Case Law[2022] ZASCA 5South Africa
Cipla Vet (Pty) Ltd v Merial and Others (1068/2020) [2022] ZASCA 5 (11 January 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
11 January 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Interpretation of orders – rule 42 or common law – clarification of order – whether qualifying costs including costs of two counsel occasioned by an amendment prior to hearing included in wasted costs order granted – appeal dismissed – order of the full court confirmed.
Judgment
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## Cipla Vet (Pty) Ltd v Merial and Others (1068/2020) [2022] ZASCA 5 (11 January 2022)
Cipla Vet (Pty) Ltd v Merial and Others (1068/2020) [2022] ZASCA 5 (11 January 2022)
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sino date 11 January 2022
THE SUPREME COURT
OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
reportable
Case no: 1068/2020
In
the matter between:
CIPLA
VET (PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
MERIAL
FIRST RESPONDENT
MERIAL
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
MERIAL
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Cipla
Vet (Pty) Ltd v Merial and Others
(1068/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 5
(11 January 2022)
Coram:
Mocumie, Molemela
and Mokgohloa JJA and Kgoele and Phatshoane AJJA
Heard:
15 November 2021
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal
website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 09h45 on 11 January 2022.
Summary:
Interpretation of
orders – rule 42 or common law – clarification of order –
whether qualifying costs including costs of two
counsel occasioned by
an amendment prior to hearing included in wasted costs order granted
– appeal dismissed – order of the
full court confirmed.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (
Tolmay
J, Louw J and Hughes J
sitting
as court of appeal):
The appeal is
dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Kgoele
AJA (
Mocumie,
Molemela and Mokgohloa JJA
and
Phatshoane AJA
concurring):
[1]
This
appeal concerns the interpretation of a cost order granted by Murphy
J sitting as the Court of the Commissioner of Patents on
24 July
2014. The central issue is whether the wasted costs incurred as a
result of an amendment sought and made by the appellant,
Cipla Vet
(Pty) Ltd, to its pleaded case of invalidity before the commencement
of a trial in a patent infringement action, should
include the costs
of two counsel and the qualifying fees of the expert witnesses of the
respondents, Merial, Merial LTD and Merial
South Africa, in
circumstances where such costs were not expressly set out in para
(ii) of Murphy J’s order.
[2]
The
following are common cause facts. The dispute between the parties
emanated from an action that was instituted by the respondents
as
plaintiffs, against the appellant, as the defendant, for the
infringement of South African Patent No 96/8057. The appellant
pleaded that the patent was invalid and raised several grounds to
support this. Amongst these grounds, the issue of lack of
inventorship
(obviousness) constituted the bulk of the appellant’s
case. To this end, extensive preparation and consultation with the
respondents’
expert witnesses had been undertaken by their counsel
in preparation for the trial. The appellant’s plea was amended
several times,
but more relevant to this appeal, again on 9 January
2014, shortly before the trial; to abandon reliance on the ground of
obviousness.
Subsequently, Murphy J granted the following order:
‘
(i)
The action is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs
of two counsel and qualifying
fees of Prof Barbour.
(ii)
The defendant is ordered to pay the wasted costs occasioned by its
amendment of its plea.’
[3]
The
respondents, with leave of the court of first instance, appealed to
this Court against para (i) of Murphy J’s order (the first
appeal).
Paragraph (ii) which is the subject of the current appeal was not
part of the first appeal. Whilst the respondents’
first
appeal was still pending, a bill of costs (first bill) was prepared
and submitted by the respondents. The appellant opposed
the taxation
and amongst others, claimed that the tender for wasted costs and the
order by Murphy J did not make provision for the
recovery of the
costs of two counsel and the costs of expert witnesses. It took time
before the Companies and Intellectual
Property Commission (the CIPC)
could appoint a taxing master because the appellant also objected to
the forum of taxation. The bill
of costs was ultimately set down for
taxation for 1 to 4 November 2016.
[4]
In the
meantime, this Court on 1 April 2016, upheld the first appeal. It
ordered amongst others that the appellant (plaintiff) pay
the costs,
which costs included the costs of two counsel and the qualifying fees
of the respondents’ (defendants) expert witnesses.
Needless to say,
this costs order is of no relevance to the current appeal. Suffice it
to state that the respondents thereafter prepared
a revised
comprehensive bill of all costs and gave notice of their intention to
tax it on 7 November 2016. The appellant persisted
with its initial
objection, which prompted the respondents to launch an application
for the clarification, alternatively, variation
of the order made by
Murphy J. The application served before Baqwa J, who dismissed it and
found that the order by Murphy J was unambiguous.
And furthermore
that, when read in context, the wasted costs did not include the
costs of two counsel and the qualifying fees
of experts. However, he
subsequently granted the respondents leave to appeal to the full
court of that division (Tolmay J, Louw and
Hughes JJ).
[5]
The
full court upheld the respondents’ appeal, set aside the order made
by Baqwa J and substituted it with the one in terms of which
Murphy
J’s order was clarified to declare that the ‘defendants’ wasted
costs shall include the cost of two counsel and the
qualifying fees
of their expert witnesses’.
[6]
In
coming to its conclusion, the full court reasoned (paraphrased for
brevity): the relief sought by the respondents can either be
granted
in terms of rule 42 of the Uniform Rules of Court or the common law
but Baqwa J limited his judgment to rule 42 only; Baqwa
J erred in
finding that Murphy J had no intention to deal with the costs and
wasted costs on the same basis; Baqwa J failed to have
regard to the
context and wording of para 96 wherein Murphy J recognised the
complexity of the case which could not have been intended
to be
limited to the appellant’s case; the nature of the claim and its
complexity was a given whether it applied to the wasted
costs or the
costs ultimately granted on appeal on the merits to this Court; Baqwa
J erred by finding that the application could
not succeed due to a
long delay which elapsed before they sought relief.
[7]
The
current appeal is directed at the order made by the full court,
special leave to appeal having been granted by this Court on 5
November 2020.
[8]
As
indicated already, the crisp issue before us is whether the full
court was correct in clarifying or varying the order made by Murphy
J
to read that the wasted costs order shall include the costs of two
counsel and the qualifying fees of the respondents’ expert
witnesses.
[9]
In
terms of rule 42(1)
(b)
the court may rescind or vary an order or judgment in which there is
an ambiguity, or a patent error or omission. The same relief
can also
be granted in terms of the common law if, on a proper interpretation,
the meaning assigned to the words in the order remain
‘obscure,
ambiguous or otherwise uncertain’, so as to give effect to its true
intention, provided it does not thereby alter the
sense and substance
of the judgment.
[1]
[10]
It is
clear that the case of the respondents is based on an ambiguity and
can be claimed under both rule 42 and the common law. Their
notice of
motion also reveals the fact that they were alive to this, and in
particular, special reference was made to the word ‘clarifying’
as the relief sought.
[11]
Paragraph
96 of Murphy J’s judgment is key to the interpretation of the order
he granted. It reads:
‘
In
the result, while the defendant has not proven invalidity, the action
stands to be dismissed on the ground that the plaintiffs
failed to
discharge the onus to prove that the defendant’s product, Fiprotec,
included integers b) and d) of claim 1 of the patent
and thus
infringed. Costs should follow the defendant’s success, including,
by reason of the nature of the claim and its complexity,
the costs of
two counsel. It was agreed between the parties that the expert
witnesses would be entitled to their qualifying fees.
The defendant
agreed that it was liable for the costs occasioned by the amendment
of the plea.’
[12]
Before
us, the appellant persisted with the argument that Murphy J’s order
was clear and unambiguous. In their opposition, the respondents
maintained that, properly and contextually interpreted, having regard
to para 96 of the judgment by Murphy J confirming the complexity
of
the matter including the agreement between the parties that the
expert witnesses would be entitled to their qualifying fees, the
order by the full court should be confirmed.
[13]
The
basic principles applicable to the interpretation of court orders are
trite and need no further emphasis.
[2]
It appears from para 25 of the judgment of the full court that it
regarded Murphy J’s order to be ambiguous or otherwise uncertain.
This served as a basis for the clarification of the order by the full
court to give effect to Murphy J’s true intention. For the
reasons
that follow hereunder, the findings of the full court cannot be
faulted.
[14]
On a simple reading of Murphy J’s order it is clear that he
recognised that the nature and complexity of the matter
justified the
employment of two counsel. And that there was an agreement between
the parties regarding the qualifying fees of expert
witnesses.
However, what remains manifestly obscure and uncertain is that
despite this recognition (the nature and complexity of
the matter and
the agreement between the parties) he nevertheless omitted to
expressly include these costs as part of para (ii) of
the order he
made. This omission can not be of assistance to the appellant for the
following reasons. First, in this case there was
an agreement between
the parties regarding the qualifying fees of their expert witnesses.
Second, para (ii) of the order of Murphy
J cannot be read without
reference to para 96. This is so because para 96 is the only
paragraph in the entire judgment which makes
reference to the
determination of costs and therefore serves as the basis of the costs
orders Murphy J made in the two paragraphs.
[15]
Furthermore, the appellant does not suggests that the obviousness
defence it aborted just before trial,
which necessitated the
amendments it sought, was anything other than ‘complex’.
Ordinarily, this would justify costs occasioned
by the employment of
two counsel. The appellant was constrained to argue that the
respondents did not incur those costs. If consideration
is given to
what Murphy J noted in para 96 and the acceptance by the appellant
that indeed expert witnesses were considered necessary
by both
parties and were used in the preparation stage, up to the stage where
the amendment was sought and made, then ineluctably
the costs
incurred occasioned by the preparation before the trial but for the
late abandonment of the defence cannot be simply wished
away.
Axiomatically, such costs remains wasted costs even in
circumstances where the witnesses were not ultimately called because
the defence was abandoned on the eve of the trial.
[16]
Taking into consideration all of the aforementioned, the argument of
the appellant, that in the absence
of a request by the parties to
Murphy J to award the costs of two counsel and the qualifying fees of
experts, Murphy J was not entitled
to consider awarding these costs,
was in my view correctly rejected by the full court. The argument
that qualifying fees are special
costs and therefore require a court
order cannot assist the appellant either, as it is trite law that the
payment of qualifying fees
can be granted on the basis of an order of
court or consent by all the parties (agreement).
[3]
In my view, Murphy J was well within his powers to recognise the
agreement between the parties without further ado, more so that
he
had already accepted that the matter was of a complex nature.
[17]
As far as the ‘order in two parts’ argument of the appellant is
concerned, which is to the effect
that Murphy J had no intention to
deal with the costs of suits and the wasted costs on the same basis,
I am of the view that the
full court was also correct to reject this
argument. Indeed, there are two orders made by Murphy J regarding
costs. That is in sub-paras
(i) and (ii) of the order. In my view,
the orders were separated for a good reason – to separate the costs
of the main action from
those occasioned by the amendments (wasted
costs). But for this, as already indicated above, para 96 ought to be
conjuctively read
with para (ii) of the order of Murphy J. The
argument that the agreement relating to the qualifying fees of expert
witnesses related
to the main action only and not to the wasted costs
suffers the same fate. The same applies to the contention that Murphy
J was never
told that counsel fees and the qualifying expert’s fee
agreed upon were to be included in the wasted costs.
[18]
For the sake of completeness there is a need to address the one
remaining ground which swayed Baqwa J’s
mind apart from the
interpretation of Murphy J’s order: the respondents’ delay
in bringing the application for clarification
and or variation. This
is clearly a red herring with no bearing at all on the central issue,
on the simple basis that the respondents’
delay in bringing the
application was not inordinately long as there was an ambiguity as
the full court correctly found. I am of
the view that the full court
was correct to find that the delay in launching the application was
not unreasonable.
[19]
For the reasons given, the appeal ought to be dismissed.
[20]
Lastly, the issue of costs of this appeal. Although the
respondents were substantially successful in their
appeal in this
Court, they did not cross-appeal the order of the full court on
the costs, namely costs of one counsel and not
two as they appeared
before the full court and this Court. The matter is not complicated
as it is based on the same argument before
the full court. In the
high court, counsel for the respondents accepted the view and
ultimate decision of the full court that the
matter was not
complicated. Therefore, the order of the full court stands.
[21]
In the result, the following order is made:
The appeal is
dismissed with costs.
A M KGOELE
ACTING JUDGE OF
APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
the appellant:
E P van Rensburg
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel, Pretoria
Symington & De
Kok, Bloemfontein
For the
respondent:
L Bowman SC (with A M Heystek SC)
Instructed
by:
DM Kisch Inc, Pretoria
Phatshoane
Henney, Bloemfontein
[1]
Firestone South Africa (Pty)
Ltd v Gentiruco AG
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at 306F-308A.
[2]
Commissioner, South African
Revenue Service v United Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd
[2020] ZASCA 16
;
2020 (4)
SA 428
(SCA) para 8 with reference to
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18.
[3]
Stauffer
Chemical Co and Another v Safsan Marketing and Distribution Co (Pty)
Ltd and Others
1987
(2) SA 331
(A) at 355B-C;
Cassel
and Benedick NNO and Another v Rheeder and Cohen NNO and Another
[1991] ZASCA 25
;
1991 (2) SA 846
(A)
at 853;
Transnet Ltd
t/a Metrorail and Another v Witter
[2008] ZASCA 95
;
2008 (6) SA 549
(SCA) para 15G-H.
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