Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 66South Africa
Jacobs and Another v Garlicke and Bousfield Inc and Others (1340/2011) [2023] ZAKZDHC 66 (13 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)
13 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Jacobs and Another v Garlicke and Bousfield Inc and Others (1340/2011) [2023] ZAKZDHC 66 (13 September 2023)
Jacobs and Another v Garlicke and Bousfield Inc and Others (1340/2011) [2023] ZAKZDHC 66 (13 September 2023)
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sino date 13 September 2023
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Substitution –
Deed
of cession
–
Claim
by company for investment not repaid – Applicant contending
that claim ceded to her – Appearing that the
investment was
applicant’s and in her personal capacity – Company
never had a right to cede – Prejudice
in defendant being put
to the expense of participating in proceedings that have no
prospects of success – Also clear
evidence that the
applicant’s claim has prescribed – Attempt to litigate
against the defendant has come to an
end – Application
dismissed.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
1340/2011
In
the matter between:
LIZELLE
JACOBS
APPLICANT
COTTON
KING MANUFACTURING (PTY) LIMITED
PLAINTIFF
(in
liquidation)
(Registration
number: 1962/00738/06)
and
GARLICKE
AND BOUSFIELD INC
DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT
and
PKF
(DURBAN) INCORPORATED
FIRST THIRD PARTY
PATRICK
ROBERT
SECOND THIRD PARTY
NERAK
FINANCIAL SERVICES (PTY) LTD
THIRD THIRD PARTY
SANTAM
LIMITED
FOURTH THIRD PARTY
LOMBARD
INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
FIFTH THIRD PARTY
UNDERWRITER
AT LLOYD’S
SIXTH THIRD PARTY
Coram
:
Mossop J
Heard
:
15 August 2023
Delivered
:
13 September 2023
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Mossop
J
:
Introduction
[1]
In
a summons that was issued on 1 February 2011 under case number
1340/2011 (the summons), the plaintiff is cited as being Cotton
King
Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd (Cotton King) and the defendant is identified
as being Garlicke and Bousfield Incorporated, a firm
of attorneys
based in Durban. Before me is an application for substitution in
which the applicant, who is the previous chief financial
officer of
Cotton King, seeks an order that she be substituted as the plaintiff
in the action in the place and stead of Cotton
King.
Representation
[2]
When
the matter was called, Mr Iles appeared for the applicant and Mr
Harpur SC appeared for the defendant. Both counsel are thanked
for
their insightful submissions and the other assistance that they have
provided to the court.
Background
The
particulars of claim
[3]
The
particulars of claim allege that a representative of Cotton King and
a Mr Colin Cowan (Mr Cowan), allegedly representing the
defendant,
concluded an agreement on or about 12 October 2010.
[1]
In terms of that agreement, Cotton King agreed to invest R2,5 million
with the defendant which money was to be employed to advance
bridging
finance to clients of the defendant. The money was to be repaid to
Cotton King by the defendant with interest at the rate
of 30 percent
per annum by 31 January 2011. The money was duly paid over to the
defendant by Cotton King, but it was not repaid
by the defendant by
the due date. The summons thus sought the repayment of the R2,5
million together with interest and costs.
The
amended plea
[4]
On
10 October 2011, in an amended plea, the defendant pleaded that
Cotton King had been placed in voluntary liquidation as from
9
December 2010, a date prior to the date upon which the summons was
issued, and that the investment referenced in the particulars
of
claim had not been between Cotton King and the defendant but had been
between the applicant and Mr Cowan. Other issues were
raised in the
amended plea, but they need not detain us. No replication was
delivered to the amended plea.
Security
[5]
On
19 October 2011, the registrar of this court directed Cotton King to
put up security in the amount of R400 000 for the defendant’s
costs by close of business of 2 November 2011. Cotton King never put
up that security.
The substitution
application
[6]
On
27 March 2013, the applicant launched the substitution application.
It was met with an answering affidavit from the defendant.
The
founding affidavit
[7]
In
her founding affidavit in the substitution application, which is
brief and scarcely fills three pages, the applicant explains
that
Cotton King sold its business and, acting upon the advice of its
accountants, it then placed itself into voluntary liquidation.
Two
liquidators were appointed to wind-up the plaintiff and, according to
the applicant, the liquidators:
‘…
did
not wish to become embroiled in long and protracted litigation with
the Defendant and accordingly the Plaintiffs (sic) claim
in and to
the said action against the Defendant was duly sold, transferred and
ceded to me. I must point out that I was at all
times a minority
shareholder in the company in any event.’
[8]
That
explanation would seem to be at odds with what the defendant had
pleaded, namely that the investment was made by the applicant
personally and not by Cotton King. The fact that the applicant
indicated that Cotton King’s claim had been sold to her would
tend to indicate that it was not her claim to start with.
[9]
The
cession referred to by the applicant was in writing (the deed of
cession) and the applicant has attached a copy of that document
to
her founding affidavit. It reveals that it was concluded on 21
November 2011. She claims further in her founding affidavit that:
‘
I
duly assumed all rights and obligations in and to the said claim. In
particular I refer to paragraph 4.1 of the Deed of Cession.’
Paragraph 4.1 of the deed
of cession provides that the applicant intended to substitute herself
as plaintiff in the action.
[10]
The
deed of cession records that the liquidators ceded to the applicant:
‘
[t]he
claim of Cottonking (sic) Manufacturing (Proprietary) Limited against
Garlicke and Bousfield Incorporated and others, for
an amount of
R2 500,000.00 (two million five hundred thousand rand), plus all
interest and costs which accrue in respect of
such claim, in respect
of the recovery of funds invested, and in respect of which action has
been instituted under KwaZulu-Natal
High Court, Durban, Case Number
1340/2011.’
[11]
The
deed of cession goes on to explain why the cession occurred:
‘
2.1
Cottonking (sic) Manufacturing (Proprietary) Ltd has instituted legal
proceedings against Garlicke &
Bousfield Incorporated and others,
under KwaZulu Natal High Court, Durban, Case Number 1340/2011, in
respect of the recovery of
an investment of R2,500,000 (two million,
five hundred thousand rand).
2.2
The Cedents
[2]
acknowledge that
the investment in 2.1 was in relation to funds paid by the
Cessionary
[3]
in her personal
capacity, and was not an investment by the Company,
[4]
notwithstanding that the investment was paid through the bank account
of the Company.
2.3
The Plaintiff in the claim has erroneously
been cited as Cottonking Manufacturing (Proprietary) Limited
and not
the Company.
[5]
2.4
The Plaintiff in the claim is required to be substituted by the
Company, alternatively Cessionary,
pursuant to the cession.
2.5
The Cedents have agreed to cede the claim to the Cessionary on the
terms of this agreement.’
[12]
The
deed of cession, contrary to what the applicant states in her
founding affidavit, seems to confirm what the defendant pleaded
in
its amended plea, namely that the investment was the applicant’s
all along.
The answering
affidavit
[13]
The
answering affidavit in the substitution application was delivered on
23 May 2013. Its essential thrust was that the security
ordered by
the registrar had not been put up and it explained why the guarantees
that had been put up consequent upon the registrar’s
order were
unacceptable to the defendant. The answering affidavit otherwise
generally opposed the substitution of the applicant
for Cotton King.
The supplementary
answering affidavit
[14]
This
was delivered by the defendant, without objection from the applicant,
on 16 October 2014. By the time of its delivery, the
applicant had
not delivered her replying affidavit. The supplementary answering
affidavit suggested that the cession had been brought
into existence
to permit Cotton King to avoid having to put up the security ordered.
[15]
The
supplementary answering affidavit went on to raise further grounds
upon which the substitution was opposed, namely that the
party who
invested with Mr Cowan (not with the defendant) was the applicant in
her personal capacity, that Cotton King never had
a claim against the
defendant and that the applicant’s personal claim had
prescribed.
The replying affidavit
[16]
Nearly
six and a half years (or 78 months) after the supplementary answering
affidavit was delivered by the defendant, the applicant
delivered her
replying affidavit on 14 May 2021.
The applicant’s
supplementary affidavit
[17]
On
28 July 2023, just over two years after she delivered her replying
affidavit, the applicant caused to be delivered a further
affidavit
(the supplementary affidavit) in which, through the evidence of her
attorney, she brought it to the court’s attention
that she had
personally put up the security that Cotton King had been ordered to
put up by the registrar nearly 12 years earlier.
General
observations
[18]
Those
are the essential facts of the matter. Nearly ten and a half years
after it initially commenced, the applicant’s substitution
application is before me for determination.
[19]
Before
getting to grips with the essence of the matter, I make two
observations. The first relates to the inordinately long period
of
time that the substitution application has taken before it was
sufficiently complete to be argued. Such an extraordinary delay
generally makes the proper adjudication of the matter more difficult.
While the defendant has contributed to this delay, delivering
its
supplementary answering affidavit 16 months after it had delivered
its answering affidavit, the fact of the matter is that
it was able
to do so because the applicant had been inactive and had not
delivered her replying affidavit. There can be no doubt
that the
significant delay in the matter was occasioned solely by the
applicant.
[20]
The
second observation that I make is that the applicant has not at any
stage attempted to press her own claim as the investor.
She makes it
plain that her entire case against the defendant is dependent on the
rights that she acquired from the deed of cession
and not from any
original right that she personally possesses. This in itself is
curious but may be explicable if reference is
made to the spectre of
prescription that presents itself in this matter. That issue will be
considered further later in this judgment.
Litis contestatio
[21]
It
is common cause that the deed of cession was concluded after
litis
contestatio
had
been reached in the action between Cotton King and the defendant. By
my calculation, with no replication having been delivered,
pleadings
closed on 31 October 2011. The deed of cession, as previously stated,
was concluded on 21 November 2011.
It
is trite that
litis
contestatio
is reached when the pleadings are closed.
[6]
Substitution
[22]
Substituting
one party for another is a procedural matter
[7]
and it can occur in either one of three ways: by an amendment of the
pleadings, by invoking Uniform rule 15 or at common law. Uniform
rule
15 applies where the substitution of a party is required because of a
change in status of a party and the common law applies
where there is
no such change in status. While Cotton King may have been liquidated,
that fact did not make the cession necessary.
This is accordingly not
a matter involving a change of status. The common law approach thus
applies.
[23]
As
to how these applications should be approached and considered, Brand
JA stated in
Tecmed
v Nissho Iwai
[8]
that:
‘
The
settled approach to matters of this kind follows the considerations
in applications for amendments of pleadings. Broadly stated,
it means
that, in the absence of any prejudice to the other side, these
applications are usually granted . . . As is pointed out
in
Devonia
Shipping
at
369H, the risk of prejudice will usually be less in the case where
the correct party has been incorrectly named and
the amendment
is sought to correct the misnomer, than in the case where it is
sought to substitute a different party. But the criterion
remains the
same: will the substitution cause prejudice to the other side, which
cannot be remedied by an order for costs or some
other suitable
order, such as a postponement?
’
[24]
Continuing,
Brand JA went on to state that:
‘…
the
legal effect of a cession after
litis
contestatio
is to terminate the proceedings instituted by the cedent, with the
corollary that the substitution of the cessionary as the plaintiff
must be regarded as the institution of new proceedings.’
[9]
[25]
The
applicant did not deliver a notice in terms of Uniform rule 15 but
delivered only the application upon which I am required to
adjudicate
which means, following
Tecmed
,
it
is
to be considered on a wide basis, which includes the grounds
mentioned in rule 15(3), and broadly considers the presence or
otherwise of prejudice.
[10]
The
issues
[26]
I
was presented with a joint list of issues shortly before the matter
was heard. I am indebted to counsel for compiling it. Six
issues are
mentioned in that list as requiring determination and I shall now
consider each of those issues.
The first issue:
whether the applicant’s supplementary affidavit ought to be
admitted into evidence
[27]
The
parties seek a ruling on the admissibility of the supplementary
affidavit delivered by the applicant on 28 July 2023, in which
it was
reported that she had put up the security fixed by the registrar in
2011.
[28]
In
that supplementary affidavit, deposed to by the applicant’s
current attorney, it is disclosed that she has paid an amount
of
approximately R420 000 into her attorney’s trust account,
of which R400 000 is to be utilised in respect of the security
previously ordered. There is no order in place requiring her to put
up that security: what is in place is an order by the registrar
directing Cotton King to deliver security in that amount.
[29]
It
will be manifestly clear that this application has an unfortunately
long history that has spanned at least a decade. It seems
to me
likely that in that span of time things will happen of which the
court will not be aware but of which it should, perhaps,
be made
aware. The supplementary affidavit is intended to fulfil that
purpose. Despite an indication in the supplementary affidavit
that
the applicant would not object to an answering affidavit being
delivered by the defendant dealing with the allegations raised
in
that supplementary affidavit, no such answering affidavit was
delivered by the defendant. In truth, there is not much that could
have been said in relation thereto by the defendant: the applicant
was not obligated to put up security but chose to do so, a fact
that
is not really contestable. In my view, given the absence of an order
requiring the applicant to provide such security, the
facts that are
contained in the supplementary affidavit are neutral in their effect
and I am inclined therefore to accept it. Condonation
is therefore
granted.
The
second issue: whether the late filing of the applicant’s
replying affidavit ought to be condoned
[30]
The
second issue is whether the court should accept the applicant’s
replying affidavit. As noted earlier, it was delivered
late. Very,
very late - some 78 months late.
[31]
That
being the case, one would have anticipated that the applicant would
have clearly sought condonation for her failure to deliver
the
replying affidavit within the time frames contemplated by the Uniform
Rules of Court. In doing so she would have had to address:
‘…
the
extent and cause of the delay, the effect of the delay on the
administration of justice and other litigants, the reasonableness
of
the explanation for the delay, the importance of the issue to be
raised in the intended appeal and the prospects of success.’
[11]
[32]
Yet,
inexplicably, she has brought no such clear application for
condonation. All she has done is to provide a general explanation
in
her replying affidavit of the delays that have beset the substitution
application.
[33]
I
make reference to the facts disclosed by the applicant. At the
outset, she states that before finalising the replying affidavit,
she
left South Africa and emigrated to the United States of America,
where she still resides, and states that instructions were
given to
counsel to draw the replying affidavit in April 2013. She, however,
puts up no proof of that instruction nor does she
state to which
counsel the instruction was given. She proceeds to state that before
the replying affidavit could be drawn:
‘…
the
security for costs issue had to be addressed, as that formed the crux
of the dispute in the substitution application.’
[34]
The
applicant is mistaken in suggesting that this was the only impediment
to the substitution application being granted. She appears
not to
have addressed the further issues raised in the supplementary
answering affidavit, namely that the investment was between
the
applicant in her personal capacity and Mr Cowan and not between
Cotton King and the defendant, that Cotton King never had a
claim
against the defendant and that any claim that the applicant may have
had against the defendant had prescribed by no later
than 2 February
2014. None of these allegations have ever been addressed by the
applicant.
[35]
It
is difficult to understand what the security for costs issue had to
do with the applicant. She had not been ordered to provide
it and the
effect of the intended substitution was to remove Cotton King, which
had been ordered to provide it, as a participant
in the action.
Nonetheless, the applicant states that she put up the deposit
necessary to secure the issuing of a guarantee for
the security which
was ordered to be put up by the registrar. Three different forms of
the guarantee were put up, each of which
attracted an objection from
the defendant.
[36]
The
applicant goes on to explain that she was then advised by her legal
representative that the particulars of claim would have
to be amended
before the reply in the substitution application could be delivered.
The amendment was duly formulated and delivered
but was objected to
by the defendant. The applicant states that she was apparently not
aware of this objection at the time that
it was received. The
defendant then amended its plea and thereafter delivered a notice of
an irregular step regarding the non-delivery
of the security ordered
by the registrar.
[37]
The
years 2014 and 2015 slip by in the applicant’s narrative with
barely a mention. She apparently sought information from
her
attorneys in Durban in sporadic emails sent to them. In February
2016, she sent an email to her attorneys and in April 2016
she gave
them instructions to try and settle the matter. She followed up on
this issue during the remainder of 2016 and in 2017.
A number of
emails are put up between her and her attorneys. In mid-2018, she
instructed her brother-in-law to attend upon her
attorney’s
offices and ascertain what was going on. She was then told that the
money that she had put up for the security
that the registrar had
ordered Cotton King to put up had been stolen by an employee of her
attorneys.
[38]
By
the end of July 2018, she states that she had come to the end of her
tether with her attorneys in Durban. She appointed new attorneys.
She, fairly, concedes that she ought to have terminated the mandate
of the first set of attorneys earlier than she did. She explains
as
follows:
‘
Apart
from setting myself and my businesses up in the United States, I did
not have ready or easy means to follow up with my attorneys
other
than by way of messages. I am not a lawyer and, although I have
contacts in South Africa, I did not know another attorney
who I could
appoint instead of my present attorneys of record.’
[39]
She
appointed her current attorneys and consulted with them in late
November 2018. They provided her with a memorandum on 5 December
2018. She then consulted with her new attorneys ‘in around
February or March 2019’. Given the ease and relative immediacy
of modern digital communications it is not clear why it took so long
for her to consult with her new attorneys.
[40]
Acting
upon advice received, the applicant then instituted an action against
her erstwhile attorneys. That action apparently proceeds
and appears
not yet to have been resolved. In her particulars of claim in the
action against her erstwhile attorneys, she explains
that it was
pleaded that her claim against the defendant had prescribed. In
November 2019, her erstwhile attorneys pleaded to those
particulars
of claim and denied that her claim had prescribed. It appears that
the applicant has unquestioningly now accepted that
to be the case.
Not much happened thereafter due to the Covid-19 pandemic but the
applicant had a telephone conversation with her
new attorney in
August 2020.
[41]
Despite
the acknowledgment that she ought to have changed attorneys much
earlier than she did and her criticism of the decisions
and pace at
which her erstwhile attorneys worked, it appears that the new
attorneys appointed by the applicant displayed no greater
haste in
progressing the substitution application than the erstwhile
attorneys. Regard being had to the fact that she first contacted
her
new attorneys in late November 2018, the replying affidavit in the
substitution application was only delivered some two and
a half years
later, on 14 May 2021.
[42]
The
law expects litigants to act with all due and necessary haste when
litigating. Where there is a prolonged lack of speed and
an ignoring
of prescribed time limits, the defaulting party must provide
compelling reasons why their failure to act with the required
swiftness should be overlooked. The applicant does not explicitly
seek that condonation. I suppose that it is conceivable that
her
description of what occurred over the past decade could, charitably,
be considered as an attempt at seeking condonation, without
labelling
it as such. But it appears to me that what the applicant has engaged
in is what was contemplated in
Independent
Municipal and Allied Trade Union on behalf of Zungu v SA Local
Government Bargaining Council and others
,
[12]
where the court held that:
‘
In
explaining the reason for the delay it is necessary for the party
seeking condonation to fully explain the reason for the delay
in
order for the court to be in a proper position to assess whether or
not the explanation is a good one. This in my view requires
an
explanation which covers the full length of the delay. The mere
listing of significant events which took place during the period
in
question without an explanation for the time that lapsed between
these events does not place a court in a position properly
to assess
the explanation for the delay. This amounts to nothing more than a
recordal of the dates relevant to the processing of
a dispute or
application, as the case may be.’
[43]
There
is no real explanation why there were such prolonged delays between
the signal events recounted by the applicant in her replying
affidavit. Because she has not sought condonation, the applicant has
also not addressed her prospects of success should condonation
be
granted. Those prospects will come into focus when some of the
remaining issues are addressed.
[44]
I
am not satisfied by the partial explanation provided by the applicant
for the prolonged delay in the preparation and delivery
of her
replying affidavit. Her explanation is characterised by a lack of
concern for the time limits applicable. Large chunks of
time are
simply glossed over by her. Her attitude almost borders on an
abandonment of the substitution application in preference
to pursuing
her erstwhile attorneys. Her lethargy in advancing the matter has not
been satisfactorily explained. To the extent
that condonation was
sought for the late filing of the replying affidavit, it is refused.
The third issue:
whether Cotton King has a valid claim against the defendant, and
whether it could have ceded such claim to the
applicant
[45]
The
wording of this issue asks whether Cotton King ‘has’ a
claim against the defendant. I shall assume that what was
intended
was whether Cotton King ‘had’ a claim against the
defendant, as it is common cause that Cotton King purported
to cede
its rights to the applicant. Having ceded that claim, it follows that
Cotton King no longer has a claim against the defendant.
[13]
[46]
The
deed of cession is the fulcrum around which the applicant’s
claim rotates. It is essential to the survival of her claim
against
the defendant. It is also, in my view, explicit in what it states.
[47]
Whilst
the deed of cession is generally unremarkable and contains provisions
that one would expect to find in such a document, it
is remarkable in
one particular respect: it acknowledges that Cotton King was not the
investor that had paid the money to the defendant.
According to the
two liquidators and the applicant, being the parties to the deed of
cession, the investor was the applicant. It
follows that the monies
invested with the defendant were not Cotton King’s but belonged
to the applicant. The deed of cession
need not have mentioned these
details. But it did. However, Cotton King’s particulars of
claim, even after they were amended,
are entirely predicated on
Cotton King being the investor.
[48]
The
admission in the deed of cession that it did not advance the
investment to the defendant raises a troubling question for the
applicant: what could Cotton King then cede to the applicant? It is a
matter of logic that a party who concedes that it has no
claim in
law, as the liquidators have done on behalf of Cotton King, has no
legal right to cede.
[49]
In
Grobler
v Oosthuizen
,
[14]
Brand JA stated that a cession cannot stand without the existence of
a principal debt and that:
[50]
‘…
it
matters not whether the principal debt is extinguished or never
existed at all’.
[15]
The
learned judge relied for this conclusion upon
Kilburn
v Estate Kilburn
,
[16]
where Wessels ACJ stated:
‘
It
is therefore clear that by our law there must be a legal or natural
obligation to which the hypothecation is accessory. If there
is no
obligation whatever there can be no hypothecation giving rise to a
substantive claim.’
[51]
Watermeyer
J in
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Neethling NO
,
[17]
referring to
Estate
Kilburn
with approval, stated that:
‘
Kilburn’s
case
was not a case where a principal obligation subsequently became
extinguished. It was a case where there never had been a principal
obligation. It seems to me however that there is no distinction in
principle between the two cases . . . After . . . the principal
debt
was extinguished . . . there remained no obligation to support the
cession by way of security.’
[18]
[52]
In
the more recent decision of
Brayton
Carlswald and another v Brews
,
[19]
Theron JA stated that:
‘
Transfer
of a “right” which has been extinguished is a nullity as
there is nothing which can be transferred. I agree
with the principle
that as a matter of logic, a non-existent right can never in law be
transferred as the subject-matter of a cession
.’
Following the reasoning
applied in
Neethling
, the same principle must apply where the
right never existed in the first place.
[53]
It
seems to me that the deed of cession acknowledges that Cotton King
never had a valid claim against the defendant. The liquidators
state
clearly that the investment that is referenced in the particulars of
claim was not Cotton King’s but was the applicant’s
in
her personal capacity. It follows therefore that Cotton King never
had a right to cede to the applicant.
[54]
I
appreciate, as Mr Iles drew to my attention, that where a cession
occurs after
litis
contestatio
has been reached, that what is ceded is the outcome of the litigation
and that as the subject-matter of the cession is
res
litigiosa
,
the cession itself does not transfer the right to prosecute the
action to the cessionary. That right only accrues when the court
grants an order substituting the cessionary as plaintiff.
[20]
It is at that juncture that the court will exercise its discretion
based upon the facts known to it. The question of such a discretion
is dealt with when the fifth issue is considered.
[55]
As
a cessionary steps into the shoes of the cedent, the cessionary
cannot acquire a greater right than the right possessed by the
cedent.
[21]
The cession
therefore could not, and did not, transfer a right to the applicant
that would entitle her to be substituted for Cotton
King in the
action.
The
fourth issue: whether the substitution of the applicant for the
plaintiff would prejudice the respondent
[56]
It
is worth repeating that at no stage has the applicant ever proceeded
against the defendant on the basis that she was the investor
who
invested R2,5 million with it. Her right to proceed is strictly
confined to her claim that she is the cessionary of Cotton
King’s
rights against the defendant.
[57]
The
action instituted by Cotton King, in its present form, appears to
have no future. It cannot succeed as Cotton King invested
nothing
with the defendant and, consequently, is not due anything back from
the defendant. There is no suggestion in the particulars
of claim, as
they are presently framed, that the applicant is due anything from
the defendant. As was stated by Majiedt JA in
Sentrachem
Limited v Terreblanche
:
[22]
‘
Once
a substitution as plaintiff occurs, there can be no dispute
concerning the legal standing to sue. A substitution sanctioned
by
the court is a legal procedural step to formalise the transfer of the
claim to the cessionary in terms of the cession. After
substitution
the cedent [should read cessionary] is entitled, and is in fact in
law obliged, to continue the suit in its own name.’
[58]
That
being the case, the applicant will be required to continue with
Cotton King’s non-existent claim against the defendant.
The
defendant will be put to the expense of participating in proceedings
that have no prospects of success and are an exercise
in futility. To
my mind that constitutes prejudice.
The fifth issue:
whether it is appropriate to determine the prospects of success on
the plaintiff’s claim in this substitution
application
[59]
In
Van
Rensburg v Condoprops 42 (Pty) Ltd
,
[23]
Leach J stated that:
‘
In
considering whether to allow such a substitution the court would be
called on to exercise discretion …’.
[24]
[60]
In
his heads of argument, Mr Iles echoed Leach J’s words and, in
my view, correctly acknowledged that a court hearing a substitution
application exercises a discretion when arriving at its judgment on
that issue.
A
judicial discretion refers to a judicial officer’s power to
make a decision based upon his or her individualised evaluation
of a
matter, guided by the principles of the applicable law. The judicial
officer will apply reason and judgment to choose from
several
alternatives that may be acceptable, due regard being had to all the
relevant facts pertaining to the matter.
[25]
Decisions taken involving the exercise of a discretion may thus be
based on the case's particular circumstances rather than upon
a rigid
application of law but should not be arbitrary in nature and should
be based upon what is right and equitable in the
circumstances
of the matter.
[61]
Mr
Iles submitted further that if there was a valid cession of a claim
to the cessionary that had not yet prescribed, the application
for
substitution should be granted. He submitted that this was the
position in this case: litigation was properly commenced by
Cotton
King before its claim had become prescribed, after
litis
contestatio
had been reached the claim was ceded to the applicant and the
agreement to cede was reduced to writing for ease of proof. The
substitution sought should therefore be granted. He submitted that it
was of no concern to the court whether the applicant, having
been
substituted for Cotton King, was ultimately likely to be successful
in the action.
[62]
Perhaps
the flaw in this reasoning is the premise that Cotton King had
entered into a valid cession with the applicant. Cotton King
had no
right and had made no investment with Mr Cowan. Yet it commenced
action against the defendant and then purported to cede
its rights to
the applicant.
[63]
Furthermore,
the mechanistic, tick-box approach that Mr Iles proposes does not
seem to me to allow for the exercise of the discretion
referred to by
Leach J in
Van
Rensburg
,
or for the consideration of prejudice to the other side. The
prospects of the success of the action may influence the issue of
prejudice. For me to properly exercise my discretion I must consider
all that is relevant. In my view, that would, at the very
least,
require me to carefully consider the nature of the right that was
ceded. Based upon the unique facts of this matter, what
was ceded was
not a valid right at all. That having been recognised, it seems to me
that I should have some regard to the eventual
outcome of the action
in the light of the admission that the investment was not Cotton
King’s when exercising my discretion
and considering the
question of prejudice to the defendant.
The
sixth issue: whether the applicant’s claim against the
respondent has prescribed
[64]
As
a general proposition, based upon the similarity of the approaches to
applications for amendments and substitution referred to
by Brand JA
in
Tecmed
,
[26]
a court would not ordinarily permit an amendment where the occurrence
of prescription was common cause or in any other situation
where a
claim would be known to have prescribed.
[27]
[65]
We
now know that Cotton King never had a claim against the defendant.
The applicant did have a claim but did not enforce it for
some
unknown reason. In terms of section 12(1) of the Prescription Act 68
of 1969 (the Act), prescription begins to run when the
debt becomes
due. The issuing and serving of summons in the name of an incorrect
plaintiff does not stop the running of prescription.
[28]
The wording of section 15(1) of the Act makes this plain:
‘
The
running of prescription shall, subject to the provisions of
subsection (2), be interrupted by the service on the debtor of any
process whereby the creditor claims payment of the debt.’
The
operative word in that extract is ‘creditor’: Cotton
King, by its own admission, was not a creditor of the defendant
when
it issued the summons against it. The issuing of the summons
accordingly did not interrupt the running of prescription insofar
as
Cotton King’s claim is concerned and certainly not as far as
the applicant’s claim is concerned. A substitution
application,
which may be viewed as a joinder application in which one party is
added and one is removed, is not a process in terms
of which a
creditor claims payment of a debt and accordingly does not interrupt
the running of prescription.
[29]
[66]
I
do not lose sight of the decision in
Sentrachem
v Terreblanche
.
[30]
In that case, a valid claim was ceded several times and the
cessionary on each occasion was substituted as the plaintiff in the
action, with the final substitution occurring after the completion of
the three-year prescriptive period. A special plea of prescription
was upheld by the lower court. On appeal, the Supreme Court of Appeal
found that the claim had not prescribed: all that had changed
on each
occasion was the identity of the plaintiff, not the nature of the
debt. In delivering his judgment, Majiedt JA approved
[31]
the following extract from
Fisher
v Natal Rubber Compounders (Pty) Ltd:
[32]
‘
Upon
substitution the cessionary acquired, by way of cession, all rights
and obligations vested in the cedent at the time of the
substitution.
What was bestowed on NRC by cession was a claim in respect of which
the running of prescription had been interrupted
by the service of
the summons. In my view the original interruption of prescription by
the timeous service of the summons was not
affected in any way by the
cession or subsequent amendment. The amendment was a mere procedural
step followed to effect the
substitution
.’
The
facts of this matter are distinguishable. Cotton King’s claim
was non-existent and the issuing of summons therefore did
not
interrupt the running of prescription. The substitution of the
applicant for Cotton King, if such was ordered, would result
in the
introduction of a different plaintiff and a different cause of action
and such action, it is submitted by the defendant,
has prescribed.
[67]
There
is clear evidence that the applicant’s claim has prescribed. In
a letter written by Mr Cowan and addressed to the applicant,
dated 14
October 2010, it was recorded that the investment was to be repaid by
no later than 31 January 2011. Absent any admission
made by the
defendant regarding its liability for the investment, and none have
been mentioned in this matter, the applicant’s
claim against
the defendant became prescribed at midnight on 30 January 2014. The
applicant’s claim has on the face of it
prescribed and nine
years later it remains prescribed. Mr Iles ultimately conceded as
much in his argument. It was a necessary
admission.
Summation
[68]
It
appears to me that the applicant’s attempt to litigate against
the defendant has come to an end. Her claim in her personal
capacity
has prescribed, and she has not taken cession of anything from Cotton
King that could improve her position. To allow her
to be substituted
in the place and stead of Cotton King would accordingly serve no
purpose and would not advance her position
[33]
but would prejudice the defendant who would have to endure the
inconvenience and expense of this essentially hopeless action limping
on.
[69]
The
applicant is, however, not without a remedy. Her true cause of action
is against her erstwhile attorneys in respect of which
she has
already issued summons.
Costs
[70]
Mr
Harpur, in urging the dismissal of the application, sought a costs
order that
included
the costs of senior counsel. Mr Iles resisted this with a reference
to
Hangar
v Robertson
.
[34]
In that matter, Leach JA stated the following:
‘
Counsel
for the respondent asked for an order for costs, to which the
respondent is of course entitled. However, he specifically
requested
that the costs order should include the costs “consequent upon
the employment of senior counsel”. This court
has previously
observed that such an order is inappropriate and that, where a single
counsel is employed no special order is required,
it being for the
taxing master to determine a fair and reasonable fee on taxation -
see
City
of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Chairman of the Valuation
Appeal Board for the City of Johannesburg & another
.
Although the employment of senior counsel in the present case appears
to have been a wise and reasonable precaution, it would
be wrong for
this court to fetter the taxing master’s discretion.’
[35]
(Footnote omitted.)
I
am of the view that the employment of senior counsel in this matter
likewise appears to have been a sensible precaution.
Order
[71]
In
the circumstances, I grant the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
_______________________
MOSSOP
J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicant : Mr K D Iles
Instructed
by: :
Warrick De Wet Redman Attorneys
Suite
14 Corporate Park
11
Sinembe Crescent
Sinembe
Park
Umhlanga
Counsel
for the respondent : Mr G Harpur SC
Instructed
by :
Garlicke and Bousfield
Incorporated
7
Torsvale Crescent
La
Lucia Ridge Office Estate
La
Lucia Ridge
Date
of argument
: 15
August 2023
Date
of Judgment
:
13
September 2023
[1]
Mr
Cowan was an attorney of this court and an executive consultant
associated with the defendant. Mnguni J summed up aspects of
Mr
Cowan’s conduct in his judgment in
Stols
v Garlicke and Bousfield
(PKF
(Durban) Incorporated and others as third parties)
[2020]
ZAKZPHC 47;
[2020]
4 All SA 850 (KZP)
para
3 when he said: ‘
On
24 November 2010, around 6h50am, Mr Cowan committed
suicide. He left a suicide note dated 22 November 2010,
wherein
he admitted to having committed fraud and misrepresented facts to G
and B’s directors by inducing them to authorise
certain
fraudulent transactions’
.
[2]
Defined in the deed of cession as being the two liquidators.
[3]
Defined in the deed of cession as being the applicant.
[4]
Defined in the deed of cession as being Cotton King Manufacturing
(Pty) Ltd.
[5]
This
clause makes no grammatical sense. The deed of cession defines ‘the
company’ as being Cotton King. Using the
real names of the
parties, this sentence would read: ‘Cotton King Manufacturing
(Pty) Ltd has erroneously been cited as
Cotton King Manufacturing
(Pty) Limited and not Cotton King Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd.’ Mr
Harpur suggested that what this
clause was intended to mean was that
the action should have been brought in the name of ‘Cotton
King Manufacturing (Pty)
Ltd (in liquidation)’ and not simply
in the name of Cotton King Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd. Mr Iles thought
that explanation
likely, but nothing turns on it and I need not
hammer some meaning into the sentence.
[6]
Uniform
rule 29(1);
Jankowiak
and another v Parity Insurance Co Ltd
1963 (2) SA 286 (W).
[7]
Brummer
v Gorfil Brothers Investments (Pty) Ltd en andere
1999 (3) SA 389
(SCA) at 410F.
[8]
Tecmed
(Pty) Ltd and others v Nissho Iwai Corporation and another
[2010] ZASCA 143
;
2011 (1) SA 35
(SCA) para 14.
[9]
Ibid para 20.
[10]
Ibid
paras
13-14.
[11]
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital and another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as
Amicus Curiae)
[2007]
ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC) para 20.
[12]
Independent
Municipal and Allied Trade Union on behalf of Zungu v SA Local
Government Bargaining Council and others
(2010)
31 ILJ 1413 (LC) para 13.
[13]
Standard
General Insurance Co Ltd v Eli Lilly (SA) (Pty) Ltd (FBC Holdings
(Pty) Ltd, third party)
1996 (1) SA 382
(W) at 385F-G.
[14]
Grobler
v Oosthuizen
[2009]
ZASCA 51
;
2009 (5) SA 500
(SCA);
[2009] 3 All SA 508
(SCA).
[15]
Ibid
para 21.
[16]
Kilburn
v Estate Kilburn
1931 AD 501
at 506.
[17]
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Neethling, NO
1958
(2) SA 25
(C).
[18]
Ibid at 30A-D.
[19]
Brayton
Carlswald (Pty) Ltd and another v Brews
[2017]
ZASCA 68
;
2017 (5) SA 498
(SCA) para 20, referencing
First
National Bank of SA Ltd v Lynn NO and others
[1995] ZASCA 158
;
1996
(2) SA 339
(A) at 346C.
[20]
Van
Rensburg v Condoprops 42 (Pty) Ltd
2009 (6) SA 539
(E).
[21]
General
Finance Co (Pvt) Ltd v Robertson
1980 (4) SA 122
(ZA) at 124A.
[22]
Sentrachem
Limited v Terreblanche
[2017]
ZASCA 16
para 17.
[23]
Van
Rensburg v Condoprops 42 (Pty) Ltd
2009 (6) SA 539 (E).
[24]
Ibid para 4.
## [25]Kemp
t/a Centralmed v Rawlins[2009]
ZALAC 8; [2009] 11 BLLR 1027 (LAC); (2009) 30 ILJ 2677 (LAC) para 4.
[25]
Kemp
t/a Centralmed v Rawlins
[2009]
ZALAC 8; [2009] 11 BLLR 1027 (LAC); (2009) 30 ILJ 2677 (LAC) para 4.
##
[26]
Tecmed
(Pty) Ltd and others v Nissho Iwai Corporation and another
[2010] ZASCA 143
;
2011 (1) SA 35
(SCA) para 14.
[27]
Grindrod
(Pty) Ltd v Seaman
1998 (2) SA 347
(C) at 351D-E.
[28]
Solenta
Aviation (Pty) Ltd v Aviation @ Work (Pty) Ltd
[2013] ZASCA 103
;
2014 (2) SA 106
(SCA) para 17.
[29]
Peter
Taylor and Associates v Bell Estates (Pty) Ltd and another
[2013] ZASCA 94
;
2014 (2) SA 312
(SCA) para 16;
Nativa
Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd v Keymax Investments 125 (Pty) Ltd and
others
2020 (1) SA 235
(GP) paras 10-42.
[30]
Sentrachem
Limited v Terreblanche
[2017]
ZASCA 16.
[31]
Ibid
para 13.
[32]
Fisher
v Natal Rubber Compounders (Pty) Ltd
[2016] ZASCA 33
;
2016 (5) SA 477
(SCA) para 15.
[33]
Stroud
v Steel Engineering Co Ltd and another
1996 (4) SA 1139
(W) at 1142C-F.
[34]
Hangar
and others v Robertson
[2016]
ZASCA 102
.
[35]
Ibid
para 21. See also
GR
Sutherland and Associates (Pty) Ltd v V & A Waterfront Holdings
(Pty) Ltd and others
[2023] ZAWCHC 67
para 40.
sino noindex
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