Case Law[2022] ZASCA 111South Africa
Minister of Police and Others v Samuel Molokwane (730/2021) [2022] ZASCA 111 (15 July 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
15 July 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Civil Procedure – s 2(2) of State Liability Act 20 of 1957 –– whether failure to serve summons against Minister of Police on State Attorney nullified summons.
Judgment
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## Minister of Police and Others v Samuel Molokwane (730/2021) [2022] ZASCA 111 (15 July 2022)
Minister of Police and Others v Samuel Molokwane (730/2021) [2022] ZASCA 111 (15 July 2022)
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sino date 15 July 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 730/2021
In
the
matter
between:
MINISTER
OF
POLICE
FIRST APPELLANT
GEZANI
MICHAEL CHABALALA
SECOND APPELLANT
SELLO
CHAUKE
THIRD APPELLANT
SIMPHIWE
LAURENS DANTI
FOURTH APPELLANT
and
SAMUEL
MOLOKWANE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Minister of Police and
Others v Samuel Molokwane
(730/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 111
(15 July 2022)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, SCHIPPERS and MAKGOKA
JJA and MUSI
and MAKAULA AJJA
Heard:
13 May 2022
Delivered:
15 July 2022
Summary:
Civil
Procedure – s 2(2) of
State Liability Act 20 of 1957
––
whether failure to serve summons against Minister of Police on State
Attorney nullified summons.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division
of the High Court,
Pretoria
(Van
der Schyff J, sitting as a court of first instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, including costs of two counsel where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Makgoka
JA (Van der Merwe and Schippers JJA and Musi
and
Makaula AJJA
concurring):
[1]
The appeal turns on whether the
respondent’s omission to serve a copy of a summons issued
against the first appellant, the
Minister of Police (the Minister),
on the State Attorney, rendered the
summons
a nullity, despite a copy having been served on the Minister. The
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high
court)
concluded that it did not, and dismissed two special pleas raised by
the appellants based on such non-service. The high
court subsequently
granted the appellants leave to appeal to this Court.
[2]
The factual background is briefly this. On
2 December 2015, Mr Molokwane (t
he
respondent) instituted action in the high court against the first
appellant, the Minister, the second, third and fourth appellants,
in
which the respondent claimed damages arising from alleged
wrongful arrest
and
assault
by the second to fourth appellants
on 8 February 2014. It is common cause that the second to fourth
respondents were acting within
the course and scope of their
employment with the Minister, and they were, respectively, served
with copies of the summons on 8 December
2015.
There
is no controversy about service on these appellants. It is the
service on the Minister which is at the heart of the appeal.
[3]
Service of the process commencing
litigation against members of the national executive, such as the
Minister, is governed mainly
by s 2(2) of the
State
Liability Act 20 of 1957 (the
State Liability Act). Before
its
amendment, and at the relevant period to this matter, that section
read as follows:
‘
(1)
In any action or other proceedings instituted by virtue of the
provisions of
section 1
, the executive authority of the department
concerned must be cited as nominal defendant or respondent.
(2)
The plaintiff or applicant, as the case may be, or his or her legal
representative must, within seven days after a summons or
notice
instituting proceedings and in which the executive authority of a
department is cited as nominal defendant … has
been issued,
serve a copy of that summons… on the State Attorney.’
[4]
The above provisions were not complied
with, as the respondent caused a copy of the summons to be served on
the Minister at his
official place of business, Wachthuis, 231
Pretorius Street, Pretoria, on
4 December
2015. It was never served on the State Attorney as prescribed in
s
2(2)
of the
State Liability Act.
There was
no appearance to defend by any of the appellants.
Consequently,
the respondent obtained default judgment on 4 March 2016 against the
appellants, in terms of which liability and quantum
of the claim were
separated in terms of rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of Court (the
Uniform Rules) and liability was determined
in favour of the
respondent against the first, third and fourth appellants on the
basis that the respondent was entitled to recover
his full proven or
agreed damages against the appellants. The determination of the
respondent’s quantum was postponed
sine
die
.
[5]
The order granting default judgment was
served on the Minister on 22 March 2016. On 26 March 2018, the
respondent lodged an application
against the Minister for the
determination of quantum. That application was served on the State
Attorney on 24 August 2018, and
on the Minister at his official place
of business. The respondent also served a notice of intention to
amend his particulars of
claim; the amended pages to the particulars
of claim; and the order granting default judgment on 4 March 2016, as
mentioned already.
The application for the determination of quantum
was set down for 10 September 2018.
[6]
On 29 August 2018, the State Attorney, on
behalf of all the appellants, delivered a notice of intention to
oppose that application.
On 6 September 2018 the State Attorney
launched an application on behalf of the appellants to stay the
application for the determination
of quantum, pending the rescission
of the default judgment granted on 4 March 2016. On 25 November 2019
the respondent abandoned
the default judgment in terms of rule 41(2)
of the Uniform Rules.
On 13 December
2019 the State Attorney delivered a notice of intention to defend the
action on behalf of the appellants and
subsequently delivered their
plea to the respondent’s particulars of claim.
[7]
On 3 September 2020 the appellants
delivered an amended plea, in which they raised two special pleas, in
the alternative. The main
plea was based on non-compliance with
s
2(2)
of the
State Liability Act, as
mentioned already. It was
contended that because there was no service of a copy of the summons
on the State Attorney, the respondent’s
summons was a nullity.
Alternatively, the appellants pleaded that in the event it was found
that service was effected on the State
Attorney on 24 August 2018
(when the application for determination of quantum against the
Minister was served on the State Attorney)
the respondent’s
claim had prescribed, as that occurred more than three years after
the respondent’s cause of action
arose on 8 February 2014.
[8]
The special pleas were placed before the
high court by way of a Special Case and Statement of Facts in terms
of rule 33(1) and (2)
of the Uniform Rules, which set out the issues
for determination. It was agreed, among other things, that ‘if
the defendants’
special pleas [were] dismissed the trial is to
immediately proceed in respect of the issue of the defendants’
liability.’
[9]
The
high court
considered the purpose of
s 2(2)
of the
State Liability Act, and
reasoned that the non-service on the State Attorney did not render
the summons a nullity. At most, the high court held, the non-service
constituted an irregular step, which could be rectified. It further
held that, in any event, the ‘irregular step’ of
non-service became moot when the State Attorney formally placed
itself on record on behalf of the appellants, exchanged pleadings
with the respondent’s attorneys, and participated in a
pre-trial conference. The high court concluded that the appellants
had failed to demonstrate that they were prejudiced by non-service on
the State Attorney. It accordingly dismissed the appellants’
special pleas.
[10]
In this Court,
the
submissions on behalf of the appellants were as follows. Service upon
the State Attorney was ‘mandatory’ in terms
of
s 2(2)
of
the
State Liability
Act,
as
that provision was ‘couched in peremptory terms by the use
of the words “must within 7 days serve”.’ As
the
State Liability
Act does
not make provision for condonation for non-compliance with the
service on the State Attorney, a court had no power to condone such
non-compliance. In the result, the special plea of non-service should
have been upheld. Alternatively, the high court should have
found
that the respondent’s action had been extinguished by
prescription by the time summons was served on the State Attorney
on
24 August 2015.
[11]
The approach to
s 2(2)
propounded on behalf
of the appellants is incompatible with the approach to the
interpretation of similar provisions by our courts.
As explained in
All Pay Consolidated Investment Holdings
(Pty) Ltd and Others v The Chief Executive Officer, South African
Social Security Agency
and Others
[2013]
ZACC 42
;
2014 (1) SA 604
(CC);
2014 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) para 30, t
he
strict mechanical approach of drawing ‘formal distinctions
between “mandatory or peremptory” provisions on
the one
hand and “directory” ones on the other, the former
needing strict compliance on pain of non-validity, and the
latter
only substantial compliance or even non-compliance, has been
discarded’.
[12]
The jettisoning of the ‘mechanical
approach’ has its origin in
Maharaj
and Others v Rampersad
1964 (4) SA
638
(A). After having concluded that the legislative provision
it was concerned with was peremptory, the court went on to enquire
whether it was fatal that it had not been strictly complied with.
This Court laid down the following test at 646C-E:
‘
.
. .The enquiry, … is not so much whether there has been
‘exact’, ‘adequate’ or ‘substantial’
compliance with this injunction but rather whether there has been
compliance therewith. This enquiry postulates an application
of the
injunction to the facts and a resultant comparison between what the
position is and what, according to the requirements
of the
injunction, it ought to be. It is quite conceivable that a court
might hold that, even though the position as it is, is
not identical
with what it ought to be, the injunction has nevertheless been
complied with. In deciding whether there has been
a compliance with
the injunction the object sought to be achieved by the injunction and
the question of whether this object has
been achieved, are of
importance.’
[13]
In
Nkisimane and Others v Santam Insurance Co Ltd
1978
(2) SA 430
(A) at 433H-434A the following was said about the
categorisation of statutory requirements as ‘peremptory’
or ‘directory’:
‘…
They
are well-known, concise, and convenient labels to use for the purpose
of differentiating between the two categories. But the
earlier
clear-cut distinction between them (the former requiring exact
compliance and the latter merely substantial compliance)
now seems to
have become somewhat blurred. Care must therefore be exercised not to
infer merely from the use of such labels what
degree of compliance is
necessary and what the consequences are of non or defective
compliance. These must ultimately depend upon
the proper construction
of the statutory provision in question, or, in other words, upon the
intention of the lawgiver as
ascertained from the language, scope,
and purpose of the enactment as a whole and the statutory requirement
in particular…’.
[14]
In
Ex Parte
Mothuloe (Law Society, Transvaal, Intervening
)
1996 (4) SA 1131 (T) at 1132F, it was observed,
with reference to
Maharaj
and
other authorities, that there was a ‘. . .trend in
interpretation away from the strict legalistic to the substantive.
.
.’. It was emphasised that even though the provisions of an Act
are peremptory, the question needs to be asked whether
or not exact
compliance therewith is required. Consequently, the answer will ‘.
. . be sought in the purpose of the statutory
requirement which is to
be ascertained from its language read in the context of the statute
as a whole’.
[15]
The ‘trend’ referred to above
was applied in
Weenen Transitional Local
Council v Van Dyk
2002 (4) SA 653
(SCA)
where it was emphasised
that in matters
such as the present, the question is whether there has been
compliance with
the statutory provisions
viewed in the light of their purpose. This Court trenchantly observed
at
para
13:
‘…
Legalistic
debates as to whether the enactment is peremptory (imperative,
absolute, mandatory, a categorical imperative) or merely
directory;
whether ‘shall’ should be read as ‘may’;
whether strict as opposed to substantial compliance
is required; …
etc may be interesting, but seldom essential to the outcome of a real
case before the courts. They tell us
what the outcome of the court’s
interpretation of the particular enactment is; they cannot tell us
how to interpret. These
debates have a posteriori, not a priori
significance. . . .’
[16]
This approach received the imprimatur of
the Constitutional Court in
African
Christian Democratic Party v Electoral Commission
and
Others
[2006] ZACC 1
;
2006 (3) SA 305
(CC);
2006 (5) BCLR 579
(CC)
para
25. There, it was held
that the
adoption of the purposive approach in our law has rendered obsolete
all the previous attempts to determine whether a statutory
provision
is directory or peremptory on the basis of the wording and subject of
the text of the provision. The question was thus
‘whether what
the applicant did constituted compliance with the statutory
provisions viewed in the light of their purpose’.
A narrowly
textual and legalistic approach is to be avoided.
[17]
There
is also the injunction in s 39(2) of the Constitution, which enjoins
courts, when interpreting any legislation, to promote
the spirit,
purport and objects of the Bill of Rights. Thus, where a provision is
reasonably capable of two interpretations, the
one that better
promotes the spirit, purport and objects of the Bill of Rights should
be adopted.
[1]
The right
implicated in this case is that of access to courts, enshrined in
s 34 of the Constitution.
[2]
Consistent with this injunction, the interpretation of
s 2(2)
of the
State Liability Act must
be one which promotes this right, by
considering the underlying purpose of the section, rather than merely
its text. This purposive
approach is far more consistent with our
constitutional values, than reading the section narrowly and
strictly, as preferred by
the appellants.
[18]
With these interpretive iterations in mind,
I turn to
s 2(2)
of the
State Liability Act. Its
purpose, especially
the requirement that a summons must be served on the State Attorney
within seven days after it was issued,
is clearly to ensure that the
relevant ‘executive authority’ (the Minister in this
case) is afforded effective legal
representation in the matter by the
State Attorney. If the State Attorney provides such legal
representation, in any manner whatsoever,
despite it not having been
served by the sheriff within seven days of the process commencing
such proceedings, this purpose would
have been served. That would
also be the position where, as in the present case, there was no
service on the State Attorney at
all. In other words, it is not so
much about how the State Attorney obtained the knowledge of the
process commencing proceedings,
as the representation of the party in
the legal proceedings itself.
[19]
In the present case, a copy of the summons
was served on the Minister. In the midst of legal and technical
arguments advanced on
behalf the Minister, there is deafening silence
on the Minister’s part as to what he did with the summons after
receiving
it. The critical point, however is that the State Attorney
effectively represented the Minister in this action, by entering
appearance
to defend the action if
de
novo
, by filing a plea and by being
able to be ready for trial. Thus, the purpose of the section has been
achieved.
The Minister’s contention
that, despite a copy of the summons having been served on him, the
summons should nevertheless be
declared a nullity solely because it
has not been served on the State Attorney, is simply untenable.
[20]
One of the overarching considerations in
matters of this nature is prejudice. In the present case, I am unable
to discern any prejudice
suffered by the Minister as a result of
non-service of a copy of the summons on the State Attorney. The
Minister has not pointed
to any. As I have said he was able to serve
a plea in which he responded to the respondent’s allegations in
the combined
summons. The absence of prejudice is also evident from
the fact that in the statement containing the agreed facts, the
Minister
asserts none. Instead, the parties agreed that in the event
the special pleas were dismissed, the trial would proceed immediately
on the issue of liability. To my mind, this is the clearest
indication that the Minister suffered no prejudice.
[21]
Furthermore, the respondent’s
condonation application for the late service of his statutory notice
in terms of
s 3
of the Institution of Legal Proceedings against
Certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002 (Legal Proceedings Act), was
granted. In
terms of s 3(4)(
b
)(iii)
of the Legal Proceedings Act, the court granting such application
must be satisfied, among others, that the organ of state
was not
unreasonably prejudiced by the failure which necessitated the
condonation application. The application for condonation
was served
on the State Attorney, who at that stage, was already on record on
behalf of all the appellants. If ever there was prejudice,
one would
have expected the Minister to place the necessary facts before the
court to establish it. Instead, the Minister decided
not to oppose
the application. It must therefore be accepted that no prejudice
occurred to the Minister.
[22]
It remains to consider briefly, the
appellants’ alternative special plea of prescription. As
mentioned already, the appellants
contended that
service
on the State Attorney had occurred more than three years (on 24
August 2018) after the respondent’s cause of action
arose on 8
February 2014. In terms of s 11(
d
)
of the Prescription Act
68 of 1969 (
the
Prescription Act), the
respondent’s claim would have prescribed
after three years, ie on 7 February 2017.
Section 15
of the
Prescription Act provides
that the running of prescription shall be
interrupted by the service on the ‘debtor’ of any process
whereby the creditor
claims payment of the debt. There is no dispute
that the Minister is the ‘debtor’ as envisaged in
s 15(1)
of the
Prescription Act.
>
[23]
The respondent’s condonation
application for the late service of his statutory notice in terms of
s 3 of the Legal Proceedings
Act, was granted. Similar to the issue
of prejudice as discussed above, in terms of s 3(4)(
b
)(i)
of the Legal Proceedings Act, the court granting an application for
condonation must be satisfied, among others, that the debt
had not
been extinguished by prescription. To the extent the high court has
granted the condonation, it, of necessity, found that
the
respondent’s claim had not been extinguished by prescription.
The issue is thus
res judicata
,
and no longer open to the appellants to assert it.
[24]
The
plea of prescription in any event had no merit. It is correct that
when this section is read with s 2 of the Legal Proceedings
Act,
service on the State Attorney, instead of the Minister, would have
been effective service to interrupt prescription. However,
this does
not mean that the State Attorney replaced the Minister as the
‘debtor’. Viewed in this light, service on
the Minister,
as it happened in the present case, was effective for the purpose of
interrupting prescription. The fact that the
summons has not been
served within the prescripts of
s 2(2)
of the
State Liability Act,
does
not affect this. For purposes of interrupting prescription,
there was service of ‘a process’ on the Minister. I am
fortified in this view by the fact that, where summons is served
without giving the statutory notice in terms of s 3 of the Legal
Proceedings Act within the prescribed period, or at all, such service
is nevertheless effective for the interruption of prescription
if
condonation is subsequently granted.
[3]
[25]
In all the circumstances the high court was
correct to dismiss the special pleas. The appeal must, accordingly,
fail.
[26]
In the result the following order is made:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including costs of two counsel where
so employed.
T
MAKGOKA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellants:
H C Janse van Rensburg (with him J J van Rensburg)
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Pretoria
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein.
For
respondent:
T Odendaal (heads of argument having been prepared by J P Van den
Berg SC and T Cooper)
Instructed
by:
Adams & Adams, Pretoria
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Wary
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Stalwo (Pty) and Another
[2008]
ZACC 12
;
2009 (1) SA 337
(CC);
2008 (11) BCLR 1123
(CC) paras 46,
84, 107.
[2]
Section
34 of the Constitution of Republic of South Africa, 1996 provides:
‘
Access
to courts
34.
Everyone has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by
the application of law decided in a fair public hearing
before a
court or, where appropriate, another independent and impartial
tribunal or forum.’
[3]
See
Minister
of Safety and Security v De Witt
[2008]
ZASCA 103
;
2009 (1) SA 457
(SCA) para 18.
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