Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 250South Africa
Dlwathi v Taxing Master and Others (2021/51100) [2025] ZAGPJHC 250 (10 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
10 March 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Dlwathi v Taxing Master and Others (2021/51100) [2025] ZAGPJHC 250 (10 March 2025)
Dlwathi v Taxing Master and Others (2021/51100) [2025] ZAGPJHC 250 (10 March 2025)
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sino date 10 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Case
Number: 2021/51100
In
the matter between:
STEVE
DLWATHI
Applicant
and
THE
TAXING
MASTER
First Respondent
DAYTONA
(PTY)
LTD
Second Respondent
SHAREHOLDERS
OF THE SECOND RESPONDENT
Third Respondent
In re: the matter
between:
STEVE
DLWATHI
Applicant
and
HYDE
PARK AUTO (PTY) LTD t/a SANDTON AUTO
First Respondent
DAYTONA
(PTY)
LTD
Second Respondent
SHAREHOLDERS
OF THE SECOND RESPONDENT
Third Respondent
ABRINA
3765 (PTY) LTD t/a BMW SANDTON
Fourth
Respondent
SHAREHOLDERS
OF THE FOURTH RESPONDENT
Fifth Respondent
THE
SHERIFF OF THE HIGH COURT
Sixth Respondent
JUDGMENT
JM BERGER AJ:
[1]
This
is not the first time that Mr Steven Dlwathi, an admitted advocate,
has approached this Court, in his personal capacity, on
papers that
are particularly difficult to understand. Styled as a review,
purportedly brought in terms of rule 48 read with
section 18(1)
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
[1]
the application appears to seek the following four forms of
substantive relief.
[2]
a.
First, an order reviewing and setting aside
the allocator of the Taxing Master’s ruling of 18 September
2023 pertaining to
the bill of costs in respect of an interlocutory
application that was decided by Strijdom AJ on 28 March 2023, in
which Mr Dlwathi
and his then attorneys were ordered to pay costs on
the scale as between attorney and client;
b.
Second, an order declaring that the Taxing
Master’s ruling was made prematurely, is inconsistent with –
and violates
–
section 18(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act, and
ought to be set aside or nullified;
c.
Third, an order setting aside the punitive
costs order granted by Strijdom AJ; and
d.
Fourth, an order declaring that “
[t]he
operation and execution of a decision which is the subject of an
application for leave to appeal or of an appeal …
[is] hereby
suspended pending the decision of the application or appeal.”
[2]
In order to make sense of this application,
it is important to understand what was before Strijdom AJ, what he
decided, and what
has subsequently transpired.
[3]
The application before Strijdom AJ was
brought by the second respondent in this case, Daytona (Pty) Ltd. In
that matter, Daytona
sought – as its primary relief – to
have a substantive application brought by Mr Dlwathi set aside as an
irregular
step in terms of
rule 30(1).
In the alternative, it sought
to have that application struck out and dismissed in terms of
rule
30A(10(b)
, due to non-compliance with the rules.
[4]
The court was also asked to strike out
“
defamatory, scandalous, vexatious
and irrelevant matter included in the answering affidavit filed in
opposition to the
Rule 30/30A
application.”
Strijdom AJ found these allegations made by Mr Dlwathi to be
“
manifestly defamatory,
scandalous, irrelevant, and vexatious”
,
noting that his attacks on the
bona
fides
of Daytona and its legal
representatives were unjustified.
[5]
In addition to granting the substantive
relief sought by Daytona, Strijdom AJ directed that Mr Dlwathi and
his attorneys at the
time pay Daytona’s costs, on the scale as
between attorney and client. It is in respect of that costs order
that Daytona
sought to have a bill of costs taxed when its attorneys
issued a notice of intention to tax. It is common cause that neither
Mr
Dlwathi nor the attorneys filed a notice of opposition.
[6]
Seemingly of the view that the provisions
of
section 18(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act would
prevent the bill of
costs from being taxed, Mr Dlwathi applied for leave to appeal
against the whole of the judgment and order
of Strijdom J. That
matter was heard on 8 June 2023, with a written judgment being handed
down on 10 July 2023, in which the application
for leave to appeal
was dismissed with costs.
[7]
This review application was launched on 9
October 2023, some three months later. As the answering affidavit
correctly notes, the
application was based on the assumption that
Daytona was not entitled to approach the Taxing Master to have the
bill of costs taxed
because of an alleged pending appeal in the
Supreme Court of Appeal. But it appears that at the time this
application was launched,
and at the time Daytona answered, no such
application to the SCA had been made.
[8]
In oral argument, Mr Sing – who
appeared on behalf of the second and third respondents –
indicated that he had been
advised by his attorney that an
application to the SCA had indeed been made, albeit much later, and
served on his clients, on 27
November 2024. When asked why this
information had not been brought to the court’s attention any
earlier, he was unable to
provide an answer, being accompanied
only by his correspondent attorney. I return to this later when
dealing with costs.
[9]
In
a letter dated 11 October 2023, Daytona’s attorneys advised Mr
Dlwathi of two things: first, that no application to the
SCA for
leave to appeal had been delivered; and second, that in any event,
Beinash
v Reynolds
[3]
makes it plain that “
while
pending appeal proceedings suspend a judgment creditor’s right
to execute a costs order, the same does not suspend the
right to tax
a bill of cost[s].”
Mr Dlwathi was invited to withdraw his review, failing which a
punitive costs order would be sought.
[10]
In oral argument, Mr Dlwathi –
representing himself without the assistance of any co-counsel or
attorney – conceded
that his case had no merit. In particular,
he accepted that he had no basis for bringing the review because –
a.
a review in terms of
rule 48
cannot be
pursued in circumstances where a notice “
require[ing]
the taxing master to state a case for the decision of a judge”
has not been issued; and
b.
only two categories of persons may bring a
rule 48
review: a party who objected to any item or part of an item,
or a party dissatisfied with the taxing master’s
mero
motu
disallowance of any item or part
of an item.
[11]
He also accepted that had he properly
applied his mind to Daytona’s attorneys’ letter of 11
October 2023, which he could
not remember ever reading, he would have
realised that his real concern – execution of the costs order
pending an appeal
– had actually been addressed. In such
circumstances, Mr Dlwathi said that the matter would have been
withdrawn.
[12]
In
an attempt to explain how such a poorly-considered application could
be brought, Mr Dlwathi referred to what is set out in his
affidavit
supporting his application for condonation for the late filing of the
review (which was filed timeously), and the late
delivery of his
heads.
[4]
In that affidavit,
dated 5 December 2024, which runs to over 20 pages, Mr Dlwathi sought
to explain the delay by relying on an
”
unfortunate
illness”
of
“
unknown
cause(s)”
that was treated by traditional healers, sangomas, and diviners, over
a period of months.
[13]
In support of his affidavit, Mr Dlwathi
filed an affidavit deposed to on 11 November 2024 by his 91-year-old
mother, in which she
also identifies herself as the mother-in-law of
the second respondent, and the grandmother of a Ms Fezeka Noluthando
Dlwathi. As
Daytona is the second respondent in this matter, I have
no idea to whom reference is made. Nevertheless, from some of the
contents
of the affidavit, it is clear that it was filed in support
of the condonation application.
[14]
The affidavit, replete with lengthy
footnotes and references to case law and various publications, goes
into great detail about
the alleged causes of Mr Dlwathi’s
alleged illness. It also includes long sections dealing with personal
family matters that
have nothing at all to do with this case. In my
view, the choice to include this affidavit in Mr Dlwathi’s
papers, with little
to no evidential value, raises red flags in
respect Mr Dlwathi’s fitness to practice law.
[15]
The difficulty I have with Mr Dlwathi’s
explanation is that even if it is true, it does not explain why he
filed the heads
of argument and practice note that he did in December
2024, continuing to pursue an obviously defective application, at a
point
after he had returned to practice. At that stage, he should
have had the opportunity to apply his mind properly to the papers,
and – if that had been done – taken a decision to
withdraw the matter, and tender costs.
[16]
For the sake of completeness, I now deal
with the third and fourth forms of substantive relief sought by Mr
Dlwathi.
[17]
The declaratory order sought in prayer 3 of
the notice of motion, to set aside the punitive costs order granted
by Strijdom AJ,
cannot be granted in review proceedings such as
these. That much is obvious. That costs order is part of the full
judgment and
order in respect of which the application to the SCA for
leave to appeal has been filed. Should the SCA grant leave to appeal,
it would have the necessary authority to deal with the issue. Unless
and until that happens, the costs order stands.
[18]
Although I am empowered by
section 21(1)(c)
of the
Superior Courts Act to
grant declaratory orders in appropriate
circumstances, no legitimate purpose would be served here by granting
an order that does
no more than restate part of the law as set out in
section 18(1)
of the
Superior Courts Act. Indeed
, it would be
misleading to make such a pronouncement without expressly mentioning
the caveat: that
section 18(1)
must be read subject to subsections
(2) and (3).
[19]
That leaves the issue of costs. In oral
argument, Mr Sing submitted that the following three factors would
justify the grant of
a punitive costs order:
a.
First, Mr Dlwathi’s false statements
in paragraph 10 of his founding affidavit dated 2 October 2023, in
which he alleged that
the papers in an application for leave to
appeal to the SCA had been served on Daytona’s attorneys. As Mr
Sing advised in
oral argument, that application was only served on
his instructing attorneys over 13 months later. Moreover, there is
nothing in
the evidence to gainsay Daytona’s evidence that, at
the time the answering affidavit was prepared, no such application
had
been delivered.
b.
Second, the contents of Daytona’s
attorneys’ letter dated 11 October 2023, in which Mr Dlwathi
was warned that should
he persist with his clearly unmeritorious
application, a punitive costs order would be sought.
c.
Third, the misjoinder of the third
respondent, who had nothing to do with the taxing of the bill of
costs.
[20]
While Mr Dlwathi has indeed acted poorly, I
am loathe to exercise my discretion to award another punitive costs
order against him,
particularly in circumstances where he has clearly
not been well. Moreover, Daytona continued to persist in its
submission that
an application to the SCA had never been served on
its attorneys. It was only halfway through oral argument when this
Court was
advised that such an application had been made, albeit long
after the affidavits in this matter had been delivered.
[21]
Even in his practice note dated 19 February
2025, Mr Sing submitted that there is no pending appeal in the SCA.
That practice note
was delivered by his instructing attorneys, who
had been served with a copy of the pending application some three
months earlier.
If they had been doing their jobs, they would have
noticed the very obvious error, and ensured that it was corrected
timeously.
ORDER
[22]
In the result, I make the following order:
a.
The application is dismissed.
b.
The applicant is directed to pay the second
and third respondents’ costs, including the costs of counsel.
JM BERGER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Dates:
Hearing:
3 March 2025
Judgment:
10 March 2025
Appearances:
For
the applicant:
In
person
For
the second and third respondents:
Mr
Z Sing, instructed by Alan Allschwang & Associates Inc.
[1]
Without
any explanation, Mr Dlwathi – in his papers,
and
in both written and oral submissions – continued to refer to
“
rule 18(1)
” of the
Superior Courts Act.
[2
]
As
the notice of motion is so poorly drafted, I have attempted to make
sense of what relief is sought.
[3]
Beinash
t/a Beinash & Co and Another v Reynolds NO and Others
1999 (1) SA 1094
(W)
[4]
Mr
Sing correctly conceded that condonation ought to be granted.
sino noindex
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