Case Law[2023] ZASCA 79South Africa
Dhlamini v Schumann, Van den Heever and Slabbert Inc and Others (505/2021) [2023] ZASCA 79 (29 May 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
29 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – Appeal – whether the appeal should be dismissed for mootness – s 16(2)(a) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – relief sought in the appeal settled by a tender of the documents sought in an Anton Piller application – exceptional circumstances justifying a reconsideration of the appeal – procedure for further consideration of costs provided for in the interim order - issue of costs was not before the high court – high court costs order reversed.
Judgment
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## Dhlamini v Schumann, Van den Heever and Slabbert Inc and Others (505/2021) [2023] ZASCA 79 (29 May 2023)
Dhlamini v Schumann, Van den Heever and Slabbert Inc and Others (505/2021) [2023] ZASCA 79 (29 May 2023)
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sino date 29 May 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
# Not reportable
Not reportable
Case
no: 505/2021
In
the matter between:
THANDI
CAROLINE DHLAMINI APPELLANT
and
SCHUMANN,
VAN DEN HEEVER & SLABBERT INC FIRST RESPONDENT
JAKKIE
SUPRA SECOND
RESPONDENT
IZAK
BOSMAN THIRD
RESPONDENT
AZELLE
KLEINEN FOURTH
RESPONDENT
JACOBUS
JOHANNES SLABBERT FIFTH
RESPONDENT
LEGAL
PRACTICE COUNCIL SIXTH
RESPONDENT
ROAD
ACCIDENT FUND SEVENTH
RESPONDENT
ALL
PERSONS WITH CLAIMS
AGAINST
THE SEVENTH RESPONDENT
PROSECUTED
TO FINALITY BY THE FIRST
RESPONDENT WITHIN THE
5 (FIVE)
YEARS
PRECEDING THIS APPLICATION EIGHTH
RESPONDENT
Neutral Citation:
Dhlamini v Schumann, Van den Heever & Slabbert Inc and
Others
(505/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 79
(29 May 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA ADP, MABINDLA-BOQWANA JA and BASSON AJA
Heard:
2 November 2022
Delivered:
29 May 2023
Summary:
Civil procedure – Appeal – whether the appeal should
be dismissed for mootness –
s 16(2)
(a)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
– relief sought in the appeal settled by
a tender of the documents sought in an Anton Piller application –
exceptional
circumstances justifying a reconsideration of the appeal
– procedure for further consideration of costs provided for in
the
interim order - issue of costs was not before the high court –
high court costs order reversed.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Adams J, sitting as a court of first instance):
1
To the extent
set out below the appeal is upheld with each party
paying their own costs.
2
The order of
the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following: ‘The matter is struck from the roll.’
JUDGMENT
# Basson AJA (Dambuza ADP
and Mabindla-Boqwana JA):
Basson AJA (Dambuza ADP
and Mabindla-Boqwana JA):
[1]
This is an appeal against the order of the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg, Adams J (the high court), in terms of which
the appellant’s application for an Anton Piller application
was
struck off the roll with a costs order against the appellant. The
issue to be determined is whether this appeal was rendered
moot by a
tender made by the respondents to release to the appellant’s
attorneys and the sixth respondent, the Legal Practice
Council (LPC),
all the files that fell within the ambit of the Anton Piller
application, or whether the matter should be determined
on the
merits.
# Background
Background
[2]
During September 2014 the appellant, Ms Thandi Caroline Dhlamini and
three
other people were involved in a motor vehicle accident as a
result of which she sustained neck, spinal and head injuries. In
January
2015 she was contacted by someone from the firm of attorneys,
Schumann, Van Den Heever & Slabbert Incorporated (the first
respondent),
who offered to represent her in her claim for damages
against the Road Accident Fund (RAF or the seventh respondent), to
which
she agreed. The appellant was later informed that her claim was
settled in the amount of R583 454.90, of which she received
approximately
R400 000. The appeal is with leave of this Court.
[3]
The second to fifth respondents are practising attorneys and
directors
of the first respondent. I will refer to the first, third,
fourth and fifth respondents collectively as the respondents. The
eighth
respondent is described as ‘all persons with claims
against the (RAF) prosecuted to finality by the first respondent
within
the 5 (five) years preceding the application’ (members
of the class in the class action contemplated by the appellant’s
attorneys).
[4]
During 2019, the appellant received a tipoff from a member of the
press
who informed her that a whistle-blower within the first
respondent had informed him that she and others were victims of the
respondents’
scheme of defrauding both their own RAF clients
and the RAF. The appellant then launched an application for an Anton
Piller order
against the respondents to secure the records pertaining
to her and the eighth respondents’ RAF claims. The intention
was
to use the evidence obtained from the files to institute a class
action against the respondents for losses suffered as a result
of the
alleged fraudulent scheme. In the application for the Anton Piller
order the appellant maintained that when paying over
the settlement
amount of her RAF claim, the respondents, particularly Mr Schumann,
misrepresented the settlement amount and paid
over to her only 40% of
the amount actually received from the RAF.
[5]
The respondents denied any fraudulent or unethical conduct on their
part.
They tendered delivery to the appellant’s attorneys and
the LPC, the appellant’s file and the files of the four persons
who had deposed to confirmatory affidavits in support of her founding
affidavit in the Anton Piller application. They pleaded,
however,
that the appellant’s attorneys were not entitled to the files
of the further respondents who were part of the eighth
respondent.
They emphasised that only the LPC had authority to conduct a wide
ranging investigation of the nature threatened by
the respondents
against them.
[6]
On 24 March 2020 the high court granted an interim Anton Piller
order. It incorporated a rule
nisi
which was returnable on 6
July 2020. It authorised immediate access to the respondents’
premises for the purpose of conducting
a search for and examination
of any items or documents, and determination of whether they fell
within the ambit of the order. It
provided for the preservation of
the evidence, which was described as comprising ‘client files’
and ‘accounting
records’ relating to the first
respondent’s clients whose claims against the RAF had been
‘prosecuted to finality
by the first respondent’. The
respondents were ordered to point out the relevant files to the
‘search party’.
Any item or document determined to fall
within the ambit of the order was to be removed from the premises and
kept in the custody
of the sheriff. The appellant was ordered to
institute the intended class action within 30 days of execution of
the interim order.
In terms of the order the respondents were to file
an affidavit identifying items which they contended should not be
inspected
or copied, if there were any.
[7]
The order was served and executed two days later on 26 March 2020. A
total
of 30/28 files, including the appellant’s, were
identified as well as those belonging to the eighth respondent - the
intended
class of persons. In their affidavit dated 22 June 2020,
filed as directed in the order, the respondents made the tender by
expressing
willingness to release the appellant’s file together
with those of her supporters in the Anton Piller application, to the
appellant’s attorneys. They then tendered to release the rest
to the LPC, citing lack of authority from the clients and protection
of attorney client privilege.
[8]
On 6 July 2020, the return day of the rule
nisi
, both parties
attended court. Although the respondents did not oppose the
application, they raised, as a point
in limine,
that the Anton
Piller order had lapsed because the legal action which was to be
instituted against them within 30 days of execution
of the interim
order, had not been instituted.
[9]
On the following day, 7 July 2020, the high court made the following
order:
‘
(1)
It is declared that the order made by this Court on the 24th March
2020 has lapsed and the matter is struck from the roll.
(2)
The applicant shall pay the first to fifth respondents’ costs
of the application for the Anton Piller order and
the related
proceedings.’
Central
to the high court’s decision was the finding that the Anton
Piller order was subject to a ‘resolutive condition’
that
[the class action] would be instituted within 30 days of the
execution of the interim Anton Piller order’. Because there
had
been non- compliance with the interim order, it had lapsed, the court
concluded.
[10]
Both parties were in agreement, however, that on the return day no
argument was tendered
on costs. The intention was to bring a separate
application for costs for the Anton Piller application as provided
for in the order.
In the relevant part, the interim order provided
that costs (of the Anton Piller application) would be determined in
the anticipated
class action. The interim order read as follows in
the relevant part:
‘
COSTS
(n)
The costs of this application are reserved for determination in the
further
proceedings to be instituted by the applicants, foreshadowed
in this application, save in the event of opposition in which a
punitive
costs order will be sought, and save further that:
(i)
if no such proceedings are instituted within 30 (thirty) days
of the
execution of this order, either party may, on no less than 5 (five)
days’ notice to the other, apply to this Court
for an order
determining liability for such costs and determining what must be
done about the identified items and any copies thereof;
and
(ii)
any other person affected by the grant or execution of this
order
may, on no less than 5 (five) days’ notice to the parties
hereto, apply to this Court for an order determining liability
for
the costs of such person and determining what must be done about any
of the identified items pertaining to such person or any
copy
thereof.’
[11]
On appeal the respondents contended that the proposed appeal against
the order
striking the matter from the roll and the resultant costs
order is moot. They asserted that the tender to release to the
appellant’s
attorneys and the LPC the files in question,
rendered the appeal moot. The appellant, on the other hand, insisted
on an order setting
aside the high court order and confirming the
rule
nisi
, alternatively an order extending the rule
nisi
and a costs order on a punitive scale. It was submitted on her
behalf that despite the failure to institute the intended action the
interim order remained in operation and effective until the return
date and that reference in the order to institution of legal
proceedings in the order did not constitute a resolutive condition or
provide for lapse of the rule
nis
i issued as the respondents
claimed.
MOOTNESS
[12]
In general,
an appeal is moot when there no longer is ‘an existing or live
controversy’
[1]
or where
the order sought will have no practical effect or result.
[2]
This
principle is neatly summarized in
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
,
[3]
where the
Constitutional Court confirmed that a ‘case is moot and
therefore not justiciable, if it no longer presents an existing
or
live controversy which should exist if the Court is to avoid giving
advisory opinions on abstract propositions of law’.
[13]
Section 16(2)
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
provides that:
‘
(i)
When at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that
the decision sought will have no practical effect
or result, the
appeal may be dismissed on this ground alone.
(ii)
Save under exceptional circumstances, the question whether the
decision would have no practical effect or result is to
be determined
without reference to any consideration of costs.’
[14]
The purpose
of the Anton Piller application was the identification, securing and
preservation of evidence from the relevant files
for use in the
intended action.
[4]
Although the
files were identified and secured on execution of the interim order,
it remained open to the respondents to oppose
the application. There
can be no dispute that once the respondents tendered delivery of the
files, the objective of the application
was satisfied. Any threat of
possible destruction of the evidence was averted once the files were
uplifted
from
the
respondents
and
placed
in
the
possession
of
the
sheriff and
finally dissipated once the tender was made. There was no evidence
that the respondents impeded the process of proceeding
with the
intended action subsequent to the tender. Moreover, despite the
application having been struck off the roll by the high
court, the
appellant remains able to institute the intended proceedings against
the respondents. Consequently, the order relating
to the merits of
the appeal will have no practical effect, and the appellant’s
contention that the interim order remained
valid and in operation
perpetually is unsustainable.
[15]
That is,
however, not the end of the matter. In determining whether the order
sought on appeal will have a practical effect a court
may in
exceptional circumstances consider the question of costs.
[5]
The costs
referred to in this section are the costs incurred in the court which
granted the order against which the appeal lies
– in this case,
the costs granted in the high court.
[6]
It seems to
me that in this case there are exceptional circumstances that justify
consideration of the costs order made by the high
court. At the
hearing of the appeal both parties were in agreement that on the
return date the high court was reminded that the
issue of costs was
not before it and that an application would be brought as provided in
the Anton Piller order. As a result, no
submissions were made by the
parties on costs in the high court.
[16]
It is not
clear why the court proceeded to award costs in the circumstances. No
reasons were given for the costs order granted.
For that reason, the
costs order granted by that court has to be set aside. Whatever the
reasons were, there could be no judicious
exercise of discretion when
the issue was not before the court for determination. The awarding of
costs by the high court constitutes
exceptional circumstances in this
instance. To this extent, the appeal must be considered. The order
must be set aside and matter
be left to the parties to prosecute at
their election.
[7]
[17]
Regarding the costs of the appeal, both parties have been partially
successful. An order
that each party is to pay its own costs is
appropriate.
# Order
Order
[18]
In the result, the following order is granted:
1 To
the extent set out below the appeal is upheld with each party paying
their own costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following: ‘The matter is struck
from the roll.’
A
C BASSON
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
first to fifth appellants:
R
E G Willis (with G Badela)
Instructed
by:
Stephen
G May Attorney, Johannesburg EG Cooper Majiedt Inc, Bloemfontein
For
first, third, fourth and
fifth
respondents:
C E
Thompson
Instructed
by:
MCE
Janse van Vuuren, Johannesburg Bezuidenhouts Inc, Bloemfontein
[1]
Member
of the Executive Council for the Department of Cooperative
Governance and Traditional Affairs, KwaZulu-Natal v Nkandla
Local
Municipality and Others
[2021]
ZACC 46
; (2022) 43 ILJ 505
(CC);
2022 (8) BCLR 959
(CC) para 16.
[2]
Kruger
v Joint Trustees of the Insolvent Estate of Paulos Bhekinkosi Zulu
and Another
[2016]
ZASCA 163
;
[2017] 1 All SA 1
(SCA) para 15.
[3]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
[1999] ZACC 17
;
2000
(1) BCLR 39
(SCA);
2000 (2) SA 1
(CC) fn 18.
[4]
Non-Detonating
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Durie and Another
[2015] ZASCA 154
;
[2015] 4 All SA 630
(SCA);
2016 (3) SA 445
(SCA) para 19.
[5]
Section 16(2)
(a
)(ii).
[6]
John
Walker Pools v Consolidated Aone Trade & Invest 6 (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) and Another
[2018]
ZASCA 12
;
2018 (4) SA 433
(SCA) paras 8 and 9.
[7]
Khumalo
and Another v Twin City Developers (Pty) Ltd
[2017]
ZASCA 143
(SCA) paras 14-15.
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