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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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[2022] ZAWCHC 240
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## Geeco Investments (PTY) LTD v Gourmet Cape Distributors (PTY) LTD (11008/2019)
[2022] ZAWCHC 240 (25 November 2022)
Geeco Investments (PTY) LTD v Gourmet Cape Distributors (PTY) LTD (11008/2019)
[2022] ZAWCHC 240 (25 November 2022)
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sino date 25 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No: 11008/2019
In
the matter between:
GEECO
INVESTMENTS (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
GOURMET
CAPE DISTRIBUTORS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
Coram:
Justice J Cloete
Heard:
1 November 2022, supplementary note delivered 9 November 2022
Delivered
electronically:
25 November 2022
JUDGMENT
CLOETE
J
:
Introduction
[1]
This is an opposed application in which the applicant seeks leave to
supplement its founding
affidavit and amend its notice of motion in
the main proceedings to introduce additional relief (the purpose of
the supplementary
founding affidavit is to support that additional
relief).
[2]
The background to the current application is as follows. On 28 June
2019 the applicant
launched the main proceedings by way of
application for payment of R713 700 plus interest and costs. The
respondent delivered
its answering affidavit on 12 August 2019.
Thereafter, and on 18 November 2019, an order (‘
the
referral order’
) was granted by agreement in the following
terms:
‘
1.
The application is referred to trial;
2.
The notice of motion shall stand as a simple summons;
3.
The applicant shall deliver a declaration on or before 15 November
2019;
4.
The respondent shall deliver its plea on or before 13 December
2019;
5.
Costs shall stand over for later determination.’
[3]
After the
exchange of pleadings envisaged in the referral order, the matter
came before Saldanha J. At the close of the applicant’s
case
the respondent applied for absolution from the instance with
costs.
[1]
On 17 September
2021 the learned Judge handed down judgment granting the relief
sought by the respondent. The applicant did
not apply for leave to
appeal the Saldanha J order. The present application was
launched on 24 November 2021.
Whether
the applicant has followed the correct procedure
[4]
It is first necessary to consider whether it is still open to the
applicant to amend its
notice of motion, given the parties’
agreement in paragraph 2 of the referral order that this ‘
shall
stand as a simple summons’.
In the answering affidavit the
respondent’s deponent contended that ‘
the motion
proceedings have been superseded by the action proceedings. The wrong
procedure is being followed. The applicant should
have given notice
of intention to amend the declaration’.
The applicant
submitted that this contention is without merit, since the additional
causes of action which it now seeks to introduce
were not issues that
were referred to trial, and thus not dealt with in the pleadings
which followed the referral order.
[5]
Neither
party specifically considered whether or not it is competent for this
Court to grant an amendment to a simple summons (which
is what the
notice of motion became in light of the referral order). Counsel were
thus afforded the opportunity to do so by way
of supplementary notes.
I was thereafter informed that neither were able to find any
authority on the point, but they drew my attention
to
Absa
Bank v Janse Van Rensburg
[2]
where a full court of this division referred to
Icebreakers
No 83 (Pty) Ltd v Medicross Health Care Group (Pty) Ltd
[3]
in which it was held that a
simple summons is not a pleading.
[6]
In
Icebreakers
the Court considered whether it is competent to
note an exception to a simple summons. Pertinent for present purposes
are the following
passages from the judgment:
‘
[9] Rule 18(4)
is, if anything, even more destructive of the defendant’s
contentions. It provides that every pleading shall
contain a clear
and concise statement of the material facts upon which the pleader
relies for the claim, with sufficient particularity,
to enable the
opposite party to reply thereto… a party receiving a simple
summons does not reply to the summons, but awaits
service of a
declaration to which the defendant responds by way of plea. It
follows plainly that a simple summons does not have
to comply with
rule 18(4). The logical inference to be drawn from the fact that it
does not need to comply with the fundamental
rules governing
pleadings is that this is so because it is not a pleading. That is
consistent with the view of the authors of Herbstein
& Van
Winsen, who say that a simple summons is not a pleading.
[10] The summons
serves the function of commencing the litigation and bringing the
defendant before the court. The pleading, whether
by way of
particulars of claim or declaration, contains the statement of the
case…’
[7]
Rule 28 of the uniform rules of court prescribes the procedure to be
followed for amendments
to ‘
pleadings and documents’
.
Rule 28(1) provides that any party desiring to amend ‘
any
pleading or document other than a sworn statement, filed in
connection with any proceedings’
must follow the steps set
out in that rule. Unhelpfully a ‘
document’
is not
defined. Assuming however that a simple summons constitutes a
document, what
Icebreakers
makes clear is that the amendment
sought will not assist the applicant in pursuing the additional
relief it now seeks to introduce.
[8]
I say this
for two principal reasons. First, even if the amendment sought is
granted, the respondent will not be required to plead
to anything
until the applicant serves an amended declaration. Second, the
applicant
agreed
to a referral to trial rather than to oral evidence on specified
issues. This distinction is important since the consequences are
different, as was highlighted by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Lekup
Prop Co No 4 v Wright
:
[4]
‘
[32] …It
will be recalled that the appellant initiated motion proceedings and
that the matter was referred to trial after
the respondent had filed
his answering affidavit. At the trial the respondent was allowed to
read from that affidavit and did so,
extensively. That was not the
correct procedure… Affidavits filed may of course be used for
cross-examination and also as
proof of admissions therein contained,
but (save to the extent that they contain admissions) they have no
probative value; and
in the absence of agreement, they do not stand
as the witness’s evidence-in-chief or supplement it… A
referral to
trial is different to a referral to evidence, on limited
issues. In the latter case the affidavits stand as evidence, save to
the
extent that they deal with dispute(s) of fact; and once the
dispute(s) have been resolved by oral evidence, the matter is decided
on the basis of that finding together with the affidavit evidence
that is not in dispute.’
[9]
Given the agreement to refer the main proceedings to trial, I do not
see how it will
assist the applicant to supplement its founding
affidavit in support of the additional relief it seeks because, even
if it does
so, the proverbial horse has bolted since the exchange of
affidavits has come and gone. It will not be incumbent upon the
respondent
to file an answering affidavit, and the probative value of
such a supplementary affidavit will fall within the confines outlined
in
Lekup Prop Co.
[10]
The
respondent’s other primary contention is that this application
is in any event premature, since the applicant has not
applied for
leave to reopen its case. The applicant disagrees, maintaining that
it has followed the approach in
African
Farms and Townships Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
[5]
where it was held that:
‘
As pointed out
in Purchase v Purchase
1960 (3) SA 383
(N) at 385, dismissal and
refusal of an application have the same effect, namely a decision in
favour of the respondent. The equivalent
of absolution from the
instance would be that no order is made, or that leave is granted to
apply again on the same papers.’
[11]
This issue
was comprehensively dealt with by Tuchten J sitting as a court of
first instance in
Liberty
v K & D Telemarketing
[6]
as well as the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in the same
matter.
[7]
In
Liberty
the issue was whether, after an order of absolution at the end of a
trial, the plaintiff was entitled to reopen its case to pursue
its
original claim on the same pleadings (seemingly to avoid a plea of
prescription). Dismissing the application, Tuchten J held
as follows:
‘
[19] There are
to my mind a number of reasons why the present application cannot
succeed. I think the most important is that the
argument presented on
behalf of the plaintiff wrongly characterises the courses of action
available to a plaintiff against whom
absolution has been decreed
after the conclusion of the defendant’s case. A plaintiff in
such circumstances always has the
right to bring further proceedings
to enforce his claim. He may do so by instituting proceedings afresh.
For that he does not need
the leave of the court.
[20] He may also do so
by proceeding on the same papers. He needs the court’s
permission to do that. But whichever route is
followed, such a
plaintiff must proceed afresh (de novo)…’
[12]
On appeal, counsel on behalf of Liberty relied on
African Farms
for its submission that it was
entitled
to reopen its case on
the same papers. The appeal court contextualised
African Farms
as follows:
‘
[13] …That
dictum relates to motion proceedings. In motion proceedings, usually
in unopposed matters, an applicant might
be given leave to approach a
court on the same papers, supplemented if so advised. That is not an
order susceptible to appeal.
It is no authority for the proposition
that it is permissible, after an order of absolution from the
instance, to reopen under
the same case number on existing pleadings.
The only equivalence is that in either instance a defence of res
judicata could not
be raised. This would be so when an action is
instituted de novo or when the application,
in terms of
leave having been given, is brought on the same papers, supplemented,
if so advised
. That is what the dictum in African Farms
was conveying.’
[my emphasis]
[13]
Although in
Liberty
absolution was granted after conclusion of
the defendant’s case, I do not understand the principle to be
any different when
such an application is made at the close of a
plaintiff’s case, and although the applicant is referred to as
such in these
proceedings, for purposes of the trial it was clearly
the plaintiff. If a plaintiff is required to obtain leave of the
court to
reopen its case after absolution (unless it proceeds afresh)
the relief currently sought by the applicant would be premature.
[14]
Of course the distinguishing feature between
Liberty
and the
present matter is that the applicant is not seeking to pursue its
original claim on issues previously canvassed on the
pleadings
(although one of the new causes of action, namely unjustified
enrichment, was foreshadowed in the founding affidavit).
But what the
applicant seeks to do does not withstand scrutiny, since it attempts
to introduce additional relief by amending what
has become its simple
summons, and by supplementing its founding affidavit in circumstances
where there is no longer an
application
before the court. To
my mind this is impermissible.
Conclusion
[15]
It follows that the respondent is correct on both primary procedural
contentions. There
should be no prejudice to the applicant if it
follows the correct procedure by applying to reopen its case and
thereafter seeking
to amend its declaration (although it is likely
that the respondent will object to the intended amendment). I say
this because
Icebreakers
tells us that the (simple) summons
‘
serves the function of commencing the litigation and
bringing the defendant before the court’
. I make no finding
in this regard since, although there was a debate before me about
possible prescription of at least one of the
additional causes of
action, given the applicant’s stance that the present
application is interlocutory in nature, it would
be inappropriate for
me to deal with the merits at this stage, since it would amount to
prejudging matters that may well serve
in due course before a
different court.
[16]
The following order is made:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs.’
J
I CLOETE
For
applicant
: Adv G Elliot SC
Instructed
by
: Spencer Pitman Attorneys (Mr A Pitman)
For
respondent
: Adv A Brink
Instructed
by
: Van Wyk Van Heerden Attorneys (Mr W Van Heerden)
[1]
The respondent also delivered a counterclaim, to which the applicant
pleaded, but this was not persisted with in light of the
absolution
application.
[2]
2013 (5) SA 173
(WCC) at paras [4] to [5].
[3]
2011 (5) SA 130 (KZD).
[4]
2012 (5) SA 246 (SCA).
[5]
1963 (2) SA 555
(A) at 563E-F.
[6]
2019 (1) SA 450 (GP).
[7]
(1290/18)
[2020] ZASCA 41
(20 April 2020).
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