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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 233
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## City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Mayetsa (5796/2022)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 233 (5 March 2025)
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality v Mayetsa (5796/2022)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 233 (5 March 2025)
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sino date 5 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 5796/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
05 March 2025
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
THE
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
Applicant
and
TSHOLOFELO
MANYETSA
Defendant
Summary
:
Condonation – Rule 27(3) of the Uniform Rules of the Court.
Good cause to be shown for the degree of lateness. Applicant
delayed
to file the Plea and acted to the summons after being served with
notice to be barred. Despite the notice, Applicant still
missed and
failed to file the Plea and adhere to the prescribed Court Days.
Content of the application to ensure sufficient reasons
for the
degree of the delay and its relationship with the interests of
justice. Factors to be holistically considered and not independently
of each other. Applicant attributed the basis of the failure to an
‘administrative error’ and extended negligence to
Defendant that did not constitute a
bona
fide.
Application dismissed due to lack
of urgency and apportionment of the negligence. The costs to be costs
in the main cause.
JUDGMENT
NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
AJ
Introduction
Background facts
[1] The
Applicant in this matter applied for condonation in terms of Rule
27(3) of the Uniform Rules
of the Court in which it sought indulgence
of this Court for the late filing of the Plea in the main action.
This application arose
from the delictual action filed by the
Defendant against the Applicant. Both parties were legally
represented and the matter was
heard before me on 12 February 2025. I
dismissed it in court and herein I provide reasons for such
dismissal.
[2] The
Applicant, after having been served with the notice of bar from
filing its Plea on 27 May
2022, failed to file its Plea within the
prescribed time frames even after the said notice. This meant that
the application was
out of time and leave was sought before this
Court to grant condonation of the late filing of the Plea. The
Defendant opposed this
application.
[3] It
was the Applicant’s concession that following the notice of bar
on 27 May 2022, it was
supposed to have filed its Plea on 03 June
2022 and instead filed it on 13 June 2022 which meant six (6) days
outside of the prescribed
time frames. The Applicant further
submitted that the delay in submitting the Plea is inordinate because
as soon as it realized
the failure, it sought consensus from the
Defendant to remedy the situation which was refused by the latter.
The Applicant further
acknowledged that although he is constrained by
limited resources, this matter is of importance in that it deals with
issues pertaining
to service delivery to the residents in his area of
jurisdiction.
[4]
However, the Defendant vehemently opposed the application and argued
that:
[5.1] the Applicant failed
to provide a reasonable explanation for the delay;
[5.2] the application is
not
bona fide
and was made with the object of delaying the
Defendant’s claim;
[5.3] there has been a
reckless or intentional disregard of the Rules of Court; and
[5.4] Applicant failed to
show any prejudice caused to the Defendant could be compensated for
by an appropriate costs
order.
[5] This
brief is meant as a foundation for the justification and
reasonableness of the delay without
any malice on either of the
parties in the dispute.
Applicable
legal principles
[6] I do
not intend to make an exhaustive framework of the principles
regulating the foundations of
the principle of condonation. To date,
voluminous jurisprudence has also been developed by the courts in
giving meaning and substance
to this principle. Its framework is
prescribed in Rule 27(3) of the Uniform Rules of the Court which
reads as follows:
“
The court
may, on good cause shown, condone any non-compliance with these
Rules.”
[7] For
this Court, the principle of ‘good cause shown’ entails a
responsibility on the
part of the Applicant to place any justifiable
cause to the delay that served as a bar to the timeous filing of the
Plea. The Applicant
had to satisfy justifiable factors relating to:
(i)
the cause of the delay;
(ii)
the degree of delay;
(iii)
what could have
contributed to it;
(iv)
prospects of success on
the merits; and
(v)
prejudice to the
defendant, (Myburgh JP in
National
Union of Mine Workers v Council for Mineral Technology
[1998]
ZALAC 22
at
para
10
).
[8]
These factors are not to be viewed independently of each other but
holistically because condonation
is not a mere principle of the
adjudicative process. It entails a satisfactory explanation of ‘the
conspectus of all the
facts as to the cause of the delay’
without prejudice to either of the parties in the dispute, (Dlodlo
AJA in
Department of Home Affairs v Ndlovu
[2014] 9 BLLR 851
LAC at para 7). Condonation has been made unique today by its
infusion within the broader framework of the interests of justice
that is encapsulated in the rule of law as a foundational value of
the new dispensation. Bosielo AJ in
Grootboom v National
Prosecuting Authority
2014 (1) BCLR 65
(CC) at para 36 reaffirmed
that the standard for the granting of condonation must be the
interests of justice. The Judge went on
to state that the ‘principle
of the interests of justice is broad enough to be reflective and have
due regard to all the
relevant factors’ and not necessarily
limited to those mentioned by Myburgh JP above. The approach in
Grootboom
was earlier expressed by the Constitutional Court in
Van Wyk v Unitas Hospital
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (4) BCLR 442
(CC) at paras
20-22 wherein the Court held:
"the standard for considering an
application for condonation is in the interest of justice. Whether it
is in the interests
of justice to grant condonation depends on the
facts and circumstances of each case. Factors that are relevant to
this enquiry
but are not limited to the nature of the relief sought,
the extent and the cause of the delay, the effect of the delay on the
administration
of justice and other litigants, the reasonableness of
the explanation of the delay the importance of the issue to be raised
in
the intended appeal and the prospects of success ... An applicant
for condonation must give a full explanation for the delay. In
addition, the explanation must cover the entire period of the delay.
And what is more the explanation must be reasonable."
It is also my affirmation that the
interests of justice as reiterated in
Grootboom
at para 50 and
Van Wyk
above are of fundamental importance in the new
dispensation particularly in the context of eliminating any conduct
that may bedevil
the functioning and integrity of the courts. As
similarly expressed by Davis AJ in
S[...] K[...] v M[...] N[...]
CASE NO: D3532/24 KZN citing with approval
James Brown and Hamer v
Simmons
1963(4) SA (A) at 660 E-G that:
“
It is a
well-established principle in our law that it is in the interests of
the administration of justice to require adherence
to well
established rules and that those rules should in the ordinary course
be observed.”
[9] I am
not going to further pre-occupy this Court with a further analysis of
this principle but
the failure to adhere to the procedural safeguards
in the matter herein has the potential to put the credibility not
only of this
Court but the entire judiciary at risk. I need not state
that this Court stands as a guard for the general overview of the
constitutionalised
right of access to courts as envisaged in section
34 of Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996,
(Constitution). In
essence, the failure to adhere to the procedural
safeguards undermines the very foundations of the right to access the
courts and
contributes to the well-known idiom of ‘justice
delayed is justice denied’. Accessing courts is the ‘coal-face’
of dispensing justice without fear or favour. It also serves as a
pre-requisite for the enjoyment of other rights without which
the
limitation on the extensive analysis of the rights by the courts will
minimize the flourishing jurisprudence that will contribute
to the
development of the law.
[10] Therefore, the
gist of this application was to establish whether a proper case was
made for the relief sought
by the Applicant in terms of Rule 27(3) of
the Uniform Rules of the Court.
Analysis
[11] Let me
reiterate, the content of this application was to enable the
Applicant to reinstate the defence
against the pursuance of the claim
by the Defendant in the main action. This Court also acknowledges the
Applicant’s concession
of having filed the plea outside the
prescribed time frames. It is further acknowledged herein that
condonation may be granted
without being persuaded by the Applicant’s
poor explanation of the delay. This means that each case is
considered on its
own merits despite the lessons to be drawn from
other precedent-setting jurisprudence that has been developed in the
granting of
condonation applications.
[12] Thus, in the
context of this case, that persuasion is overshadowed by what I refer
to as the Applicant’s
‘dragging of the feet approach’
in submitting the Plea since the filing of the matter. It is also my
view that the
Applicant adopted what I considered as a ‘reactionary
approach’ in addressing this matter after having been served
with the ‘notice of bar’. It was common cause that the
Defendant served the summons on the Applicant on 15 February
2022.
Following the serving of the summons, the Applicant only reacted to
them when it was further served with the notice to ‘be
barred’
from filing the Plea. It is now this ‘Plea’ that is the
subject of this application which was also filed
outside the time
frame of the Court Rules. The notice of the bar was served on 27 May
2022 with the Applicant, supposedly, expected
to have filed the Plea
on 03 June 2022 and instead filed it on 13 June 2022. Simply put, the
Plea was filed six court days later.
Literally, the six-day period
may be justifiable if good cause shown as prescribed in Rule 27(3).
Thus, the justification of the
delay should consider the history of
the matter which is traced to the year 2022 when the claim was filed
against the Applicant.
[13] The Applicant’s
Counsel submitted that the question of condonation should be
similarly approached or
this Court draw lessons from the already
developed jurisprudence which laid the framework for affirmative
principles wherein amongst
others Holmes J in the case of
Melane v
Santam Insurance Co. Limited
1962 (4) SA 531
(A)
;
at 532 C
– D held:
“
In deciding
whether sufficient cause has been shown, the basic principle is that
the Court has a discretion, to be exercised judicially
upon a
consideration of all the facts, and in essence it is a matter of
fairness to both sides. Among the facts usually relevant
are the
degree of lateness, the explanation therefor, the prospects of
success, and the importance of the case. Ordinarily these
facts are
interrelated: they are not individually decisive, for that would be a
piecemeal approach incompatible with a true discretion,
save of
course that if there are no prospects of success there would be no
point in granting condonation. Any attempt to formulate
a rule of
thumb would only serve to harden the arteries of what should be a
flexible discretion. What is needed is an objective
conspectus of all
the facts. Thus, a slight delay and a good explanation may help to
compensate for prospects of success which
are not strong. Or the
importance of the issue and strong prospects of success may tend to
compensate for a long delay.”
I am of the view that the Applicant’s
conduct eroded the merits of this application. The reactionary
conduct only after the
notice of the bar and the further failure to
adhere to the procedural safeguards towards the filing of the Plea
struck at the core
of the substance of this application.
[14] In
casu
,
during argument and on papers, the Applicant’s Counsel traced
and attributed the delay to the ‘administrative error’
on
his part. I find this disturbing that the obligation of a sphere with
a constitutional responsibility could be relegated to
an
‘administrative error’. This Court acknowledges that
humans are ‘fallible’ but will not substitute the
substance of the legal principle in adhering to the requisites of
adjudicative processes over human fallibility. In this case,
the
Defendant fell into a potholed road and the Applicant extended
contributory negligence to the Defendant who, according to the
Applicant, ‘failed to keep a proper look out and exhibit the
degree of care’ to avoid falling in the circumstances.
The
extension of negligence on the Defendant is not a justified defence
for the injuries suffered. Such apportionment of negligence
is also
disturbing because the primary responsibility rest with the Applicant
to ensure the proper maintenance of the roads. The
Applicant did not
provide any credible evidence in this Court how such awareness or
familiarity could have been obtained by the
Defendant except the
‘blanket contention without substantiation. The extension of
negligence touch on the Applicant’s
bona fides
on this
application as it appeared to be indicative of a yardstick against
which to evade responsibility of his own ‘human
fallibility’.
[15] The Applicant
further emphasised the importance of this case as it relates to
service delivery that has to
be provided to his residents. Whilst the
Applicant acknowledged the limited resources to deliver services, it
also uses the scant
resources to fight legal battles against ordinary
citizens. The Applicant therefore, amassed the limited legal
resources to be
used at the prejudice of the Defendant. I am not
going to justify the way in which the Applicant spends its allocated
resources,
thus of importance in this matter is the ‘thorn’
in the content of principle of condonation relating to the proper
justification of the delay to the application.
[16] In this case,
the Applicant has a constitutionalised status as a sphere of
governance at local level and
did not view the urgency of this matter
on its inception, which is February of the year 2022. It has been
emphasised that condonation
is not a ‘mere asking’ but
entails a satisfactory cause of the delay. Similarly, as expressed by
Waglay DJP in
South African Post Office Ltd vs Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration
[2012] 1 BLLR 30
LAC at
para 16 held that that ‘it is also generally accepted that if
an applicant does not provide an acceptable explanation
for its
delay, the court need not consider the other factors and refuse
condonation’.
[17] Although the
application of this rule is not rigid and may be relaxed, I am
persuaded by Waglay DJP above
because of the complementarity between
the degree of the delay and the reasons proffered by the Applicant
for such a delay. Counsel
for the Applicant made an intensive
argument about the degree of the delay day not to be viewed by this
Court as ‘inordinate’
but to be considered holistically
with other factors. The core content of the reasons for the delay
which could be found acceptable
by this Court as Waglay DJP at para
18 held ‘cannot be reduced to an ‘arithmetic
calculation’. I am encouraged
by Waglay DJP above, that the
emphasis on the number of days should not be a key focus to the
exclusion of other factors that are
equally a determinant of this
application. The ‘administrative error’ should not serve
as the basis and a justified
reason for the acceptable days whilst
the subject of the dispute is of highest magnitude for the
adjudicative process. It is therefore,
evident that the intensive
argument about the limited days made by the Applicant needed to be
concretised with justifiable reasons
that are foundational to the
ultimate justification of the delay and without such, it is not
excusable.
[18] The
consideration of this application was also focused on the
interrelationship that exists between the prospects
of success and
the prejudice to be suffered by either of the parties. Thus, I am not
going to make a
prima facie
view regarding the prospects of
success because it will be a subjective opinion given the nature of
the dispute and what may also
be viewed as pre-empting the outcome of
this matter in the main application. On the other hand, the emphasis
is more on this Court
having observed the glaring prejudice against
the Defendant which is evidenced by the lack of urgency to this
matter before the
Applicant woke up from ‘slumber’. The
Applicant’s Counsel submitted that the Defendant was unlikely
to suffer
prejudice if condonation is granted because the costs have
been granted for the delay in the main action. I am not satisfied
that
the costs granted in another application will be used to cushion
the prejudice to be suffered in another one. The prejudice is
considered in the context of this application only and not on the
importation of the ‘curing costs’ in an application
that
considered a different point of law. As evidenced in this case, the
prejudice is of substantial interests in that there are
clear
‘unequal legal powers’ between the parties. The Applicant
has shown his ‘legal muscles’ and amassed
human and
financial resources to litigate this matter against the Defendant.
Hence his approach for the indirect intrusion of costs
in a matter
that dealt with a different subject of the law.
[19] It is also my
view that the Applicant was not genuine in this application because
his prayers sought an order
of costs against the person who opposes
this matter, which is the Defendant. At the risk of repletion, the
Applicant had shown
the flexing of his legal muscles in furthering
the perpetuation of the delay in bringing the matter into finality.
The ‘prayer’
for costs appeared to have the potential to
‘silence’ the Defendant to accept the status
quo
of having limited abilities in opposing this application. The
Defendant should not be made to pay the costs for no simple reason
other than opposing the condonation application. The prayer for costs
questions the Applicant’s
bona fides
in the resolve of
this matter. In considering the interests of justice as they dictate
otherwise because they equally put the Defendant
at the ‘pedestal’
to oppose any claim or application that may hinder the quality of the
protection against her. The
Defendant opposed what she believed was
deserving of her argument against an application that is likely to
delay the finality of
her matter. The opposition was also meant to
contribute to the upholding of the integrity of the procedural
regulations of the
adjudicative processes. It is my further view that
the prayer for costs was designed as a measure that pulled the legal
muscle
underneath the ‘radar’ with a potential to scare
the Defendant not to oppose this matter to avoid said costs.
[20] It has been
emphasised that condonation is not a ‘mere formality’ but
carries the gist of the
interests of justice which are of direct link
not only to the protection of rights but their fulfilment as
envisaged in section
7(2) of the Constitution. This Court
acknowledges that the Applicant has equal responsibility to defend
what may be, allegedly
unjustifiable claims against him. Thus, in the
context of this case, such responsibility could not be used to propel
the disregard
of the procedural safeguards relating to the
adjudicative role of this Court.
[21] Having
considered the reasons proffered by the Applicant, the
‘administrative error’ which was
the basis of this
application due to an oversight on his part, was a poor and
unconvincing justification that relegated the content
of his
obligation to a ‘mere administrative oversight’. Further,
reducing the foundations of Rule 27(3) of the Uniform
Rules of the
Court to a ‘poor brother’ was not judicially persuasive
in the exercise of the discretion to grant the
condonation. The
degree of lateness might not be excessive but the foundation of such
a delay should have been based on sound and
justifiable reasons
before this Court. The Applicant ought to have appreciated that the
degree of lateness is linked to sound and
justifiable reasons and not
to insist on an application by amongst others apportioning the blame
on the Defendant which misplaced
the substance of a
bona fide
defence before this Court.
[22]
It is my view that the Applicant minotirised the substance of the
dispute to an ‘administrative error’
and the
apportionment of negligence to the Defendant. Considering the
argument presented in totality, it is my considered opinion
that the
Applicant failed to satisfy the requirements of condonation by the
lack of urgency and response to the quest to file the
Plea timeously.
The cause of the delay was ‘self-inflicted’ and could not
serve as a justification to condone the application.
It is my
conviction and remain unconvinced that the Applicant has sufficiently
explained the cause of the delay except for cushioning
it under an
‘administrative error’ which allegedly delayed the filing
of the Plea.
[23]
In the circumstances, the following order is made:
[23.1] The application for
condonation is refused.
[23.2] The costs of this
application are the costs in the main application.
N NTLAMA-MAKHANYA
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Delivery:
This judgment is issued by the Judge whose name
appears herein and is submitted electronically to the parties /legal
representatives
by email. It is also uploaded on CaseLines, and its
date of delivery is deemed 05 March 2025
.
Date
of Hearing:
12 February 2025
Date
Delivered
:
05 March 2025
Appearances:
Counsel
for Applicant
Advocate S
Dlali
Instructing
Attorneys
:
K Matji and
Partners
Defendant:
Advocate HW
Theron
Instructing
Attorneys
:
HW Theron
INC.
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