Case Law[2023] ZACC 44South Africa
Ditsoane v ACWA Power Africa Holdings (Pty) Ltd (CCT 107/23) [2023] ZACC 44; 2024 (3) BCLR 307 (CC); (2024) 45 ILJ 467 (CC) (12 December 2023)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
12 December 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Notice of withdrawal of case — filed without client’s authority — ratification and ostensible authority not proved
Judgment
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## Ditsoane v ACWA Power Africa Holdings (Pty) Ltd (CCT 107/23) [2023] ZACC 44; 2024 (3) BCLR 307 (CC); (2024) 45 ILJ 467 (CC) (12 December 2023)
Ditsoane v ACWA Power Africa Holdings (Pty) Ltd (CCT 107/23) [2023] ZACC 44; 2024 (3) BCLR 307 (CC); (2024) 45 ILJ 467 (CC) (12 December 2023)
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sino date 12 December 2023
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 107/23
In
the matter between:
SEIPATI
JOYCE
DITSOANE
Applicant
and
ACWA
POWER AFRICA HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Ditsoane v ACWA Power Africa
Holdings (Pty) Ltd
[2023] ZACC 44
Coram:
Maya DCJ,
Kollapen J, Mathopo J, Mhlantla J,
Rogers J, Schippers AJ, Theron J and Tshiqi J
Judgments:
Rogers J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
No hearing
Decided
on:
12 December 2023
Summary:
Notice of withdrawal of case — filed without client’s
authority — ratification and ostensible authority not proved
Labour
Court – revival of withdrawn case
ORDER
On
appeal from the Labour Court, Johannesburg:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal succeeds.
3.
The Labour Court’s
order of 24 October 2022 is set aside and
replaced with an order in the following terms:
“
(a)
The notice of withdrawal served by Mulima Denga Attorneys on
25 October 2017 is set aside as unauthorised.
(b)
Insofar as needs be, the applicant’s statement of case is
revived.
(c)
There is no order as to costs.”
4.
The parties are to bear
their own costs in this Court and in the
Labour Appeal Court.
JUDGMENT
ROGERS J
(Maya DCJ, Kollapen J, Mathopo J, Mhlantla J,
Schippers AJ, Theron J and Tshiqi J
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, Ms Seipati Joyce Ditsoane, seeks leave to
appeal a judgment of the Labour Court. The effect of the
Labour
Court’s judgment is to bar the applicant from pursuing
her claim against the respondent, ACWA Power Africa
Holdings (Pty) Ltd,
for unfair dismissal. The Chief
Justice directed the parties to file written submissions. The
applicant was subsequently
directed to file a full record. We
are deciding the case without an oral hearing.
[2]
The applicant began employment with the respondent in November
2015. On 27 October 2016, the respondent issued a
retrenchment letter to the applicant stating that she was to be
dismissed with effect from 30 November 2016. The applicant
referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA). On 5
December
2016, the CCMA issued a certificate that the dispute
remained unresolved.
Litigation
history
[3]
On 11 May 2017, the applicant referred her unfair dismissal
claim to the Labour Court. At that stage she was
represented
by Mulima Denga Attorneys (MDA). The
respondent, which has at all material times been represented by
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr (CDH),
served a notice
complaining that the statement of case was excipiable and that the
referral was out of time. The applicant
promptly served an
application to condone the late referral. The respondent
delivered an exception. The condonation
application was set
down for hearing on 3 November 2017 and the exception on
17 November 2017.
[4]
On 24 October 2017, the applicant consulted with another firm
of attorneys, Ndumiso Voyi Incorporated (NVI), to get a second
opinion on her case. NVI advised her that she had good
prospects of success but that her statement of claim needed to be
substantially amended. On the same day, the applicant informed
MDA that she would be changing attorneys and that they should
file a
notice of withdrawal.
[5]
The
next day MDA, evidently having misunderstood their instructions, sent
an email to CDH, copied to the applicant. In this
email, MDA
stated that the applicant had informed them the previous evening that
her husband had advised her to get the services
of another lawyer
“and that we should withdraw the matter henceforth”.
Later that day, MDA delivered a notice
in terms of rule 13(1) of the
Labour Court’s rules,
[1]
purporting to withdraw the applicant’s case.
[6]
On 26 October 2017, NVI, unaware of what MDA had done, wrote
to CDH attaching a notice substituting themselves as the applicant’s
attorneys; stating that she intended amending her statement of claim
and to supplement her condonation application; and proposing
that the
matter enrolled for hearing on 3 November 2017 be removed from the
roll. CDH replied that MDA had delivered a notice
withdrawing
the case; that the applicant would need to bring a substantive
application to demonstrate why the notice of withdrawal
should be set
aside and the case revived; that the applicant would have to tender
wasted costs for 3 November 2017; and that only
if the case was
revived would she be entitled to bring an application to amend her
statement of case and supplement her condonation
application.
[7]
On 1 November 2017, NVI contacted MDA to query the notice of
withdrawal, stating that the applicant’s instruction had only
been that MDA should withdraw as her attorneys. MDA
acknowledged its error and later confirmed this under oath.
[8]
On 3 November 2017, the Labour Court made an order purportedly
by consent. In terms of this order, the condonation application
was postponed
sine die
(without a fixed new date), with the
applicant to pay the wasted costs. The order provided, further,
that the applicant was
granted leave, within 10 days, “to file
an affidavit explaining why the statement of case ought to be
revived, failing which
the statement of case will remain withdrawn in
its entirety”. How this order came to be made is not
altogether clear:
(a)
According to the applicant, NVI and CDH merely
agreed that the matter
would be removed from the roll, with the applicant to pay the wasted
costs. There was no agreement
putting the applicant to terms to
explain why the statement of case should be revived.
(b)
The attorney at CDH who dealt with the matter in
November 2017 is no
longer with that firm, so CDH cannot positively assert that the order
was in all respects by agreement.
What CDH says is that the
respondent’s attorney was present at court on 3 November 2017
whereas the applicant’s attorney
was not.
[9]
According to the applicant, it was only on 18 January 2018
that she learnt that an order had been made on 3 November 2017
putting
her to terms to file an affidavit explaining why her
statement of case should be revived. This seems to be borne out
by the
fact that on 19 January 2018 CDH sent a copy of the order
to NVI and on 21 January 2018 apologised to NVI for only
bringing the order to the latter’s attention sometime after the
order was handed down. In the same letter, CDH agreed
that the
10 day period for filing the revival application would only run
from 19 January 2018.
[10]
On 24 January 2018, the applicant served an application
(interlocutory application) to set aside the notice of
withdrawal filed
by MDA. She also claimed relief in respect of
condonation and the exception, but that is not now germane. The
respondent
opposed the interlocutory application. One of the
grounds of opposition was that the interlocutory application had not
been
served within 10 days from 3 November 2017. In
the light of CDH’s letter of 21 January 2018, this ground of
opposition is puzzling, to say the least.
[11]
The
interlocutory application was set down for hearing on 28 January
2022. The applicant’s uncontested evidence is that
the
four-year delay was due to the Labour Court’s congested
rolls and not to any fault on her side. On 21 January
2022, the
applicant served an application to condone her failure to deliver the
interlocutory application within 10 days from
3 November 2017.
In view of the agreement between NVI and CDH that the 10 days would
run from 19 January 2018, this condonation
application should have
been unnecessary. Unsurprisingly, the respondent did not oppose
condonation. When the matter
was called on 28 January 2022,
condonation was argued on an unopposed basis. On
31 January 2022, the
Labour Court delivered a short
judgment granting condonation.
[2]
[12]
The
seemingly unnecessary step of condonation led to a further delay of
nearly nine months. Again, the applicant’s uncontested
evidence is that this delay had nothing to do with her.
Eventually, the interlocutory application was argued on
20 October 2022.
In its judgment delivered on 24
October 2022,
[3]
the Labour
Court (Van Niekerk J) dismissed the interlocutory
application with no order as to costs. The Labour
Court refused
leave to appeal, as did the Labour Appeal Court.
[13]
In this Court, the respondent filed a notice to abide the
application for leave to appeal, adding that if this Court granted
leave
it would oppose the appeal. However, this Court’s
uniform practice is to deal simultaneously with an application for
leave to appeal and any resultant appeal. In response to the
Chief Justice’s directions, both parties filed submissions
on
the merits of the proposed appeal.
The
Labour Court’s judgment
[14]
Although the applicant sought the setting aside of the notice
of withdrawal, the Judge treated her application as being, in
substance,
a revival application as contemplated in the order of 3
November 2017. The test to be applied, said the Judge, was the
test
ordinarily applied by the Labour Court in an application to
reinstate or retrieve an archived file. The Court had to
recognise
the respondent’s interest in finality but should also
take into account all relevant factors, including the explanation
proffered,
the prospects of success in the main action, the
respective prejudice to the parties and the interests of justice.
[15]
The Judge recorded the “breakdown in communication”
that had occurred between the applicant and MDA which led to the
latter filing the notice of withdrawal. The Judge accepted that
her explanation was reasonable and that she had not intended
to
withdraw her claim.
[16]
But that, the Judge continued, was not the end of the matter.
He also had to take into account “the long period of delay
since the notice was filed, all of that delay occasioned by the
applicant”. More than six years had passed since her
dismissal, and her case had not progressed beyond the referral of a
statement of claim. The applicant acknowledged that her
statement of claim was defective and an exception against it was
still pending. In those circumstances, “there is little
prospect of a trial date within the next few years”.
According to the Judge, the prejudice to the respondent was obvious
–
it would have to defend the case “years after the event”.
Also to be taken into account was the “statutory
purpose of
efficient and expeditious dispute resolution”, which would be
frustrated if the matter were allowed to proceed.
[17]
As to the applicant’s prospects of success, the Judge
did not regard them “to be such as to outweigh an inordinate
delay
and the prejudice that the respondent would suffer were the
application to be granted”.
Directions
and submissions
The directions
[18]
The Chief Justice’s directions required the parties, in
addition to any other matters they wished to canvass, to address the
following questions:
“
(a)
On the assumption that the notice of withdrawal filed by [MDA] on
25 October 2017 was
filed without the applicant’s
actual authority, did the filing of that notice have any legal effect
or bring about the withdrawal
of her application?
(b)
If the answer to question (a) is that the filing of the notice did
not have the effect
of bringing about the withdrawal of her
application, did the applicant need an order reviving her application
or setting aside
the notice of withdrawal?”
The
applicant’s submissions
[19]
The
applicant submits that, on the uncontested evidence, the notice of
withdrawal was indeed filed without her actual authority.
The
mandate initially given to MDA was to prosecute her claim.
Withdrawing the claim was the total opposite of the mandate.
The applicant was thus not bound by the purported notice of
withdrawal. An implied authority to withdraw a case does not
fall within the scope of the implied authority recognised in
Kruizenga
.
[4]
[20]
There was also, the applicant submits, no apparent or
ostensible authority. Although MDA’s email of 25 October
2017
spoke of the withdrawal of the claim, the same email recorded
that the applicant was going to appoint new attorneys to handle the
matter. Withdrawing the case was inconsistent with her
intention as thus recorded.
[21]
The purported notice of withdrawal, the applicant thus
contends, did not bring about the withdrawal of her claim in the
Labour Court
and there was no need for an order reviving her claim.
However, the order of 3 November 2017 required the applicant to take
steps for the revival of her claim. Unless she took steps
(which she did by bringing the interlocutory application), the
order
would have had the effect of treating her case as at an end.
The
respondent’s submissions
[22]
The respondent does not argue that MDA had the applicant’s
actual authority to withdraw the case, although the respondent does
not explicitly concede the point. The respondent submits that,
if this Court accepts the applicant’s allegation of
an absence
of actual authority, we should find that the applicant by conduct
ratified the withdrawal. The respondent bases
this argument on
the fact that the applicant did not voice disagreement in response to
MDA’s email of 25 October 2017 and
did nothing for about three
months until the interlocutory application was served on
24 January 2018.
[23]
In the alternative, the respondent submits that the applicant
should be estopped from denying MDA’s authority to withdraw the
case. With reference to
Kruizenga
, the respondent argues
that the applicant represented to the respondent, which reasonably
believed, that MDA had “the usual
and customary powers”
associated with appointment as an attorney. The respondent had
no reasonable basis to question
MDA’s authority to file the
notice of withdrawal. Although, according to
Kruizenga
,
a court may on grounds of equity reject reliance on estoppel, it
would not be equitable to do so in the present case, since there
is
obvious prejudice to the respondent. But for the withdrawal
notice, the respondent would have proceeded with its opposition
to
the condonation application on 3 November 2017 and with its exception
on 17 November 2017. In that event, the
matter might
have reached finality six years ago.
Jurisdiction
and leave to appeal
[24]
The effect of the Labour Court’s judgment is to preclude
the applicant from pursuing her claim for unfair dismissal.
This prejudicially affects her right to fair labour practices, which
is guaranteed by section 23(1) of the Constitution.
It also
impacts on her right, guaranteed by section 34 of the Constitution,
to have her labour dispute resolved by the application
of law in a
fair public hearing before a court. This Court thus has
jurisdiction.
[25]
Whether leave to appeal should be granted depends on the
interests of justice. A relevant consideration is
prospects
of success. As I shall presently explain, the
applicant enjoys good prospects of success. Prospects of
success will
not necessarily be decisive. Where a case does not
involve any important issue of principle and turns on the particular
circumstances
of a case, it might not be in the interests of justice
for this Court’s resources to be expended on resolving it.
In
the present case, however, we are able to do justice without
having to convene an oral hearing. A judgment from this Court
may provide guidance in how matters of this kind should be
approached. It is thus in the interests of justice to grant
leave
to appeal.
The
merits
MDA’s authority to
withdraw the case
[26]
The uncontested evidence is that the applicant asked MDA to
withdraw as her attorneys and that MDA misunderstood her
instruction.
In the condonation application argued in January
2022, the responsible attorney at MDA filed a confirmatory affidavit
to this effect.
The filing of the notice of withdrawal of the
case thus occurred without the applicant’s actual authority.
[27]
The respondent’s contention that the applicant ratified
MDA’s withdrawal of the case is untenable. The evidence
is clear that the applicant wanted MDA to withdraw as her attorneys
so that NVI could continue with the claim on her behalf.
There
is nothing to show that the applicant, as a layperson, must have
understood, from MDA’s email of 25 October 2017,
that
MDA was intent on withdrawing the whole case. This is
particularly so since the same email spoke of her intention to
use
new attorneys. The very next day, NVI sent an email to CDH
attaching a notice of substitution and making proposals from
which it
was clear that the applicant intended to carry on with the case.
The delay from 3 November 2017 to 18 January 2018
is explained by the
fact that the applicant was unaware until 18 January 2018 that she
had been put to terms to take action in
order to prevent her case
from being deemed to be permanently abandoned.
[28]
In
Kruizenga
,
[5]
which concerned High Court litigation, Cachalia JA was careful to
emphasise that the issue in that case was whether a party may
resile
from agreements made by his attorney, without his knowledge, at a
rule 37 conference. He emphasised that his judgment
did “not
deal with agreements reached outside of the context of conducting a
trial in the normal course of events”.
[6]
[29]
After a survey of various authorities, Cachalia JA summarised
the position of an attorney’s implied authority thus:
“
To
summarise it would appear that our courts have dealt with questions
relating to the actual authority of an attorney to transact
on the
client’s behalf in the following manner: Attorneys generally do
not have implied authority to settle or comprise a
claim without the
consent of the client. However, the instruction to an attorney
to sue or defend the claim may include the
implied authority to do so
provided the attorney acts in good faith. And the courts have
said that they will set aside a
settlement or compromise that does
not have the client’s authority where, objectively viewed, it
appears that the agreement
is unjust and not in the client’s
best interests.”
[7]
[30]
Implied authority is a form of actual authority. If an
attorney does something that is contrary to the express instructions
of the client, it is contrary to the attorney’s actual
authority. The fact that the attorney’s act would, but
for the client’s express contrary instruction, have been within
the attorney’s implied authority does not convert the
act from
an unauthorised one into an authorised one. However, the fact
that the act would, but for the contrary instruction,
have been
within the attorney’s implied authority may be relevant in
deciding whether the client is estopped from denying
the attorney’s
actual authority.
[31]
In
Kruizenga
,
Cachalia JA said that the appointment of an attorney may constitute a
representation by the client that the attorney has “the
usual
and customary powers associated with the appointment”. In
the context of that particular case, the usual and
customary powers
were said to include “instructing counsel to defend the claim,
to draft the plea and to attend all pre-trial
procedures, including
rule 37 conferences”.
[8]
The Court’s conclusion was that the defendant was estopped from
denying the authority of his attorney to reach certain
agreements
during pre-trial procedures, namely conceding the merits and
admitting certain heads of damages, even though these agreements
were
contrary to the client’s express instructions.
[32]
In
response to an argument that permitting estoppel to operate in this
way could lead to grave injustice, Cachalia JA said that,
“because
estoppel is a rule of justice and equity, it is open to a court to
disallow the defence on this ground”.
[9]
In that particular case, however, the Court did not consider
that justice and equity required reliance on estoppel to be
disallowed.
[33]
On the facts of the present case, there is no merit in the
respondent’s invocation of apparent or ostensible authority.
The applicant herself did nothing to convey to the respondent or CDH
that MDA had authority to withdraw her claim. We have
not been
referred to any authority in support of the proposition that, when an
attorney is mandated to pursue a claim, it is part
of the attorney’s
“usual and customary powers” to withdraw the case out of
the blue. By “out of the
blue”, I mean a notice of
withdrawal which the other side was not expecting to receive
pursuant, for example, to settlement
discussions at a pre-trial
conference. And I emphasise, in fairness to MDA, that they did
not deliver the notice of withdrawal
in the purported exercise of a
discretion conferred on them by a general mandate. MDA only
acted as they did because they
mistakenly believed that this was the
applicant’s specific instruction.
[34]
In
Ras
,
[10]
an attorney had, without authority, withdrawn his client’s
licensing application at the hearing of a liquor board.
A Full
Court of the Cape Provincial Division of the Supreme Court said that
it was clear from the authorities that a client is
not bound by the
actions of his legal representative where the latter “has
exceeded the mandate given him and he has achieved
an object that had
not been intended by his principal”.
[11]
The Court referred to a statement by one of the old authorities
that “for acts of great prejudice the attorney needs
a special
mandate”.
[12]
This
applied to “any material alteration in the object of the
suit”.
[13]
The
Court also referred
[14]
to
De
Vos v Calitz
,
[15]
where a distinction was drawn between an act performed by an attorney
in the course of his authority and discretion as an attorney
and an
act performed by an attorney in the mistaken belief as to his
client’s instructions.
[16]
[35]
Although apparent or ostensible authority cannot be based on
the unauthorised agent’s own conduct, MDA’s email of 25
October 2017 was in any event contradictory or equivocal, since it
referred not only to withdrawal but to the applicant’s
intention to appoint new attorneys. The very next day, the
respondent’s attorneys received a notice of substitution
from
NVI together with proposals which showed that the applicant was
intent on pursuing the pending case. At best for the
respondent, it received mixed and conflicting signals.
[36]
I cannot accept the respondent’s contention that it
acted to its prejudice in reliance on MDA’s supposed
authority.
By the time the order was made on 3 November 2017,
the respondent and its attorneys clearly knew that the applicant was
intending to pursue her claim and had not intended for it to be
withdrawn. The respondent complains that, but for the notice
of
withdrawal, it might have achieved finality pursuant to the
proceedings scheduled for hearing on 3 and 17 November 2017.
But the respondent did not give up those hearings in the belief that
the case had been withdrawn. The respondent knew that
the
applicant was contesting the supposed withdrawal. The
respondent was seeking to take advantage of an error by insisting
that the enrolled matters be postponed and that the applicant
motivate why her case should be revived. If the respondent
had
simply acknowledged that MDA’s filing of the notice of
withdrawal was an error, the applicant would, in the absence of
agreement by the respondent, have had to apply for a postponement of
the hearings on 3 and 17 November 2017.
[37]
Since MDA had neither actual nor apparent or ostensible
authority to withdraw the applicant’s case, she was not bound
by the
notice of withdrawal. Although the Judge who dealt with
the matter on 3 November 2017 may not have known that the notice of
withdrawal was unauthorised, this was clearly established in the
interlocutory application. Accordingly, the Labour Court
should
have found that, since the case was never withdrawn, there was no
need to revive it. The applicant should not have
been treated
as a supplicant for an indulgence.
The Labour Court’s
refusal to “revive” the claim
[38]
Even
if one assumes against the applicant that she needed the indulgence
of a revival, the Labour Court plainly misdirected itself
in refusing
to revive her case.
[17]
A very important consideration was that the applicant never intended
to withdraw her case, something which the Judge evidently
accepted.
[39]
Where the Judge went astray was in his cursory discussion of
delay. He said he had to take into account “the long
period
of delay since the notice was filed”. The Judge
was presumably referring to the unauthorised notice of withdrawal,
which was filed on 25 October 2017. There was a delay
of five years from that date until the Labour Court heard
the
interlocutory application in October 2022. The Judge regarded
the whole of that delay as attributable to the applicant.
That
is manifestly wrong:
(a)
The first period of delay, about three months,
was from
25 October 2017 to 24 January 2018, when the
applicant served her interlocutory application.
An intervening
event was the order of 3 November 2017. The applicant
was unaware of that order, and in particular
the requirement that she
file a revival application, until 18 January 2018. When she
became aware of it, she promptly delivered
her interlocutory
application, well within the new 10-day period to which the
respondent had agreed. The applicant was not
at fault in this
regard. To the extent that her failure to comply with the
initial 10-day period required condonation, the
Labour Court
later granted condonation.
(b)
The second period of delay, about four years, was
from
24 January 2018 to 28 January 2022, when the
interlocutory application was initially scheduled to be heard.
It is uncontested that this period of delay was entirely attributable
to the Labour Court’s congested rolls. An additional
reason was, of course, that the respondent chose to oppose the
revival of the applicant’s case, despite not being able to
contest that the withdrawal had occurred without her authority.
(c)
The third period of delay, about nine months,
was from
28 January 2022 to 20 October 2022, when the
interlocutory application was finally heard on its merits.
The
reason why the interlocutory application could not be argued on 28
January 2022 is that the applicant was put to the unnecessary
burden
of bringing an application to condone non-compliance with the 10-day
period mentioned in the order of 3 November 2017 –
unnecessary,
because CDH had agreed that the 10 days would only run from
19 January 2018 and the applicant brought her
application
within the new 10-day period. In the event, condonation was
granted unopposed.
[40]
The Labour Court’s misdirection on delay so tainted its
assessment of the matter that we are entitled to consider the matter
afresh. Given that the withdrawal of the case was unintended
and unauthorised and that the applicant was not responsible
for the
ensuing delay, it would be most unjust to bar her from proceeding
with her case. Insofar as prospects of success
are concerned,
on the applicant’s version there was virtually no consultation
prior to her retrenchment. She also attacks
the retrenchment
decision on its merits. The respondent has not sought to
persuade us that revival should be refused because
of poor
prospects. The respondent has also not sought to establish
trial prejudice.
[41]
In the result, the appeal must succeed. Although I
question the respondent’s conduct in resisting the applicant’s
attempts to get her case back on track, I do not think that this is
sufficient to mark our displeasure with a costs order.
I will
thus follow the lead of the Labour Court and the Labour Appeal Court
in making no order as to costs.
Order
[42]
The following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal succeeds.
3.
The Labour Court’s
order of 24 October 2022 is set aside and
replaced with an order in the following terms:
“
(a)
The notice of withdrawal served by Mulima Denga Attorneys on
25 October 2017 is set aside
as unauthorised.
(b)
Insofar as needs be, the applicant’s statement of case is
revived.
(c)
There is no order as to costs.”
4.
The parties are to bear
their own costs in this Court and in the
Labour Appeal Court.
For
the Applicant:
Ndumiso
Voyi Incorporated.
For
the Respondent:
M
Edwards
Instructed
by Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Incorporated.
[1]
Rule 13(1)(a) states:
“
A party who has
initiated proceedings and wants to withdraw the matter must deliver
a notice of withdrawal as soon as possible.”
[2]
Ditsoane
v ACWA Power Africa Holdings (Pty) Ltd
(JS 259/2017) [2022] ZALCJHB 1.
[3]
Ditsoane
v ACWA Power Africa Holdings (Pty
)
Ltd
(JS 259/2017) [2022] ZALCJHB 299.
[4]
MEC for
Economic Affairs, Environment & Tourism: Eastern Cape v
Kruizenga
[2010] ZASCA 58; 2010 (4) SA 122 (SCA); [2010] 4 All SA 23 (SCA).
[5]
Id.
[6]
Id at para 6.
[7]
Id at para 11.
[8]
Id at para 17.
[9]
Id at para 21.
[10]
Ras v
Liquor Licensing Board, Area No 11, Kimberley
1966
(2) SA 232 (C).
[11]
Id at 237E-F.
[12]
Id at 237G-H.
[13]
Id at 238A.
[14]
Id at 238B-C. The statements from
Ras
to
which I have referred in footnotes 10 to 13 were approved by a
Full Court of the Transvaal Provincial Division of the
Supreme
Court in
Transvaal
Canoe Union v Butgereit
1990 (3) SA 398
(T) at 409E-410G. See also paras 21-2 of the
judgment of a Full Court of the Eastern Cape Division of the High
Court in
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development v Rozani
[2007] ZAECHC 113.
[15]
De Vos
v Calitz & De Villiers
1916
CPD 465.
[16]
See also
Forget
v Knott
1921
EDL 164
at 172:
“
It
seems to me on the authorities quoted by Mr Van der Riet that an
attorney, being a special agent as far as this particular
case is
concerned, has no authority to do more than prosecute it to its
final determination in the interests of his client, and
as soon as
he proceeds to do something which on the face of it is not for the
benefit of his client, the opposite party is put
upon enquiry, and
the attorney’s client can repudiate it.”
[17]
The Labour Appeal Court has held that an applicant may be permitted
to withdraw a notice of withdrawal, thereby reinstating the
case:
Ellies
Electronics (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration
[2020]
ZALAC 33
; 2020 JDR 2897 (LAC) at para 12.
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