Case Law[2025] ZASCA 177South Africa
Skhumbuzo Zulu v Vikizitha R Mlotshwa and Others (004/2024) [2025] ZASCA 177 (28 November 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
28 November 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal – notice of appeal and the record of appeal lodged late – applications for condonation in respect of lateness – application for the reinstatement of the appeal – heads of argument also lodged late, with no application for condonation for the late lodging of the heads of argument – late lodgment of heads of argument with no application for condonation – the appeal has lapsed – application for reinstatement struck off the roll.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Skhumbuzo Zulu v Vikizitha R Mlotshwa and Others (004/2024) [2025] ZASCA 177 (28 November 2025)
Skhumbuzo Zulu v Vikizitha R Mlotshwa and Others (004/2024) [2025] ZASCA 177 (28 November 2025)
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sino date 28 November 2025
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
REASONS
FOR ORDER
Not
reportable
Case
no: 004/2024
In
the matter between:
SKHUMBUZO
ZULU
APPLICANT
and
VIKIZITHA
R MLOTSHWA
FIRST RESPONDENT
SILUNGILE
B DUMISA
SECOND RESPONDENT
AHMED
M SHAIK-EMAM
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Skhumbuzo
Zulu v Vikizitha R Mlotshwa and Others
(004/2024)
[2025]
ZASCA 177
(28 November 2025)
Coram:
HUGHES,
MEYER, KATHREE-SETILOANE and UNTERHALTER JJA and BLOEM AJA
Heard:
21
November
2025
Delivered:
28
November 2025
Summary:
Appeal – notice
of appeal and the record of appeal lodged late – applications
for condonation in respect of lateness
– application for the
reinstatement of the appeal – heads of argument also lodged
late, with no application for condonation
for the late lodging of the
heads of argument – late lodgment of heads of argument with no
application for condonation –
the appeal has lapsed –
application for reinstatement struck off the roll.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal
Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg (van Zyl J
sitting
as
court of first instance):
The
application for reinstatement is struck off the roll, with no order
as to costs.
JUDGMENT
BLOEM
AJA (
Hughes,
Meyer, Kathree-Setiloane and Unterhalter JJA
concurring):
[1]
After hearing the applicant’s
counsel on 21 November 2025, we made the order set out above and
indicated that the reasons
for the order would follow. These are the
reasons.
[2]
The issue to be determined in the appeal
is whether the conference of the National Freedom Party, a political
party, which was held
during December 2019 at Ulundi, KwaZulu-Natal
(the conference), was lawful. The secondary issue, whether the
decisions taken at
the conference were valid and enforceable, depends
on whether the conference was lawful.
[3]
But,
before the merits of the appeal could be considered, some procedural
issues need to be addressed. The applicant and other members
of the
National Freedom Party (the party) instituted an application in the
Kwa-Zulu Natal Division of the High Court, Pietermaritzburg
(the high
court) against the party and nine other members of the party. In that
application, they sought an order that the conference,
as well as the
decisions taken at the conference, be declared to be unlawful,
invalid and of no consequence.
[1]
The applicant and the President of the party were two of the nine
members who were respondents in the high court, the party itself
having been cited as the tenth respondent. All nine members opposed
the application. Despite such opposition, the high court declared
the
conference and the decisions taken at the conference unlawful and
invalid. It made no order as to costs. On 17 November 2023,
the high
court granted the applicant
[2]
leave to appeal to this Court.
[3]
[4]
In terms of rule 7(1)
(b)
of The Rules Regulating the Conduct of the Proceedings of the Supreme
Court of Appeal of South Africa (the rules), an appellant
shall lodge
a notice of appeal with the registrar of this Court and the registrar
of the court
a quo
within one month after the date of the granting of leave to appeal
where leave to appeal is required. The applicant lodged his
notice of
appeal with the registrar of the high court on 28 December 2023 and
with the registrar of this Court on 5 January 2024.
On that same day,
the applicant lodged an application for condonation for the late
lodging of his notice of appeal with the registrar
of this Court. The
applicant did not serve that application on the respondents.
[5]
In terms of rule 8(1), an appellant
shall within three months of the lodging of the notice of appeal
lodge with the registrar of
this Court six copies of the record of
the proceedings in the court
a
quo
and deliver to each
respondent such number of copies as may be considered necessary or as
may reasonably be requested by the
respondent. In terms of rule 8(2),
the registrar is, on request, entitled to extend the period within
which the record must be
lodged, but for no longer than two months.
The applicant did not request the registrar for an extension of the
period to lodge
the record. On 26 November 2024, the applicant served
an application for condonation for the late lodgement of the record
on the
respondents’ attorneys. He lodged the record and the
application for condonation with the registrar on 29 November
2024,
approximately ten months after he had lodged his notice of
appeal.
[6]
The court file contains another
application titled ‘Amended Notice of Motion’, which is
dated 24 June 2024. In that
application, the applicant seeks an order
that ‘the late lodging of the Reinstatement of the Notice of
Appeal’ be condoned.
The supporting affidavit by the
applicant’s attorney is dated 27 June 2024. There is no proof
of service of that application
on the respondents. There is also no
indication when that application was lodged with the registrar.
[7]
More
importantly, in terms of rule 10(2A)
(a)
,
the applicant was required to have lodged with the registrar six
copies of his heads of argument within six weeks from the lodging
of
the record. The record having been lodged on 29 November 2024, the
applicant should have lodged his heads of argument on or
before 10
January 2025. He did so only on 14 February 2025. His heads of
argument were accordingly lodged four weeks late. The
rule provides
that if an appellant fails to lodge his or her heads of argument
within the prescribed period or within the extended
period, the
appeal shall lapse. The applicant did not make an application for
condonation for the late lodging of his heads of
argument. The
applicant did not make an application for condonation for the late
lodging of his heads of argument. The result is
that the appeal has
lapsed. We were accordingly unable to entertain any of the
applications for condonation or the merits of the
appeal. The
appellant must lodge an application to revive and reinstate the
appeal that has lapsed,
[4]
before the appeal can be heard.
[8]
Another matter is the state of the
appeal record. Various pages, some of which are important, are
missing from the record. For instance,
the one page ends with
paragraph 22.6 of the founding affidavit and the next page starts
with paragraph 24.4. It is accordingly
unknown whether paragraph 22
contains more subparagraphs, and whether paragraph 23 also consists
of subparagraphs. What is apparent
from paragraph 22 is that the
missing pages contain portions of the applicants’ cause of
action in the high court, the respondents
in this Court. Another page
ends with paragraph 24.7 and the following page starts with paragraph
27. Obviously, portions of paragraphs
24, the whole of paragraph 25
and a portion of paragraph 26 are missing.
[9]
The registrar drew these deficiencies in
the record to the attention of the applicant’s attorney during
October 2025. It was
only a few days before the hearing that the
applicant’s attorney responded in writing. His attitude was
that the missing
pages formed part of the first respondent’s
founding affidavit and that the deficiencies in the founding ‘papers
should
not be an impediment to the Applicant being able to have this
matter heard before this Court’.
[10]
It is the duty of an appellant’s
attorney, who prosecutes an appeal on behalf of the appellant, to
ensure that a proper
record of appeal is placed before the court. To
discharge that duty, the appellant’s attorney must peruse the
record and
make sure that it is complete and in compliance with the
rules. After all, he or she will raise a fee for executing that duty.
The duty to prepare a proper record of appeal is particularly
important in a case like the present, where the respondents play no
part in the appeal. Furthermore, the applicant is
dominus
litus
, which places a duty on him to
place a complete record before this Court. Without a complete record,
especially where pages containing
portions of the cause of action are
missing, the appeal cannot be heard.
[11]
Absent reinstatement of the appeal, this
Court cannot entertain the appeal. Quite apart from the other
deficiencies to which I have
drawn attention, there is no application
to reinstate the appeal which has lapsed. If advised to proceed with
the appeal, the appellant,
especially his attorneys, must see to it
that there is compliance with the rules of this Court in the
prosecution of his appeal.
[12]
For these reasons, the appeal was struck
off the roll.
G.H.
BLOEM
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the Applicant:
JJ
Grundlingh
Instructed
by:
Nene
Sakhile & Co., Pietermaritzburg
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the Respondents:
No
appearance.
[1]
The third respondent was granted leave on 10 July 2020 to intervene
in the application as the third applicant.
[2]
The applicant is the only remaining party who was one of the ten
respondents in the high court. The others have either joined
other
political parties, are deceased or are simply not interested in
further litigation in this matter.
[3]
Mngadi J granted leave to appeal in the absence of van Zyl J.
[4]
Chairperson
of the North West Gambling Board v Sun International (SA)
Limited
(1214/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 176
(14 December 2021); 2021 JDR 3369 (SCA) para 20.
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