Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 599South Africa
Whitefield Property Management v Body Corporate of Pearls (2021/58947) [2025] ZAGPJHC 599 (11 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 February 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Whitefield Property Management v Body Corporate of Pearls (2021/58947) [2025] ZAGPJHC 599 (11 February 2025)
Whitefield Property Management v Body Corporate of Pearls (2021/58947) [2025] ZAGPJHC 599 (11 February 2025)
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sino date 11 February 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 2021/58947
DATE
:
11-02-2025
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO.
(3)
REVISED.
In
the matter between
WHITEFIELD
PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Plaintiff
and
BODY CORPORATE OF THE
PEARLS
Defendant
JUDGMENT
BARNES,
AJ
: This is my ex-tempore
judgment in this matter. This is an application for condonation for
the applicant's failure to comply
timeously with the requirements of
Section 3(1)(3) and Section 4(1)(a), rather, of the Institution of
Legal Proceedings Act, which
I will refer to in the course of this
judgment as the Act.
Just
please, please tell me if you cannot hear me. Sometimes the acoustics
are a bit strange, and I think that I am talking loudly,
but if you
are not able to hear me, please give me an indication.
Thank
you. The applicant's action against the City of Johannesburg arises
out of injuries she allegedly sustained when she fell
into an open
manhole on the 27th of September 2014.
The
applicant purportedly delivered a notice in terms of the Act on the
26th of January 2016. I say purportedly because there is
a dispute
between the parties regarding whether the notice was in fact sent,
given that the relevant post office slip does not
contain any counter
stamp or signature or the initials of a delivery officer.
Be
that as it may, it is common cause between the parties that the
notice, in the event that it was delivered, was delivered ten
months
out of time.
On
the 5th of April 2016, the applicant issued summons against the
respondent, the defendant, in the action. The defendant defended
the
action and filed a special plea of non-compliance with the Act on the
3rd of April 2018.
Almost five years
later, on the 20th of June 2023, the present application for
condonation was launched. The application was defended,
and an
answering affidavit was filed by the respondent and thereafter a
replying affidavit was filed by the applicant.
Thereafter, the
application for condonation was set down and heads of argument were
filed by both sides. After heads of argument
had been filed, the
applicant purported on the 24th of November 2024, to file a
supplementary founding affidavit.
To
be precise, the supplementary founding affidavit was served on the
24th of November 2024 but only filed on the 10th of January
2025.
In
the supplementary founding affidavit, the applicant purports to
augment the original founding affidavit by, for example, dealing
with
the issue of prospects of success, which had not been dealt with at
all in the original founding affidavit.
The
respondent objected to the admission of the supplementary founding
affidavit and the first question before me is accordingly
whether
leave ought to be granted for the admission of the supplementary
founding affidavit.
It
is trite that a party seeking the Court's leave to file a further
affidavit must explain why the facts or information had not
been put
before the Court at an earlier stage.
In
exercising the Court's discretion in relation to whether or not to
grant leave in this regard, the Court will consider the following
factors. The reason the evidence was not produced timeously.
The
degree of materiality of the evidence. The possibility that it may
have been filed to relieve the pinch of the shoe. The balance
of
prejudice. The stage of litigation.
The
general need for finality in judicial proceedings, to name just some
of the various factors that the Court will take cognisance
of.
Now,
in this case, the applicant has failed to provide the Court with an
explanation of why the facts and information in the supplementary
affidavit could not have been put before the Court at an earlier
stage.
And
have failed to address the Court in relation to the relevant factors
which I have set out above. In the absence of any such
explanation,
there is simply no basis for me to exercise my discretion and leave
to admit the supplementary founding affidavit
is accordingly refused.
Turning then to the
merits of the condonation application, which fall to be determined
without reference to the contents of the
supplementary founding
affidavit.
The
condonation application is, in my view, fatally defective for two
reasons. Firstly, it fails to deal at all with prospects of
success,
an essential requirement of a condonation application.
See
in this regard Melanie v Santam Insurance Company Limited 1962(4) SA
531 Appellate Division, as it then was. And secondly, the
applicant
waited five years before bringing this condonation application with
no explanation in this regard whatsoever.
There
is a duty on litigants to bring their applications for condonation as
soon as possible, as soon as reasonably possible, at
the very least,
after they become aware of the need for an application for
condonation, and to provide an explanation to the Court
where they
have failed to do so.
See
in this regard Madinda v Minister of Safety and Security, 2008(4) SA
312 (SCA) at paragraph 6. Counsel for the applicant accepted
the
existence of such a duty, and accepted further that there was, that
no explanation had been proffered for the delay of five
years in the
bringing of this condonation application.
That
is matter that ought to have been included in the condonation
application in the Court's view, quite apart from the fact that
prospects of success had not been dealt with at all.
For
those reasons I make the following order. The application for
condonation is dismissed with costs on scale B.
H BARNES
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
:
11 February 2025
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