Case Law[2025] ZASCA 118South Africa
Macbeth Attorneys Incorporated v South African Forestry Company Soc Limited and Others (365/2023) [2025] ZASCA 118 (15 August 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
15 August 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Costs – review of taxation – party not in attendance and fails to object before the taxing master – cannot thereafter invoke review of taxation procedure in terms of SCA rule 17.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Macbeth Attorneys Incorporated v South African Forestry Company Soc Limited and Others (365/2023) [2025] ZASCA 118 (15 August 2025)
Macbeth Attorneys Incorporated v South African Forestry Company Soc Limited and Others (365/2023) [2025] ZASCA 118 (15 August 2025)
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sino date 15 August 2025
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Case
no: 365/2023
In
the matter between:
MACBETH
ATTORNEYS
INCORPORATED
APPLICANT
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN FORESTRY COMPANY
SOC
LIMITED
FIRST RESPONDENT
KOMATILAND
FORESTS SOC LIMITED
SECOND
RESPONDENT
TSEPO
MONAHENG
THIRD
RESPONDENT
SIYABONGA
MPONTSHANA
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
THE TAXING
MASTER
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Macbeth
Attorneys Incorporated v South African Forestry Company Soc Limited
and Others
(365/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 118
(15 August 2025)
Coram:
PONNAN JA
Delivered
:
15 August 2025
Summary:
Costs – review of
taxation – party not in attendance and fails to object before
the taxing master – cannot thereafter
invoke review of taxation
procedure in terms of SCA rule 17.
ORDER
The
application is dismissed with costs
JUDGMENT
Ponnan JA
[1]
This application, ostensibly a review of taxation in terms of rule 17
of the rules of this Court
(SCA rules), has been referred to me for
decision in terms of subrule (6).
[2]
On 24 April 2023, the applicant applied to this Court for leave to
appeal against a judgment of
the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria. The application, which was opposed by the respondents, was
dismissed with costs
on 14 June 2023. Thereupon, the respondents
prepared the necessary Bills of Costs (the bills). On 28 February
2024, a Notice of
Taxation was served on the applicant’s
correspondent attorneys in Bloemfontein, informing them that the
matter had been set
down on 20 March 2024 before the Taxing Master
(taxing master) for taxation. There being no appearance on behalf of
the applicant,
the bills were taxed by the taxing master on an
unopposed basis on 20 March 2024 and on that date the allocatur
was completed.
On 23 September 2024, the applicant set the review
procedure envisaged in SCA rule 17 in motion.
[3]
The taxing master initially declined to state a case for the decision
of a judge because the application
had been filed well outside the 20
days contemplated in SCA rule 17(3). The applicant was then compelled
to bring an application
for condonation. The condonation sought,
which was opposed by the respondents, succeeded on 28 May 2025. In
the meanwhile, the
taxing master resigned without having stated a
case for the decision of a judge. On 8 July 2025, the Chief Registrar
(herself newly
appointed), having familiarised herself with the
matter and solicited the views of other chief registrars with whom
she had consulted,
expressed the following view in a memorandum to
the President of the Court:
‘
[t]he
general feeling when a taxing master resigns after having taxed a
bill of costs, but before delivering a stated case is that
the bills
have to be taxed
de novo
,
because other Taxing Masters will have difficulty in providing a
stated case because they will not have the benefit of submissions
made on taxation. Further the Taxing Master has the statutory
conferred discretion which another Taxing Master cannot interfere
with.’
As interesting a debate
as that may be, it need hardly detain us, because, as I perceive it,
rule 17 does not, in the circumstances
of this case, avail the
applicant.
[4]
SCA rule 17(3) provides:
‘
Any
party dissatisfied with the ruling of the taxing master as to any
item or part of an item which was objected to or disallowed
by the
taxing master of own accord, may within 20 days of the amount taxed
and allowed require the taxing master to state a case
for the
decision of the President, which case shall set out each item or part
of an item together with the grounds of objection
advanced at the
taxation, and shall embody any relevant findings of facts by the
taxing master.’
[5]
As SCA rule 17 makes clear, a ruling by the taxing master may only be
brought under review if:
(a)
the item was objected to or
(b)
the taxing master disallowed it. A review of taxation under the rule
is thus limited to those cases where there was an objection
and those
where the taxing master disallows an item
mero
motu.
[1]
[6]
As to
(b):
What
(b)
caters
for is the case where the party presenting the bill is aggrieved; in
other words, a case at the instance of the party presenting
the bill,
aggrieved by the taxing master’s disallowance
mero
motu
of items included in the bill.
[2]
In the circumstances, there logically can hardly be an objection from
the party presenting the bill, before the allocatur is signed
by the
taxing master and the rule obviously does not contemplate an
objection in those circumstances. We are not here concerned
with an
item disallowed
mero
motu
by the taxing master. The relief sought pertains to matters that were
allowed. Accordingly,
(b)
finds
no application. That leaves
(a)
.
[7]
As to
(a):
SCA
rule 17(3) quite clearly contemplates that only the matters objected
to before the taxing master may be the subject of review.
It does not
cater for the case where a party fails to attend a taxation that is
otherwise formally in order.
[3]
Such a party may apply for the setting aside of the taxation on the
same basis on which judgments by default are set aside.
[4]
To
borrow from the headnote in
Grűnder
v Grűnder
:
‘
The
Taxing Master's
allocatur
is
a quasi-judicial administrative act: he must hear parties or their
legal representatives
(and
if need be also evidence) and exercise a judicial discretion.
Inasmuch as proceedings before the Taxing Master constitute an
action
in miniature, common law principles applicable to the setting aside
of default judgments apply also to the setting aside
of the Taxing
Master's allocatur. An order as to costs cannot be enforced
without the Taxing Master's quantification thereof,
and a
quantification done in the absence of one of the litigants ought to
be open to challenge on the same basis as are default
judgments.
’
[5]
[8]
Not having attended the taxation, less still objected to any of the
items in question, the applicant
cannot invoke the review procedure
provided by SCA rule 17 in a belated attempt to attack items that the
taxing master allowed.
It follows that the application must fail.
[9]
In the result, the application is dismissed with costs.
V
M PONNAN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
Macbeth
Inc., Mbombela
Motaung
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents:
Werksmans
Inc., Johannesburg
Phatshoane
Henney Inc., Bloemfontein
[1]
Mcunu
v Southern Insurance Association Ltd
1977
(2) SA 18
(SE) at 19A.
[2]
Daywine
Properties (Pty) Ltd v Murphy and Another
1991 (3) SA 216
(D) at 218C-D.
[3]
Gran-Or
(Edms) Bpk v Bevan
1969
(2) SA 87 (T).
[4]
D
Harms
Civil
Procedure in the Superior Courts
Service
Issue 46 at
B48.1.
[5]
Grűnder
v Grűnder and others
1990
(4) SA 680
(C) headnote at 680J–681B. See also
Barnard
v Taxing Master of the High Court of SA (TPD) and Others
[2005]
2 All SA 485
(T).
sino noindex
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