Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 143South Africa
Ellis v Eden; Eden v Ellis and Another (10604/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 143 (28 July 2022)
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Ellis v Eden; Eden v Ellis and Another (10604/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 143 (28 July 2022)
Ellis v Eden; Eden v Ellis and Another (10604/2020) [2022] ZAWCHC 143 (28 July 2022)
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sino date 28 July 2022
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Case
10604/2020
In
the matter between:
STEVEN
ELLIS
Applicant
And
RICHARD
EDEN
Respondent
and
in the matter between
RICHARD
EDEN
Applicant
And
STEVEN
ELLIS
First Respondent
NEIL
GORE
N.O.
Second Respondent
Coram:
Rogers J
Heard
on:
25 July
2022
Delivered:
28 July 2022 (by email at 09h30)
JUDGMENT
ROGERS
J:
[1]
Mr Eden seeks leave to appeal to a
full court against my judgment delivered on 6 June 2022. The
application for leave was argued
on a virtual platform. I do not
repeat the full citation of cases mentioned in my previous judgment.
[2]
Mr Eden’s attorney developed
three main points in support of the application for leave to appeal.
Firstly, the statement in
paragraph 44 of my judgment, that Mr Eden’s
factual defence in the main action “would face formidable
challenges”
but was not “hopeless” at least left
open the possibility that a court hearing the merits might find in Mr
Eden’s
favour. It was submitted, furthermore, that in the main
action it was not Mr Eden but Mr Ellis who would face formidable
challenges.
The burden of proof would rest on him to prove the
alleged partnership. He would have to overcome Mr Gore’s
statement, in
his letter of 25 March 2021, that the partnership
“seemed to have been set up and run in a very strange way, in
that the
partnership ran its business through a company”. Mr
Eden’s attorney also reminded me of Mr Ellis’ letter of
9 October
2018 to the attorney who had been instructed to draft
a shareholders agreement. In that letter Mr Ellis stated that the
draft agreement
had not worked for the parties but that the attorney
should let Mr Ellis know “the further process on this”.
This was
inconsistent, so it was argued, with a partnership agreement
allegedly concluded in mid-2017.
[3]
Second, as to the legal defence and
the question of excipiability, paragraphs 45 and 51 of my judgment
recognised that the matter
was not straightforward and that there was
an absence of authority on the subject. Mr Eden’s attorney
submitted, however,
that to say (as I did) that the legal defence was
“not unarguable” but would “probably fail”
did not do
Mr Eden’s legal defence justice. My judgment, so it
was argued, disregarded the trite distinction between a company and a
partnership.
[4]
Third, on the question of delay, Mr
Eden’s attorney referred again to
Colyn
,
where the Court said that rule 42(1)(a) was confined to its wording,
the crisp question being whether the judgment was “erroneously
granted”. He also repeated his reference to High Court
decisions to the effect that rescission should follow “without
further ado” or “without further inquiry” once it
was found that judgment had been erroneously granted in the
absence
of a litigant.
The
first point
[5]
Regarding the first point, my
dismissal of Mr Eden’s rescission application was not based on
a conclusion that he had failed
to put up facts to establish a bona
fide defence. If Mr Eden had brought a timeous rescission application
in terms of rule 31(2)(b)
or the common law, his application would
not have failed on the basis that he had not put up an arguable case
in opposition to
the main action. The only relevance of my assessment
of the strength of the factual defence was in relation to the
exercise of
the discretion which the court has in terms of rule
31(2)(b) and the common law. The fact that the defence might be more
compelling
than I assessed to be would not, in the circumstances of
this case, have been sufficient to overcome the obstacles which delay
and the absence of frank disclosure presented to Mr Eden’s
rescission application.
[6]
I accept that in the main action Mr
Ellis would have the burden of proving the existence of the
partnership. However, in the main
action Mr Ellis would have, apart
from his own evidence, the express admissions made by Mr Eden in the
damages action and certain
other aspects of Mr Eden’s conduct
inconsistent with an intention to dispute the existence of the
partnership. It is for
that reason that I stated that Mr Eden’s
defence, viz the denial of the partnership, would face formidable
challenges. But
as I have said, the outcome of the rescission
application would not have been different if I had formulated the
proposition less
forcefully.
The
second point
[7]
As to the second point, the legal
defence was relevant, in the first place, to the bona fide defence Mr
Eden was required to demonstrate
in an application based on rule
31(2)(b) and the common law. Once again, Mr Ellis’ application
for rescission based on rule
31(2)(b) and the common law did not fail
because of a rejection of his legal defence. What I have said
regarding the factual defence
applies here
mutatis
mutandis
.
[8]
The legal defence was relevant, in
the second place, to the contention that the default judgment was
“erroneously granted”
within the meaning of rule 42(1)(a)
because the particulars of claim were excipiable. I set out, in
paragraph 60 of my judgment,
what I regarded as the most natural
meaning of the particulars of claim. As counsel for Mr Ellis pointed
out, her client’s
allegation in the particulars of claim was
not that the partnership had been run “through a company”
(the formulation
used in argument by Mr Eden’s attorney) but
“under the name and style of” the company.
[9]
Mr Eden’s attorney said that I
could not ignore what Mr Gore said in his letter of 25 March 2021. He
also submitted that the
factual material supplied by Mr Ellis in
response to Wille J’s query did not address precisely how the
partnership traded
and merely made “generic” partnership
assertions. In the context of rule 42(1)(a), however, the default
judgment was
said to have been “erroneously granted” on
the sole basis that the particulars of claims were excipiable.
Extraneous
evidence is not relevant or admissible in answering that
question, which is concerned solely with whether, on every reasonable
reading of the particulars of claim, no cause of action was
disclosed. I do not think that there is a reasonable prospect of
another
court so finding. That is quite different from whether, in
the event, the evidence is consistent with the reasonable reading
which
saves the particulars of claim from excipiability.
The
third point
[10]
In any event, a finding in Mr Eden’s
favour on the excipiability point would not ensure him of success in
the appeal, because
he would still need to overcome my finding that
his application based on rule 42(1)(a) should fail because of delay.
That takes
me to the third point. I did not find, as the argument for
Mr Eden suggested, that a showing of “good cause” was a
requirement in terms of rule 42(1)(a). What I found was that, once it
has been shown that a judgment was erroneously granted in
the absence
of a litigant, the court has a discretion to rescind the judgment.
This conclusion does not take one outside the wording
of rule
42(1)(a), since rule 42(1) states that a court “may”, not
“must”, rescind or vary a judgment in
any of the listed
circumstances.
[11]
The existence of a discretion is
established by binding authority. In paragraph 63, I cited the
decisions of the Appellate Division,
Supreme Court of Appeal and
Constitutional Court to this effect, one of which was the
Colyn
case. I also pointed out, in footnote
30 of my judgment, that
Buys
,
on which the attorney for Mr Eden placed considerable reliance,
recognised that the Court has a discretion.
[12]
In supporting the application for
leave to appeal, Mr Eden’s attorney did not deal with these
authorities or with the nature
of the discretion. In paragraph 65 of
my judgment, I assumed in Mr Eden’s favour that the exercise of
the discretion should
not be affected by my assessment of the merits
of the main case. I stated, however, that at very least unreasonable
delay would
influence the exercise of the discretion. I cannot see
how it could be otherwise, since then there would be nothing left at
all
on which to found the exercise of the discretion. On the argument
advanced for Mr Eden, litigants could bring rescission applications
in terms of 42(1)(a) ten or twenty years after learning of the
default judgment and would have to succeed provided only that they
establish that the default judgment was “erroneously granted”.
There would be no discretion to dismiss the application
on grounds of
delay. I cannot accept that this is the law. The decisions of Courts
which are binding on me say that there is a
discretion. Accordingly,
it is not for me, as a Judge of the High Court, to grant leave to
appeal so that higher court may decide
whether to reassess the
existence of a discretion in terms of rule 42(1).
[13]
Mr Eden’s attorney referred to
the injustice of his client now being held liable for the debts of a
company. That is not accurate.
Following judicial procedures, he is
being held liable as one partner to another. If in truth (that is,
because of facts which
have not been fully ventilated) he is being
held liable for the debts of a company, he has only himself to blame
for failing to
defend the dissolution action, for failing to engage
with the receiver as the latter went about preparing the liquidation
and distribution
accounts, and for failing timeously to seek the
rescission of the default judgment. There comes a time when a court
cannot relieve
people of the consequences of their litigation
choices.
[14]
The following order is made:
The application for leave
to appeal is dismissed with costs.
O
L ROGERS
Judge
of the High Court
For
the Applicant in the first
B Brown instructed by B Lubbe and Associates
application
and for the First
Respondent
in the second application:
For
the Respondent in the first
S van der Meer (attorney) of Van der Meer and Partners Inc.
application
and for the
Applicant
in the second application:
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