Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 149South Africa
Canon South Africa (Proprietary) Limited v Educor Holdings (Proprietart) Limited (005025/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 149 (6 February 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Canon South Africa (Proprietary) Limited v Educor Holdings (Proprietart) Limited (005025/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 149 (6 February 2025)
Canon South Africa (Proprietary) Limited v Educor Holdings (Proprietart) Limited (005025/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 149 (6 February 2025)
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sino date 6 February 2025
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
005025/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
06/02/2025
CANON
SOUTH AFRICA
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
Plaintiff/ Respondent
And
EDUCOR
HOLDINGS
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
Defendant/ Applicant
Neutral
Citation
:
Delivered:
By transmission to the parties via email and
uploading onto Case Lines the Judgment is deemed to be delivered.
JUDGMNET
SENYATSI
J
Introduction
[1]
This matter demonstrates challenges that litigants face where they
are, for any reasons, unable to access the Case Line
portal created
to upload the pleadings.
The matter relates to an application
for rescission under section 23A (1) the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
as
amended to rescind the default judgment granted in terms of
Rule
31(5)
on 11 May 2023. This much is apparent from the Notice of Motion
filed on behalf of the defendant. The defendant also seeks that
a
punitive costs order be imposed on the plaintiff. The applicant is
the defendant in the main action and the respondent is the
plaintiff
in the main claim. For convenience’s sake, the parties will be
referred to Educor and Canon.
Background
[2]
The action was instituted by Canon on 23 January 2023. On 14
February 2023, Educor delivered a notice of intention to defend. On
01 March 2023 Canon delivered a declaration. Educor failed to deliver
a plea by due date and Canon subsequently, delivered a notice
of bar
on 03 April 2023.Educor served a plea on Canon on 12 April 2023.5 It
is common cause that the plea was not uploaded to Court
Online. Canon
brought an application for default judgment under
Rule 31(5)
on the
basis that Educor was in default of delivery of a valid notice to
defend and a plea. This was served on Educor on 20 April
2023. On 08
May 2023, Educor served a notice to oppose the application for
default judgment. On 11 May 2023, default judgment was
granted by the
Registrar and this, as already stated, is the reason for this
application.
Issues
for Determination
[3]
The issue for determination is whether a case has been made in terms
of
section 23A
(1) which is illuminated as the basis of the
application in the notice of motion. This
is
critical
because although the action is brought in terms of that section, in
its heads of arguments, Educor contends that the basis
its
application is
Rule 42(1)(a).
The legal principles
and reasons
[4] Section 23A (1)
of the Superior Court Act, 2013 as amended states as follows:
“
(
1)
If a plaintiff in whose favour a default judgment has been granted
has agreed in writing that the judgment be rescinded or varied,
a
court may rescind or vary such judgment on application by any person
affected by it.
(2) Except where a
judgment was obtained erroneously or fraudulently, the rescission of
a judgment referred to in subsection (1)
does not affect the rights
of third parties or the parties to the case.
(3) Nothing precludes a
court from proceeding with the rescission or variation
of a judgment if there is
proof that the judgment debt has been settled by the judgment debtor,
where an agreement in writing that
the judgment be rescinded or
varied cannot be obtained from the judgment creditor.” This
section envisages an instance where
a written consent is sought and
obtained that the judgment may be rescinded.
[5] Rule 42(1)(a)
of the Uniform Rules provides that:
“
The court may, in
addition to any other powers it may have,
mero
motu
or
upon
the application of any
party affected, rescind, or vary an order or judgment erroneously
sought or erroneously granted in the absence
of any party affected
thereby.”
[6] Rule 19(1) of
the Uniform Rules provides as follows:
“
Subject to the
provisions of section 24 of the Act, the defendant in every civil
action shall be allowed 10 days, after service
of summons on such
defendant, within which to deliver a notice of intention to defend,
either personally or through an attorney:
Provided that the days
between 16 December and 15 January, both inclusive, shall not be
counted in the time allowed within which
to deliver a notice of
intention to defend.”
[7]
The interpretation of Rule 19(1) has been considered in various
judgments. For instance,
in
Volkskas
Motor Bank Ltd v Loe Mining Raise Bone CC
[1]
Mahomed J (as he then
was) considered whether a notice of intention to defend signed on
behalf of a juristic person was valid. After
considering the various
authorities, the Court concluded that only natural persons can sign
notice of intention to defend and in
fact represent themselves in
court but that the notice of intention defend the juristic person is
invalid if an advocate or attorney
does not sign it.
[8]
In
Yates
Investments (Pty)Ltd v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
[2]
where a sole shareholder sought to appear and argue the appeal
on behalf of the company, Centlivres C. J said:
“
Mr. Prior
and the appellant are different personae. A litigant is entitled to
appear in person in any Division of the Supreme Court.
The appellant,
being an artificial person, cannot appear in person and must be
represented by a duly admitted advocate. Apart from
certain statutory
provisions which allow attorneys in very exceptional circumstances to
appear in the Superior Court on behalf
of a litigant, only a duly
admitted advocate can represent a litigant in a Superior Court. As
far as the Appellate Division is
concerned there is no statutory
provisions which allow anybody who is not a duly admitted advocate to
appear on behalf of a litigant.”
[9]
In
Arma
Carpet House (Johannesburg) (Pty) Ltd v Domestic & Commercial
Carpet Fittings (Pty) Ltd and Another
[3]
,
Margo J
said
[4]
:
“
In the case
of notice of intention to defend, Supreme Court Rule (1) limits the
defendant to acting in person or through an attorney
and, as before,
the right to act in person cannot extend to an artificial person. If
it had been intended to permit any person
to represent a defendant in
giving notice of intention to defend, then it would not have been
necessary in Supreme Court Rule 19(1)
to refer to ‘the
defendant personally or through an attorney’. The Rule would
then have referred simply to ‘the
defendant or his agent.’
The concept of the defendant acting ‘personally’ in
Supreme Court Rule 19(1) seems to
me to be the same as under Supreme
Court Rule 18(1) in respect of a party who sues or defends
‘personally’.
It follows that the first
defendant could not validly give notice of intention to defend in
person, but only through an attorney.
The notice in this case is
therefore bad in law and must be set aside.”
[10] The Notice of
Intention to Defend filed by Educor reads as follows:
“
SIRS,
KINDLY TAKE NOTICE that
the Defendant in the above matter hereby defends the matter and
appoints the address set out hereunder as
the address where it will
accept service of all documents in the matter.
BE PLEASED TO TAKE
FURTHER NOTICE that the service address for the Defendants is:
DAMELIN RANDBURG, CNR
MALIBONGWE DRIVE AND REPUBLIC ROAD, RANDBURG
DATED
AT PINETOWN ON THIS 14
th
DAY
OF FEBRUARY 2023
DEFENDANT
EDUCOR HOLDINGS
5[…] U[…]
Road
PINETOWN ”
[11] Based on what
appears on the face of the Notice of Intention to Defend, is the
contention on behalf of Educor that the
notice was signed by an
admitted attorney defensible? Educor contends that because the notice
was signed by its group legal adviser
and a group company secretary
who is an admitted attorney of the High Court, this Court should find
that the notice complied with
Rule 19(1). The contention is bad in
law because it is not supported by the notice itself. Nowhere in the
notice are the facts
evident which support this proposition. To the
contrary, there is no identity of the person who signed on behalf of
Educor and
of course, I have not been referred to any authority in
support of the proposition by Educor that I must accept that the
signatory
of the notice is an admitted attorney of the High Court
absent any indication to that effect from the notice itself. It
must
therefore follow that the Plea and Counterclaim which was signed
someone at Educor without the necessary details required by the
Rule,
must suffer the same fate as the Notice of Intention to Defend and is
invalid because Educor cannot represent itself.
[12] The contention
that Canon’s attorneys acted in bad faith in proceeding with
the application for default judgment
in the face of a Plea cannot be
sustained because the purported Plea was filed out of time. More
importantly, both invalid Notice
of Intention to Defend and the Plea
had not been uploaded in the Case line portal as required by the
Practice Directive of this
Court.
[13] The fact that
someone at Educor communicated with Canon’s attorneys for
assistance to upload the ill-fated Notice
of Intention to Defend and
the Plea would not render those documents valid, and this is based on
the quoted authorities set out
in this judgment. Furthermore, the
Rule 30 Notice, which was filed and uploaded on Case line portal on 6
June 2023 by the Educor’s
attorneys of record well after the
judgment had been obtained and was filed out of the timelines and of
course also signed by someone
at Educor and not by an attorney. The
judgment in default was therefore, in my opinion, not granted by
error as claimed by Educor
because of the invalidity of the pleadings
that had not been uploaded on the Case line portal as required by the
Practice Directive.
This view finds support of the many decisions
quoted in this judgment.
[14]
I turn to deal with Rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform Rules which has been
referred to above.
The
words “granted in the absence of any party affected thereby”
has little to do with actual, or physical, presence
but refers to
whether the affected party was afforded a genuine opportunity to
participate.
[5]
[15]
In
Zuma
[6]
,
Khampepe
J, said the following regarding the requirements to be met in Rule
42(1)(a) application:
“
It
should be pointed out that once an applicant has met the requirements
for rescission, court is merely endowed with a discretion
to rescind
its order. The precise wording of rule 42, after all, postulates that
a court ‘may’, not ‘must’,
rescind or vary
its order – the rule is merely an ‘empowering section and
does not compel the court’ to set aside
or rescind anything.
[7]
This discretion must be exercised judicially.
[8]
”
## [16]
InColyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills Cape[9],
in dealing with the common law principles behind Rule 42(1)(a), Jones
AJA stated as follows:
[16]
In
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills Cape
[9]
,
in dealing with the common law principles behind Rule 42(1)(a), Jones
AJA stated as follows:
“
[4]
As I shall try to explain in due course, the common law before the
introduction of rules to regulate the practice of superior
courts in
South Africa is the proper context for the interpretation of the
rule. The guiding principle of the common law is certainty
of
judgments. Once judgment is given in a matter it is final. It may not
thereafter be altered by the judge who delivered it. He
becomes
functus
officio
and
may not ordinarily vary or rescind his own judgment (
Firestone
SA (Pty) Ltd
v
Gentiruco
A.G.)
[10]
.
That is the function of a court of appeal. There are exceptions.
After evidence is led and the merits of the dispute have been
determined, rescission is permissible only in the limited case of a
judgment obtained by fraud or,
exceptionally,
justus
error.
[11]
Secondly,
rescission of a judgment taken by default may be ordered where the
party in default can show sufficient cause. There
are also, thirdly,
exceptions which do not relate to rescission but to the correction,
alteration and supplementation of a judgment
or order. These are for
the most part conveniently summarised in the headnote of
Firestone
SA (Pty) Ltd
v
Gentiruco
A.G. supra
[12]
as
follows:
‘
1.
The principal judgment or order may be supplemented in respect of
accessory or consequential matters, for example, costs or interest
on
the judgment debt, that the court overlooked or inadvertently omitted
to grant.
2.
The court may clarify its judgment or order, if, on a proper
interpretation, the meaning thereof remains 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 or order.
3.
The court may correct a clerical, arithmetical, or other error in its
judgment or order so as to give effect to its true intention.
This
exception is confined to the mere correction of an error in
expressing the judgment or order; it does not extend to altering
its
intended sense or substance.
4.
Where counsel has argued the merits and not the costs of a case
(which nowadays often happens since the question of costs may
depend
upon the ultimate decision on the merits), but the court, in granting
judgment, also makes an order concerning the costs,
it may thereafter
correct, alter or supplement that order.’
In
the
Gentiruco
A.G.
case
Trollip JA left open whether or not this list is exhaustive.
[13]
The
authorities also refer to an exceptional procedure under the common
law in terms of which a court may recall its order
immediately after
having given it, or within a reasonable time thereof, either
meru
motu
or
on the application of a party, which need not be a formal application
(
De
Wet and others
v
Western
Bank Ltd
supra
[14]
;
First
national Bank of SA Ltd
v
Jurgens
[15]
;
Tom
v
Minister
of Safety and Security.
[16]
This
procedure has no bearing on this case.
5.
It is against this common law background, which imparts
finality to judgments in the interests of certainty, that Rule
42 was
introduced. The rule caters for mistake. Rescission or variation does
not follow automatically upon proof of a mistake.
The rule gives the
courts a discretion to order it, which must be exercised judicially
(
Theron
NO
v
United
Democratic Front (Western Cape Region) and others
)
[17]
and
Tshivhase
Royal Council and another v Tshivhase and another; Tshivhase and
another v Tshivhase and another.
[18]
6.
Not every mistake or irregularity may be corrected in terms of
the rule. It is, for the most part at any rate, a restatement
of the
common law. It does not purport to amend or extend the common
law
[19]
. That is why the
common law is the proper context for its interpretation. Because it
is a rule of court its ambit is entirely procedural.”
[17]
The
trend
of the courts over the years is not to give a more extended
application to the rule to include all kinds of mistakes or
irregularities.
[20]
In
Bakoven
Ltd v GJ Howes (Pty) Ltd
[21]
,
the
Court said the following on the interpretation of Rule 42(1)(a):
“
An
order or judgment is 'erroneously granted' when the Court commits an
'error' in the sense of a mistake in a matter of law appearing
on the
proceedings of a Court of record' (The Shorter Oxford Dictionary). It
follows that a Court in deciding whether a judgment
was 'erroneously
granted' is, like a Court of Appeal, confined to the record of
proceedings. In contradistinction to relief in
terms of Rule 31(2)(b)
or under the common law, the applicant need not show 'good cause' in
the sense of an explanation for his
default and a bona fide defence…
Once the applicant can point to an error in
the proceedings, he is without further ado entitled to rescission.”
[18]
In the instant matter, Educor contended that there was an error by
the registrar to grant the default judgment because
it had entered
notice of intention to defend which could not be uploaded due to
technical reasons. This contention is without merit
because at the
time the default judgment was granted, no notice of intention to
defend had been uploaded in the court file. Educor
contended
furthermore that it had been refused the right to file the notice of
intention to defend manually and by implication
furthermore argued
that somehow, the registrar should have that there was always an
intention to defend the action. This contention
loses sight of the
fact that the office of the registrar of this court consists of
support staff and not a single individual.
[19]
Consequently, given the application for default judgment for
consideration, Mr. Maponya, the registrar of this court
could not
have known that indeed there was a notice of intention to defend the
action which had been turned down by Mr. Makofane
one of his staff
members when the alleged attempt to file it manually was made.
Accordingly, I am of the view that the judgment
was not granted in
error. I am, furthermore, fortified by the fact that in any event,
what is said to be the notice of appearance
to defend is not
compliant with the Rules because Educor indicated that it is
representing itself instead of been represented by
an attorney. This
renders the so-called notice of intention to defend invalid which is
in line with the many courts.
[20]
I now consider whether Educor had demonstrated that it has a bone
fide defence to the claim. Educor does state in its
affidavit what
its defence is. It refers to a “Plea and Counterclaim”
which it attaches to its founding affidavit which
was not signed by
an attorney or advocate. The so-called “Plea and Counterclaim”
refers to the alleged point in limine
challenge Canon’s alleged
failure to prove that the person who concluded the agreement with
Canon on behalf of Educor had
the authority to do so. The “Plea”
also challenges the correctness of the amount claimed and avers that
Canon failed
to fulfil its obligations by not maintaining the
equipment. For the reasons stated above regarding the invalidity of
the notice
of intention to defend, the so-called “Plea and
Counterclaim” must suffer the same fate. Accordingly, Educor
has not
made out a case that it has a bona fide defence.
Order
[21]
The application for rescission of judgment is dismissed with costs on
the scale A.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBUR
G
APPEARANCES
Counsel for the
Applicant/ Respondent:
Adv C A Read
Instructed
by:
Webber
Wentzel
Counsel
for the First Respondent/
Applicant:
Adv U Ahir
Instructed
by:
Mooney Ford Attorneys
DATE
APPLICATION HEARD
:
03 September 2024
DATE
JUDGMENT HANDED DOWN:
06 February 2025
[1]
1992(2)
SA 50 at 54D
[2]
1956(1) SA 364(A) at 365C
[3]
1977(3)
SA 448 (W) at
[4]
At
451A-C
[5]
See Zuma v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into
Allegations of State Capture, Corruption and
Fraud in the Public
Sector Including Organs of State and Others (CCT 52/21)
[2021] ZACC
28
; 2021 (11) BCLR
1263 (CC)
[6]
Above, footnote 5 at para 53
[7]
De Wet v Western Bank Ltd
1979 (2) SA 1031
(A) (De Wet) at 1034F and
Colyn v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
[2003] ZASCA 36
;
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA) at para 5 where the Supreme
Court of - Appeal held that rule 42, understood in the context
of the common law of rescission,
caters for a mistake, but
“rescission or variation does not follow automatically upon
proof of a mistake. The rule
gives the courts a discretion to
order it, which must be exercised judicially.” See also
Theron N.O. v United Democratic
Front (Western Cape Region)
1984 (2)
SA 532
(C) and Chetty above n 12 at 760F-G.
[8]
Chetty id at 761D where the Court held as follows: “broadly
speaking, the exercise of a court’s discretion [is] influenced
by considerations of fairness and justice, having regard to all the
facts and circumstances of the particular case”. One
of the
most important factors to be taken into account in the exercise of
discretion, so the Court in Chetty found at 760H and
761E, was
whether the applicant has demonstrated “a determined effort to
lay his case before the court and not an intention
to abandon it”
for “if it appears that [an applicant’s] default was
wilful or due to gross negligence, the
court should not come to his
assistance”. And, as stated in Naidoo v
Matlala N.O.
2012 (1) SA 143
(GNP) at para [4], a court will not
exercise its discretion in favour of a rescission application if
undesirable consequences
would follow.
[9]
ZASCA
36;
[2003] 2 All SA 113
(SCA);
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA) at paras 4 and 5.
[10]
1977
(4) SA 298 (A) 306 F- G.
[11]
Childerly
Estate Stores
v
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd
1924
OPD 163
,
De
Wet and others
v
Western
Bank Ltd
1979
(2) SA 1031
(A)
at 1040. And see Harms,
Civil
Procedure in the Supreme Court,
B42-10
and the authorities collected in footnotes 7, 8 and 9.
[12]
The
headnote is an accurate summary of the passage in the judgment
appearing at pages 306H-308A
.
[13]
At 308 A – 309 B. That is how matters presently stand, despite
the reservation in Seatle v Protea Assurance
Co Ltd
1984 (2) SA 537
(C) 542 at H- 543 A
[14]
Footnote
11 at 1044 E – 1045G.
[15]
1993
(1) SA 245
(W) 246I.
[16]
[1998]
1 All SA 629
(E)
637A – 638A.
[17]
1984
(2) SA 532
(C)
at 536G.
[18]
[1992]
ZASCA 185
[1992] ZASCA 185
; ;
1992
(4) SA 852
(A)
862J – 863A.
[19]
Harms,
Civil
Procedure in the Supreme Court
,
B42-1. But see the reservation in
Tshivase
Royal
Council
v
Tshivase
supra
(footnote 18)
at 862 I
.
[20]
Colyn v Tiger Foods Industries Ltd above footnote 9 at para 8.
[21]
1990(2) SA 446 at page 471E to H
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