Case Law[2025] ZASCA 23South Africa
Bidvest Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd v Mandla Wellem Mabena (986/2023) [2025] ZASCA 23; 2025 (3) SA 362 (SCA) (26 March 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
26 March 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Section 17(2)(f) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 –reconsideration of a decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal to refuse special leave to appeal – finality of such decision – exceptional circumstances as a jurisdictional fact – who decides whether a reconsideration is permissible.
Judgment
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## Bidvest Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd v Mandla Wellem Mabena (986/2023) [2025] ZASCA 23; 2025 (3) SA 362 (SCA) (26 March 2025)
Bidvest Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd v Mandla Wellem Mabena (986/2023) [2025] ZASCA 23; 2025 (3) SA 362 (SCA) (26 March 2025)
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sino date 26 March 2025
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Appeal –
Supreme
Court of Appeal
–
Refusal
of special leave to appeal – Reconsideration – Whether
exceptional circumstances exist – Allegations
that full
court had unfairly disregarded defence of necessity – Trial
court and full court adequately considered defence
– No
unfairness or exceptional circumstances established – Court
lacked jurisdiction to reconsider refusal of
special leave –
Finality of petition decision affirmed – Matter struck from
roll –
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
s 17(2)(f).
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 986/2023
In
the matter between:
BIDVEST
PROTEA COIN SECURITY (PTY)
LTD
APPLICANT
and
MANDLA
WELLEM MABENA
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Bidvest Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd v Mandla Wellem Mabena
(986/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 23
(26 March 2025)
Coram:
MOKGOHLOA ADP and MBATHA and UNTERHALTER JJA and VALLY and MODIBA
AJJA
Heard:
12 March 2025
Delivered:
26 March 2025.
Summary:
Section 17(2)
(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
–reconsideration of a decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal
to refuse special leave to appeal – finality of such
decision –
exceptional circumstances as a jurisdictional fact – who
decides whether a reconsideration is permissible.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Mpumalanga Division of the High Court, Middelburg
(Mphahlele DJP and Mankge and Vukeya JJ, sitting as a court of
appeal):
(i)
The matter is struck from the roll;
(ii)
The applicant is to pay the costs incurred by the respondent in
opposing
the application for reconsideration.
JUDGMENT
Unterhalter
JA (Mokgohloa ADP and Mbatha JA and Vally and Modiba AJJA
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The applicant, Bidvest Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd (Bidvest)
provided security services to the owner of the Wonderfontein mine, a
mine outside Middelburg, in the province of Mpumalanga. In
March
2016, the Association of Mine Workers and Construction Union (AMCU),
the representative union, embarked upon a protected
strike. Members
of AMCU employed at the mine, including the respondent, Mr Mabena,
participated in the strike. On 4 April 2016,
the striking workers,
including Mr Mabena, engaged in industrial action by demonstrating
and picketing in an area that had been
designated for this purpose,
and was agreed as between the employer and AMCU. A harvester
belonging to a farmer, Mr Bezuidenhout,
entered the picketing area in
order to gain access to an adjoining field in which soya was planted.
The harvester drove into a
black vehicle (belonging to one of the
striking workers), and then entered the field. The striking workers,
in response, threw
stones at the harvester and at employees of
Bidvest who were in place to secure the mine. Employees of Bidvest,
as they had done
earlier in the day, in two groups, advanced upon the
workers, and opened fire with rubber bullets. The striking workers
ran into
the nearby bushes, where Mr Mabena was struck by a rubber
bullet in his left eye, as a result of which he lost the sight of his
eye.
[2]
Mr Mabena instituted an action against Bidvest to claim compensation
for the loss of his eye. Pleadings were exchanged. The parties agreed
to separate the issue of liability and quantum. The trial
was heard
before Brauckmann AJ in the Mpumalanga Division of the High Court,
Middelburg (the trial court). The trial court, having
separated the
issue of liability for determination, held that Bidvest was 100%
liable for the damages that Mr Mabena may prove.
[3]
The treatment by the trial court of Bidvest’s defence
is
the matter that now assumes some importance. In its plea, Bidvest
denied that the events alleged by Mr Mabena that led to his
injury
had occurred at all; but if they did, there was no intent or
negligence attributable to the employees of Bidvest, acting
in the
course and scope of their employment; but if this was proven, then,
in the alternative, the employees of Bidvest acted in
a situation of
sudden and unexpected emergency; and, in the further alternative, Mr
Mabena’s own negligence contributed to
the incident leading to
his injury.
[4]
At the commencement of the proceedings before the trial court,
counsel
for Bidvest,
Mr Boot SC
, indicated that he had
proposed to counsel for Mr Mabena,
Mr Mkize
, that
Mr Mkize
lead evidence on three questions: (i) was Mr Mabena injured by
employees of Bidvest; (ii) if so, ‘whether the projectile
that
injured the plaintiff . . . was fired [in] circumstances of
necessity’; (iii) if so, that was ‘the end of the
matter’, that is to say, it would be a complete defence, but if
not, was Mr Mabena a joint wrongdoer who contributed to his
own
injuries, and to what extent? The status of this pronouncement is a
matter of some controversy before us. However, the trial
court
decided the case in the following manner.
[5]
The trial court found that Bidvest relied upon the defence of sudden
and unexpected emergency, but had failed to plead the defence of
necessity. It concluded that Mr Mabena was shot at point blank
range
by an employee of Bidvest causing him to lose his left eye. The trial
court went on to decide that, even if it considered
the defence of
necessity (disclosed only in the opening address), Bidvest had, on
the evidence, failed to discharge its onus to
prove necessity or,
indeed, sudden emergency. As a result, the trial court ordered, in
relevant part, that Bidvest is 100% liable
to Mr Mabena for all the
damages he may prove, and must pay his costs.
[6]
With leave, Bidvest appealed the judgment and order of the trial
court to the full court of the trial court (the full court). Mankge J
(Mphahlele DJP and Vuyeka J concurring) dismissed the appeal,
with
costs. First, the full court found no basis to interfere with the
trial court’s assessment of the evidence, and the
conclusions
it reached. Second, it held that the defence of necessity had not
been pleaded and should not have been raised, as
it was, at the start
of the trial. Third, it doubted that the defence of sudden emergency,
as pleaded, ‘would have succeeded’.
Fourth, on viewing
the video footage of the events of the day, the full court concluded
the striking workers were ‘at a state
of sudden emergency’
created by the harvester that was approaching them, and not ‘the
other way round’. It then
observed, ‘I will however . . .
not comment beyond this on the defence of necessity’.
[7]
Bidvest sought special leave from this Court to appeal the judgment
and order of the full court. The application was considered by
Mabindla-Boqwana JA and Mali AJA, and was dismissed, with costs
(the
decision on petition). Bidvest then brought an application in terms
of s 17(2)
(f)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the SC
Act) seeking from the President of this Court (the President) a
referral of the decision
on petition for reconsideration, and if
necessary, variation. Bidvest’s affidavit in support of its
application invoked exceptional
circumstances that, it contended,
warranted the referral of the decision on petition to this Court for
reconsideration and variation.
On 1 March 2024, Mocumie ADP (on
behalf of the President) ordered that the decision on petition be
referred to this Court for reconsideration,
and, if necessary,
variation. This referral now serves before us.
The
referral issue
[8]
The question that arises is this: what must we reconsider? The
referral
is made to us by the President. Does s 17(2)
(f)
, and
the referral made to us by the President, require us simply to
reconsider the decision on petition, or does it also require
us first
to decide whether there are exceptional circumstances that warrant
the reconsideration of the decision on petition, and
only if we so
find, then to reconsider the decision on petition?
[9]
In
Motsoeneng
,
[1]
this Court held that it is for the Court to which the referral is
made in terms of s 17(2)
(f)
to decide whether there
are exceptional circumstances. This, it said, is a jurisdictional
fact. Ponnan JA framed the proposition
as follows: ‘Counsel
appeared not to appreciate that the requirement for the existence of
exceptional circumstances is a
jurisdictional fact that had to first
be met, and that absent exceptional circumstances, the s 17(2)
(f)
application was not out
of the starting stalls’.
[2]
[10]
Section 17(2)
(f)
,
of application as at the date of the referral by Mocumie ADP, read
thus: ‘The decision of the majority of the judges considering
an application referred to in paragraph
(b)
,
or the decision of the court, as the case may be, to grant or refuse
the application shall be final: Provided that the President
of the
Supreme Court of Appeal may in exceptional circumstances, whether of
his or her own accord or on application filed within
one month of the
decision, refer the decision to the court for reconsideration and, if
necessary, variation’.
[3]
This provision has a number of features. First, the power conferred
upon the President is a special competence that permits of
the
possibility of revisiting the finality that ordinarily attaches to a
decision on petition; finality that is affirmed by s 17(2)
(f)
.
Second, by reason of how unusual it is to permit of this possibility,
the standard is very high: exceptional circumstances. Third,
the
referral to this Court follows upon the exercise of the power enjoyed
by the President. In
Avnit
,
[4]
this Court understood the power as one, ‘likely to be exercised
only when the President believes that some matter of importance
has
possibly been overlooked, or a grave injustice will otherwise
result’. Fourth, the power may be exercised, either in
response
to an application by a party or of the President’s own accord,
and in response to the grant or refusal of a petition.
The President
may either dismiss the application or refer it to this Court.
[11]
Once the President has exercised her power, the question posed in
paragraph [8] above then
arises. On one interpretation, what the
President refers for reconsideration is simply the decision on
petition. The President
alone enjoys the power to decide whether
there are exceptional circumstances that warrant this Court
reconsidering the merits of
the decision on petition. That is
certainly an interpretation that accords with one reading of the text
of s 17(2)
(f),
in that it confers a power upon the President
to refer, and the subject matter of that referral is the decision on
petition, and
not, in addition, the President’s power to refer.
I shall refer to this interpretation as ‘the exclusivity
interpretation’
because it is for the President alone to decide
whether there are exceptional circumstances.
[12]
The other interpretation is this. The President may only decide to
exercise the power conferred
upon her if there are exceptional
circumstances. The text of s 17(2)
(f)
does not refer to
exceptional circumstances as a state of affairs that exist if the
President forms the opinion that this is so.
Rather, exceptional
circumstances must exist for the President to enjoy the power of
referral. Exceptional circumstances thus constitute,
as this Court
found in
Motsoeneng
, a jurisdictional fact. If they do not
exist, the Court to which the referral is made is duty-bound to so
find. Absent the existence
of exceptional circumstances, there is no
basis for the exercise of the power conferred upon the President, and
hence, no basis
for this Court to consider again the merits of the
decision on petition. The finality of the decision on petition
stands. I shall
refer to this interpretation as ‘the
jurisdictional fact interpretation’ because it is ultimately
for this Court to
decide whether there are exceptional circumstances.
[13]
Both the exclusivity interpretation and the jurisdictional fact
interpretation have some
foundation in the text of s 17(2)
(f)
.
As we have observed, the power is conferred upon the President and
its exercise is to refer the decision on petition to the Court.
That
framing supports the exclusivity interpretation. However, the text
confers the power upon the President if there are exceptional
circumstances, and does not make the determination of those
circumstances the exclusive preserve of the President. If the
exercise
of a power depends upon the existence of a state of affairs
(here exceptional circumstances), absent a clear expression to the
contrary, the repository of the power will not lightly be found
simultaneously to exercise the power and be the only judge as to
whether the state of affairs exists that permits of the exercise of
such power. Hence, it lies with the Court to which the referral
is
made by the President to be the ultimate arbiter as to whether the
jurisdictional fact for the exercise of the power exists.
This
reasoning supports the jurisdictional fact interpretation.
[14]
Since the text is not decisive of the issue, we are required to
enrich our interpretation
of s 17(2)
(f)
by recourse, in
addition, to context and purpose. The following is salient. Section
17 sets out the sequence of decision-making
by recourse to which a
litigant may seek to secure a right of appeal. The sequence is
hierarchical in nature. In essence, if the
trial court that made the
order does not grant leave to appeal, this Court may do so, upon a
decision on petition. That is a decision
taken by two judges of this
Court, and in the event of their disagreement by a third judge of
this Court.
[15]
Given this hierarchical sequence of decision-making, it would be a
discordant institutional
norm if s 17(2)
(f)
were to be
interpreted to allow a single judge of this Court, albeit the head of
court, to undo the finality of a decision taken
by two (and sometimes
three) judges of the same court. It lends much greater institutional
coherence to the principle of hierarchical
reconsideration if the
jurisdictional fact that is required to reconsider the presumptive
finality of a decision on petition is
taken by a panel of this Court
to which the matter is referred by the President. That would better
accord with the scheme of s
17. The refusal of leave by the trial
court is reconsidered on petition by two (and sometimes three) judges
of this Court. If their
decision is to be judged worthy of
reconsideration (and hence rendered not final), that is done by
recourse to a stringent standard
and one ultimately determined by a
panel of this Court. Hence s 17(2)
(f)
does not use language
which references exceptional circumstances to have been found to
exist ‘in the opinion of the President’.
Rather,
exceptional circumstances are referenced as an objective state of
affairs that must exist as a predicate for the exercise
of the power
by the President. If the predicate does not exist, then this Court
has no competence to engage upon a reconsideration
of the decision on
petition. The President’s referral cannot invest this Court
with jurisdiction to reconsider the decision
on petition, if the
jurisdictional predicate for such consideration is absent.
[16]
I observe that this principle of institutional coherence is
also of a piece with
another feature of s 17. The substantive
standard for the grant of leave to appeal increases in its stringency
once a litigant
has had the benefit of an appeal before a full bench
of the trial court. Special leave requires the satisfaction of a more
stringent
test than leave from the judgment and order of a single
judge of the trial court. So too, the test for reconsideration from a
decision
on petition is yet more stringent. And rightly so. Once the
grant of leave has been refused (in the usual case) by a puisne judge
in the trial court, and by way of a decision on petition by this
Court, a very high bar must be met to have the question of leave
to
appeal reconsidered by this Court. It would be an oddity if the
substantive test for reconsideration were to be more stringent,
but
the institutional arrangements under which a decision on petition
could be reconsidered is determined by a single judge, the
President,
to undo the finality of a decision taken by two judges of this Court.
[17]
For these reasons, I consider the position taken in
Motsoeneng
to
be correct. And in consequence, we are required, as a threshold
question, to determine whether there are exceptional circumstances
that permit of the referral to us for reconsideration of the decision
on petition to refuse special leave. If we should find that
there are
no exceptional circumstances, then that puts an end to the matter,
and we need not consider whether the refusal to grant
leave on
petition was correctly decided, much less whether the judgment and
order of the full court are correct.
Were
there exceptional circumstances?
[18]
I consider next whether
there are exceptional circumstances established by Bidvest that
permit of the reconsideration of the decision
on petition. Both in
its application to the President in terms of s 17(2)
(f)
,
and before this Court, Bidvest contended that exceptional
circumstances existed that warranted the reconsideration of the
decision
on petition. Bidvest complained that it had not been treated
fairly in the full court. The full court had found that Bidvest was
bound by its pleaded defence of sudden emergency, and could not rely
on the defence of necessity. This deprived Bidvest of its
right to
have its sole defence considered by the full court. Bidvest accepted
that its case could rest only on the defence of necessity,
since the
evidence established that an employee of Bidvest had shot Mr Mabena
and the defence of sudden emergency could not be
sustained. Bidvest
submitted that it had raised the defence of necessity at the outset
of the trial; that Mr Mabena’s counsel
had not demurred; that
the trial had been conducted on this basis; and hence both the trial
court and the full court were bound,
as a matter of high
authority,
[5]
to consider this
defence on its merits; that the full court did not do so; that this
was unfair; and this then disclosed exceptional
circumstances that
warranted a reconsideration of the decision on petition.
[19]
Counsel made submissions at some length in oral argument as to
whether Bidvest was required
to amend its plea to include the defence
of necessity or whether it sufficed that the defence was invoked at
the commencement of
the trial and evidence was led and
cross-examination was directed to the merits of this defence. Counsel
for Mr Mabena disavowed
any agreement on his part to the triad of
questions that counsel for Bidvest had proposed in his opening
address to the trial court.
[20]
It is unnecessary to resolve these matters. A careful reading of the
judgment of the full
court does not show that Bidvest was denied a
consideration of its defence of necessity. To see why this is so, I
must revert to
the reasoning of the trial court. The trial court
concluded (correctly) that the defences of sudden emergency and
necessity are
distinct, and that Bidvest only pleaded the defence of
sudden emergency. The trial court then undertook a full analysis of
the
evidence led at trial. It then postulated the following: ‘even
if I consider the defence (only disclosed in the opening address)
of
necessity’, it nevertheless came to the conclusion, ‘[O]n
the evidence before me the defence of necessity was not
proven’.
The trial court thus did consider the defence of necessity, and there
was no unfairness suffered by Bidvest on the
basis that its defence
was excluded because it was not pleaded.
[21]
What then of the treatment of this issue in the appeal before the
full court? The full
court was critical of the failure by Bidvest to
plead the defence of necessity. In an important passage from its
judgment, the
full court stated: ‘Even though I do not agree
with the trial court in its approach of accepting the issue at the
opening
address stage, I however agree with the trial court’s
ultimate finding on the issue of necessity’. This
affirmation
of the trial court must be read together with the
acceptance by the full court that the findings of the trial court,
underlying
its order, could not be faulted. There are certain
references in the judgment of the full court which might suggest that
it considered
the defence of necessity with circumspection. So, for
example, upon its viewing of the video evidence, the full court
concluded
thus: ‘the defence of necessity
would
have
probably be met with difficulties looking at the events as they
unfold in the video recording’. (Emphasis added.) But
its
viewing of the video evidence also led the full court to conclude
that it was the striking workers who were faced with a situation
of
sudden emergency and the following finding is then made: ‘I
will however not comment beyond this on the defence of necessity.
Therefore, the conclusion by the trial court should stand,
even on
this basis alone
’
.
(Emphasis added.)
[22]
A fair reading of the judgment of the full court indicates that it
did have regard to the
evidence led at trial and concluded that it
could find no error that the trial court had made as to the defence
of necessity. Once
this is so, there was no unfairness of the kind
attributed by Bidvest to the full court. And hence there are no
exceptional circumstances
disclosed that permit of a reconsideration
of the decision on petition.
[23]
Section 17(2)
(f)
requires that this Court must decide whether
exceptional circumstances exist. If they do not, as I find, then the
jurisdictional
fact has not been established that permits of a
reconsideration of the decision on petition. The decision on petition
remains the
final word on whether Bidvest may appeal the judgment and
order of the full court. It may not. And hence the matter must be
struck
from the roll.
[24]
In the result:
(i)
The matter is struck from the roll;
(ii)
The applicant is to pay the costs incurred by the respondent in
opposing the application for reconsideration.
D
N UNTERHALTER
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the applicant:
Adv B Boot SC
Instructed by:
Weavind &
Weavind, Pretoria
Hattingh Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For respondent:
Adv L P Mkize
Instructed by:
Mkize Attorneys,
Delmas
Phatshoane Henney
Inc., Bloemfontein.
[1]
M
otsoeneng
v South African Broadcasting Corporation Soc Ltd and Others
[2024] ZASCA 80.
[2]
M
otsoeneng
para
19.
[3]
Section
17(2)
(f)
was
amended by s 28 of the Judicial Matters Amendment Act 15 of 2023
which came into effect on 3 April 2024. The effect of the
amendment
is to alter the standard for referral from exceptional circumstances
to the following test: ‘where a grave failure
of justice would
otherwise result, or the administration of justice may be brought
into disrepute’. The change of standard
does not however
change the essential question before this Court.
[4]
Avnit
v First Rand Bank Ltd
[2014]
ZASCA 132
para 7.
[5]
Builders
Ltd v Union Government
1928
AD 46
at 53;
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
SCA;
Shill
v Milner
1937
AD 101
at 105.
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