pleadings closed, the matter progressed to the pre-trial stage.
The respondents delivered its
pre-trial questions and list of
admissions sought from the appellant on 18 April 2019. The material
pre-trial was held before Allie
J on 23 April 2019. The pre-trial was
postponed to 24 May 2019. Ultimately the parties agreed to
postpone the pre-trial to
3 March 2020. In a Rule 30A notice dated 5
September 2019, the respondents called upon the appellant to make
specific admissions.
In the notice, the respondents notified the
appellant that they intended, after the lapse of 10 days, to apply
for an order that
the plaintiff’s notice in terms of Rule 37(4)
be complied with or that the appellant’s defence be struck out.
[8] The deponent to the
supporting affidavit in this notice characterized the application as
being in terms of Rule 30A of the Rules
seeking to compel the
appellant to provide the respondents with the admissions requested of
the appellant in terms of Rule 37(4)
of the Rules. The deponent
alleged that Allie J postponed the pre-trial to 24 May 2019 and
directed the parties to file a pre-trial
minute on or before 21 May
2019. The deponent alleged that a copy of the pre-trial minute signed
by the parties representatives
filed on 21 May 2019 was annexed.
[9] What was in fact
annexed, was the respondents’ draft pre-trial minute for the
pre-trial that was to be held on 24 April
2019. Even if one were to
think that Allie J had directed as alleged, the annexure could not be
in compliance with her directive.
It was dated 5 May 2018, its title
said it was the respondent’s draft and it was not signed by or
on behalf of every party.
This is not the only problem as regards the
alleged directive by Allie J. The respondents were unable to produce
a record of such
directive. The purported Rule 30A notice of
application did not have the record of the alleged directive by Allie
J and did not
have the pre-trial minute signed by the parties’
representatives. In failing to provide at least copies of same, their
existence
had not been established. The mere say-so of their
existence by the candidate attorney is not enough in the context and
under the
circumstances of the issues between the parties.
[10] As the pre-trial was
set down for 23 April 2019, on 18 April 2019 the respondents
delivered pre-trial questions and a list
of admissions sought from
the appellant. Once again, the deponent to the Rule 30A notice of
application simply alleged that Allie
J directed the appellant to
file its reply, failing which the respondents were directed to seek
an order compelling the appellant
to do so. Rule 37(4) provided that:
“
37 Pretrial
conference
(4) Each party shall, not later than
10 days prior to the pre-trial conference, furnish every other party
with a list of –
(a) the admissions which he requires;
(b) the enquiries which he will direct
and which are not included in a request for particulars for trial;
and
(c) other matters regarding
preparation for trial which he will raise for discussion.”
[11] The pre-trial
questions and a list of admissions sought by the respondents were
filed exactly five calendar days prior to the
pre-trial conference.
Such a directive would have been premature. In the face of a dispute
about its existence, without more from
the respondents, I am unable
to find that Allie J in fact made that directive. It must be borne in
mind that the appellant’s
case was that it could not be
compelled to answer to, or make admissions during the pre-trial phase
of the proceedings and that
they did not agree to such a directive as
envisaged in Rule 37(8)(c). It seems to me that if such directives
were made, as it was
alleged, the respondents would have ensured the
availability of such, included in duly signed minutes, as envisaged
in Rule 37(8)(d)
of the Uniform Rules of Court. The balance of
probabilities, having regard to the totality of the facts already set
out, favour
a conclusion that Allie J did not make such a directive
and this explained why the respondents were unable to produce any
objective
evidence of their existence.
THE 13 DECEMBER 2019
ORDER
[12] In a notice dated 5
December 2019, the appellant was advised that an application would be
made on 13 December 2019 for an order
that the appellant be directed
to furnish the respondents with the outstanding replies as requested
by the applicants in their
Rule 37(4) notice within 10 days of
service of the order and that in the event of the appellant failing
to comply, the respondents
shall be entitled to apply on the same
papers duly supplemented, for an order striking out the defence of
the appellant. On 13
December 2019 a court order was made by default
in the following terms:
“
1. The
respondent is directed to furnish the applicants with the outstanding
replies as requested by the applicants in their notice
in terms of
Rule 37(4), dated 18 April 2019, within ten (10) days of service of
this order upon the respondent’s attorneys
of record;
2. In the event the respondent fails
to comply with paragraph 1 above, the applicants shall be entitled to
apply to this Honourable
Court on the same papers, duly supplemented,
for an order striking out the defence of the respondent in the action
instituted under
case no. 22758/2016;
3. The respondent shall pay the costs
of this application.”
[13] The respondents
applied to court on 21 February 2020 for an order in the following
terms:
“
1. The
respondent’s defence be dismissed, and
2. The respondent be ordered to pay
the costs of the application on an attorney and client scale.
3. That judgment be entered against
the respondent as per the particulars of claim in the action for an
order to: …”
The subparagraphs to
paragraph 3 are a repetition of the prayers in the particulars of
claim. The application was opposed on two
grounds, to wit, that the
relief sought was incompetent and amounted to an abuse of the process
of court and secondly, that the
order granted on 13 December 2019 was
erroneously sought and granted.
THE 13 OCTOBER 2020
JUDGMENT
[14] The Rule 30A notice
of 5 December 2019 was served on the appellant’s correspondent
attorneys. In his affidavit, the attorney
explained that due to death
in his family he could not be in office between 2 December 2019 and
13 December 2019. His offices closed
on 13 December 2019 for the
festive season, and on that day his secretary resigned and had moved
to Gauteng. He was unaware that
the Rule 30A application was enrolled
for 13 December 2019, the day on which the order was made by default.
On 3 February 2020
the respondents launched an application where they
sought an order striking out the appellant’s defence and for
judgment
against appellant.
[15] In answering to the
application to strike out the appellant’s defence, the
appellant also simultaneously applied for
the rescission of the order
granted on 13 December 2019. The appellant’s case was that the
purpose of Rule 37(4) was to enable
the parties to prepare for the
pre-trial conference to facilitate the smooth running of the
conference and to enable them to reach
agreement on as many issues as
possible without unnecessary delay. The purpose was not to enable a
party to prepare for trial,
but only to curtail issues to be
determined at trial. A notice in the form served on the appellant was
not envisaged by Rule 37
and the list envisaged in Rule 37(4) related
only to matters to be discussed at the pre-trial conference and was
not a substitute
for trial particulars being sought under Rule 21.
The appellant’s view was that the respondent abused Rule 37(4)
to compel
it to furnish trial particulars which should be requested
under Rule 21. The appellant’s case was that a party aggrieved
by the other for non-compliance with a request made in terms of Rule
37(4) was to request a pre-trial to be held before a Judge
in
chambers
[16] The appellant’s
case was further that a party could not be compelled to agree to
anything during the course of Rule 37
proceedings. This was evident
from the fact that Rule 37(8)(c) provided that, even in a case where
a conference had been convened
before a judge in chambers, the judge
may not give directions which might promote the effective conclusion
of the matter, but only
with the consent of the parties. The
appellant did not consent to provide the applicants with any answer
to their list of admissions
sought. Any order or directive which
purported to compel the appellant to make admissions or respond to
the Rule 37(4) questionnaire
was only competent if such order or
directive was with the consent of both parties.
[17] Further, the
appellant’s case was that in the absence of such consent, and
considering the fact that the applicant’s
Rule 37(4)
questionnaire went beyond what a party was entitled to request in
terms of that Rule, the relief that the respondents
obtained by
virtue of the court order and the relief sought in the subsequent
application was not competent and could not be granted.
The
appellant’s attorneys, in correspondence, alerted the
respondents to the appellant’s case and afforded them an
opportunity to withdraw their application but the respondents
nevertheless persisted with their application. The appellant denied
that the respondents were prejudiced by the appellant’s refusal
to furnish a reply to the Rule 37(4) questionnaire, as Rule
21 was
available as an avenue, which limited the request to particulars to
the extent that it was strictly necessary to enable
them to prepare
for trial. Reliance on Rule 37(4) to obtain trial particulars was
misplaced. The application for rescission was
dismissed and the
application to strike out was granted.
THE RULE 30A
PROCEEDINGS
[18] The respondents did
not set down the pending Rule 37 proceedings after they were
postponed before Allie J. The order was the
product of a separate
process. In other words, the respondents unilaterally jumped out of
the Rule 37 process, into and started
the engines of a Rule 30A
process solely. The question that the appellant raised was
whether the respondents, procedurally,
were entitled to the relief
obtained on 13 December 2019, in Rule 30A reads:
“
30A
Non-compliance with rules
(1)
Where a party fails to comply with these rules or
with a request made or notice given pursuant thereto, or with an
order or direction
made in a judicial case management process
referred to in rule 37A, any other party may notify the defaulting
party that he or
she intends, after the lapse of 10 days from the
date of delivery of such notification, to apply for an order –
(a)
That such rule, notice, request, order or
direction be complied with; or
(b)
That the claim or defence be struck out.
(2)
Where a party fails to comply within the period of
10 days contemplated in subrule (1), application may on notice be
made to the
court and the court may make such order thereon as it
deems fit.”
[19] In
Helen Suzman
Foundation v Judicial Service Commission
2018 (4) SA 1
(CC) at
para 79 at F-G it was said:
“
I have no
quarrel with the fact that in terms of rule 30A(2) there is an
exercise of discretion as to what an appropriate order
should be once
a court has held – under rule 30A(1) – that there has
been non-compliance with the rules. As to the
antecedent question
arising from rule 30A(1) whether there has, in fact, been
non-compliance with the rules, there is no question
of an exercise of
discretion. The court must determine- as an objective question of
fact or law – whether there has been
non-compliance. On that
question, therefore, a court of appeal makes the simple determination
whether the lower court was right
or wrong in its conclusion on
compliance. The discretion under rule 30A(2) does not feature at
all.”
[20] The appellant
admitted that the Rule 30A notice was served on its correspondent
attorney. The appellant’s attorney gave
an explanation as to
why the notice did not come to his attention and that of the
appellant. In response, the respondents simply
indicate that they
have no knowledge of the explanation given and therefore cannot admit
it. In the absence of countervailing evidence,
the appellant’s
explanation stood to be accepted. The appellant and the attorney were
not aware of the application against
the appellant. I am unable to
conclude that the appellant was shown to have been in willful
default.
[21] The obvious
sometimes needs to be restated. It is the specific provisions of a
rule, a request as envisaged in a rule or an
order or direction made
in terms of a rule that may be enforced in terms of Rule 30A. The
respondents in their founding affidavit
to the notice of application
in terms of Rule 30A alleged that on 18 April 2019 they delivered
their pre-trial questions and list
of admissions sought. This was
just five calendar days before the pre-trial conference which was
scheduled for 23 April 2019. Rule
37(4) required them to have
furnished the appellant with such lists not later than 10 days prior
to the pre-trial conference. The
respondents had failed to comply
with Rule 37(4). They failed to comply with the provisions of a rule.
On their own version they
were not entitled, without the consent of
the appellant and the permission of the court, to have the lists
dealt with on 23 April
2019 [Rule 37(4) read with 37(5) and
37(8)(c)].
[22] Rule 37(8)(c)
provides:
“
37 Pre-trial
Conference
(8)(c) The judge may, with the consent
of the parties and without any formal application, at such conference
or thereafter give
any direction which might promote the effective
conclusion of the matter, including the granting of condonation in
respect of this
or any other rule.”
[23] In my view, Allie J
could not competently, under the circumstances, make the alleged
directives without the consent of the
appellant. The further reason,
outside non-compliance with the time frames, was that the appellant
could not be legally compelled
to answer to or to make admissions
during the pre-trial conference proceedings [
Kriel v Bowels
2012
(2) SA 45
(ECP) at par 16]. If Allie J made no directives, the
respondents were not entitled to the relief that they obtained. Be it
as it
may, the 13 December 2019 order was not made during pre-trial
conference proceedings within the realm of Rule 37.
[24] The directions which
the respondents alleged, in any event, were not the ones envisaged in
Rule 37A Judicial Case Management
proceedings. The respondents’
alleged directions, by Allie J, were those as envisaged in Rule 37
Pre-trial Conference proceedings.
These are not directions covered by
Rule 30A, when one reads the rule speaking for itself in its own
terms. Rule 37(2) makes it
very clear that pre-trial conference
proceedings are applicable to cases not subject to judicial case
management. The scope of
the matters to be dealt with, at a pre-trial
conference, are set out in Rule 37(5) which refers to subrules (4)
and (6) which respectively
lists the matters. The list simply
comprises matters that are intended to be dealt with at the pre-trial
conference [
Fransch v Premier Gauteng
2019 (1) SA 247
(GJ) at
para 10].
[25] The list cannot
inexplicably and suddenly change into a request for further
particulars as envisaged in Rule 21 at the respondents’
pleasure. This is simply because Rule 37(4)(b) specifically provides
for the listed matters to be those not included in the request
for
further particulars for trial. Rule 37(4)(c) specifically narrows the
matters on the list to be those which a party will raise
for
discussion. The discussion is clearly during the pre-trial conference
[
Rungasamy v Road Accident Fund
(6585/09) [2009] ZAKZDHC 58
(23 October 2009) para 7]. The list was procedurally clothed as a
Rule 37 list and substantively unleashed
as a Rule 21 request for
further particulars [
Kriel
para 16 at 49C-D]. The respondents
had no legal basis to utilize the general Rule 30A remedy for its
defective request. The respondents
were not entitled, procedurally,
to the relief pursuant the application of Rule 30A.
[26] Rule 37(4) makes no
provision for a request and the entire Rule 37 makes no provision for
a party to be compelled to reply
to the list as envisaged in Rule
37(4). It seems to me that the respondents’ Rule 30A notice and
all the proceedings anchored
thereon, were based on the respondents’
self-created rules, and not the Uniform Rules of Court. In
Fransch
the court said at para 11:
“
[11] The
remedy available to any party who is frustrated by a lack of
co-operation or
bona fides
on
the part of his opponent, is to request that the conference be held
before the judge in chambers”.
In
MT v CT
2016
(4) SA 193
(WCC) at para 27 the court considered another alternative
for a frustrated party and said:
“
In the event
that a party is in default of a procedural step, eg has failed to
file a reply to a request for trial particulars,
or claims that
certain documents are not discoverable, the pre-trial procedure is
held in abeyance while the parties take the dispute
to the motion
court for resolution there: the rule 37(8) procedure is not geared to
the resolution of pre-trial disputes which
invariably require the
filing of affidavits and heads of argument.”
[27] The remedy in
Fransch
is discerned from a reading of Rule 37(8)(a);
37(8)(c); 37(8)(d); 37(9); 37(10) and 37(11). In my view, where a
party had availed
themselves of the Rule 37(8)(a) procedure and had
requested a judge to hold or continue with a pre-trial conference in
chambers,
the trial court is obliged, at the hearing of the matter,
to consider whether or not a special order as to costs should be made
against a party or its attorney because such party or the party’s
attorney did not attend a pre-trial conference or failed
to a
material degree to promote the effective disposal of the litigation
[
Erasmus: Superior Courts Practice
at DI-501]. These are the
special remedies available in Rule 37 Pre-trial Conference
proceedings.
[28] Rule 42(1)(a)
provides:
“
42 Variation
and Rescission of Orders
(1)
The court may, in addition to any other powers it
may have,
mero motu
or
upon the application of any party affected, rescind or vary:
(a)
An order or judgment erroneously sought or
erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected thereby;”
[29] Rule 30A did not
apply to directions issued in terms of Rule 37(8)(c) and in this case
no such directives were made in any
event. The formal request
purportedly delivered in terms of Rule 37(4) was not procedurally
competent and amounted to an abuse
of process. The respondents abused
Rule 37 and delivered a notice which was in essence a request for
further particulars and demanded
a response thereto, both of which
were not envisaged in the Rule. The respondents were not entitled, in
law, to the relief sought
and granted on 13 December 2019. The order
was incorrectly granted. It was an order granted without a legal
foundation. It was
an order erroneously granted [
Athmaram v Singh
1989 (3) SA 953
(D & CLD) at 956J-957A;
Promedia Drukkers
& Uitgewers (Edms) Bpk v Kaimowitz and Others
1996 (4) SA 411
at 417G-H].
RESCISSION
[30] A judgment
incorrectly recorded against the appellant fell to be rescinded in
terms of Rule 42(1)(a) [See
Custom Credit Corporation Ltd v Bruwer
& Others
1969 (4) SA 564
(D & CLD) at 566D;
Topol and
Others v LS Group Management Services (Pty) Ltd
1988 (1) SA 639
(WLD) at 648F-J. In
Freedom Stationary v Hassam
2019 (4) SA
459
(SCA) at para 18 it was said:
“
As Streicher
JA explained in
Lodhi 2 Properties
Investments CC and Another v Bondev Developments (Pty) Ltd
2007
(6) SA 87
(SCA)
[2007] ZASCA 85)
paras 25-27, the phrase ‘erroneously
granted’ relates to the procedure followed to obtain the
judgment in the absence
of another party and not the existence of a
defence to the claim. See also
Colyn v
Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/s Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003
(6) SA 1
(SCA) ([2003]
2 All SA 113
;
[2003] ZASCA 36)
paras 6 and 9.
Thus, a judgment to which a party was procedurally entitled cannot be
said to have been erroneously granted in the
absence of another
party.”
STRIKING OUT AND
PUNITIVE COST ORDER
[31] The striking out of
a defence is extremely drastic and meant that the defendant’s
plea will not be referred to at trial
[
Langley v Williams,
1907
T.H. 197].
It should be resorted to only if the court considered that
a party had deliberately and contemptuously disobeyed its order to
furnish
particulars [
Wilson v Die Afrikaanse Pers Publikasies
(Edms) Bpk
1971 (3) SA 455
(T) at 462H-463B]. The application to
strike out the appellant’s defence in this matter was
conceived, predicated and pronounced
upon a wrong legal footing. In
my view, the decisions to strike out the appellant’s defence
and to award a punitive cost
order, under the circumstances, were not
based on a discretion correctly and judicially exercised.
[32] In conclusion, it
needs to be stated that in granting the application for leave to
appeal, the court a
quo
acknowledged that it did not deal with
the issue whether the remedy provided under Rule 30A was applicable
where there has been
non-compliance with a Rule 37 direction.
For these reasons I would make the following order:
(a) The appeal is upheld.
(b) The order of the
court
a quo
is set aside and replaced with the following
order:
“
(i)
The order granted against the respondent on 13 December 2019 is
rescinded.
(ii)The application to
strike out the respondent’s defence is dismissed.
(iii) The applicants to
pay the costs, jointly and severally, the one to pay the other to be
absolved”
(c)The respondents to pay
the costs on appeal, including the costs occasioned by the employment
of two counsel.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I agree.
V
SALDANHA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I agree.
E T
STEYN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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