Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 308South Africa
Nedbank Limited v Ntshangase (2022/027021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 308 (19 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 March 2025
Headnotes
judgment wherein the applicant (“the plaintiff”) seeks summary judgment against the respondent (“the defendant”).
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nedbank Limited v Ntshangase (2022/027021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 308 (19 March 2025)
Nedbank Limited v Ntshangase (2022/027021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 308 (19 March 2025)
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sino date 19 March 2025
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number:2022/027021
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
In the matter between:
NEDBANK
LIMITED
Plaintiff / Applicant
and
MBULELO
SIMON NTSHANGASE
Defendant
/ Respondent
JUDGMENT
STYLIANOU,
AJ :
1.
This is an application for summary judgment wherein the applicant
(“the plaintiff”) seeks summary judgment
against the
respondent (“the defendant”).
2.
The parties have agreed that the summary judgment application should
be postponed as it is not ripe for hearing.
3.
In essence, the summary judgment application cannot proceed because a
condonation application brought by the plaintiff
for the late-filing
of its application for summary judgment, is not ready to be heard.
4.
Unfortunately, the parties cannot agree on who should pay the wasted
costs occasioned by the postponement.
5.
The matter was allocated to the opposed motion roll for the week of
10 March 2025, however, the court file was not accessible
on
CaseLines until shortly before the commencement of the motion week.
This notwithstanding, the matter was allocated for hearing
once it
became available on CaseLines.
6.
Mr Cohen, who appeared for the defendant maintained that the wasted
costs occasioned by the postponement should be borne
by the
plaintiff.
7.
Mr Cohen submitted that it was due to the plaintiff’s conduct
that the matter was not ripe for hearing, specifically:
7.1. that the
summary judgment application was out of time, and that the
condonation application that the
plaintiff was required to bring had
not been finalised before the summary judgment application was
enrolled; and
7.2. that the
matter had not been properly loaded onto CaseLines as required by
this Court’s practice;
and
7.3. that the
plaintiff did not call for a pre-hearing conference for the purposes
of drawing up a joint
practice note.
8.
The defendant maintains that for all these reasons, the matter could
not proceed and the wasted costs of the postponement
should be borne
by the plaintiff.
The
Condonation Application
9.
The plaintiff concedes that it issued its application for summary
judgment outside the time-period specified in Rule 32
of the Uniform
Rules of Court.
10.
On 25 April 2024, the plaintiff filed an application for condonation
for the late delivery of its application for summary
judgment.
11.
Some nine months later (on 17 January 2025) the plaintiff filed a
notice of set down of the summary judgment application
for the week
of 10 March 2025. At this stage of the proceedings, there was no
notice of opposition or answering affidavit to the
condonation
application.
12.
The notice of opposition to the condonation application was only
filed on 17 February 2025 almost ten months after the
condonation
application was filed.
13.
The answering affidavit was thereafter filed by the defendant on 19
February 2025.
14.
A replying affidavit was filed by the plaintiff on 5 March 2025 –
a few days before the summary judgment was due
to be heard.
15.
From the above time-line, it seems clear that the filing of the
notice to oppose and the answering affidavit to the condonation
application so close to the hearing date of the summary judgment
application was the reason why the matter was not ripe for hearing.
16.
In seeking to address this issue, the defendant relied upon Rule
6(11) which provides:
(11)
Notwithstanding the aforegoing subrules, interlocutory and other
applications incidental to pending proceedings
may be brought on
notice supported by such affidavits as the case may require and set
down at a time assigned by the registrar
or as directed by a judge.
17.
The defendant submits that the time periods for the exchange of
affidavits set out in Rule 6(5) do not apply to interlocutory
applications (such as the condonation application) and that the
defendant could not be criticised for only filing its answering
affidavit some ten months after the condonation application had been
launched.
18.
In the matter of
Gisman Mining and Engineering Co (Pty) Ltd (in
liquidation) v LTA Earthworks (Pty) Ltd
1977 (4) SA 25
(W),
McEwan J said at 27H – 28 A as follows:
“
It
does seem to me, however, that, whatever the correct reading of Rule
6 (11) may be, it cannot mean that in an interlocutory matter
the
applicant has unlimited time to file a replying affidavit. If the
correct position is that there is no Rule defining exactly
the time
within which affidavits must be filed, then in my view the Rule
should at least be read to mean that they must be filed
within a
reasonable time. prima facie, in my view, a reasonable time
would certainly not be longer than the time prescribed
in terms of
Rule 6 (5) (e), unless there were some special circumstances
applying.
19.
Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice
at p.6-50 says:
“
The provisions of the rules
relating to the time for filing answering and replying affidavits do
not apply to interlocutory applications.
Further affidavits in interlocutory applications must be filed within
a reasonable time; prima facie in the absence of special
circumstances, this would not be longer than the times prescribed in
terms of rule 6(5).”
20.
Hence, whereas there are indeed no time periods specified in rule
6(11) for the exchange of affidavits in interlocutory
applications,
it does not mean that a litigant can sit back indefinitely before it
decides whether to oppose and whether to file
an answering affidavit.
Clearly, ten months is an unreasonable period.
21.
Mr Cohen further argued that the plaintiff should have enrolled the
condonation application on the interlocutory roll
before the summary
judgment application was set down. The defendant argued that it was
the failure to do this that has necessitated
the postponement of the
summary judgment application.
22.
Presumably, had the plaintiff sought to have the condonation
application heard earlier, the defendant would have been
compelled to
act sooner and would not have waited so long to file its answering
affidavit. Had condonation been granted, it would
have meant that the
summary judgment application could have gone ahead without
hindrance.
23.
Mr McTurk, who appeared for the plaintiff, submitted that it was
preferable for the condonation application to be heard
at the same
time as the summary judgment application and not separately
beforehand. He submitted that the condonation application
and the
summary judgment application could conveniently be heard and
considered together since, in considering whether to grant
condonation, one of the factors that a Court takes into account must
be the plaintiff’s prospects of success. (See:
Federated
Employers Fire & General Insurance Company Limited & another
v McKenzie
1969 (3) SA 360
(A) at 362F–G.)
24.
This would involve an analysis of the defence raised by the defendant
and whether it disclosed a
bona fide
defence. There would be
an inverse relationship between the plaintiff’s prospects of
success and the defendant’s
bona fide
defence. The
better the defendant’s defence, the worse the plaintiff’s
prospects of success on summary judgment and
vice versa. If the court
hearing the condonation application finds that no
bona fide
defence is made out, it may be more inclined to grant condonation
– which would mean that a subsequent court (the summary
judgment court) would reconsider the question of whether a
bona
fide
defence is made out by the defendant.
25.
Of course, if a
bona fide
defence is made out, the court
hearing the condonation application would in all likelihood refuse to
condone the late-filing of
the summary judgment application and the
summary judgment application would end there.
26.
There is therefore some merit in Mr McTurk’s submission that it
would be convenient for one Court to consider both
the condonation
application and the summary judgment application. However, one should
not discount the influence that the other
elements of a condonation
application (such as the reason for the default) would have on the
granting of such an application. Condonation
obviously does not
depend solely upon the prospects of success.
27.
Having said that, there is also merit to Mr Cohen’s submission
that the condonation application (with all its constituent
elements)
should be heard first and that the plaintiff was remiss in not
seeking to enrol it earlier.
28.
It seems to
me that the parties are equally to blame for not ensuring that the
condonation application was either disposed of beforehand,
or ready
to be heard together with the summary judgment application.
Was
the matter loaded onto CaseLines?
29.
The defendant
maintains that the matter was not loaded onto CaseLines and
accordingly, the matter was not ripe for hearing.
30.
During
argument, counsel for the defendant demonstrated to the Court, by
directing the Court to interrogate the “Audit”
function
on the CaseLines platform, that the file in this matter was created
on CaseLines on 21 April 2023 at 10:27.
31.
In the
absence of expert testimony on how CaseLines works and how files are
“
pulled
through
”
from the “Court Online” system to the CaseLines system, I
am not prepared to make a finding on whether or not
the matter was
created in 2023 and whose fault it was that it could not be found on
CaseLines at the time that the Court was allocating
its matters for
hearing.
32.
Nothing
further need be said about this issue.
There
was no Joint Practice Note
33.
The defendant
also complains that the plaintiff did not call for a conference to
draw up a joint practice note.
34.
This was
denied by the plaintiff who referred to correspondence dated 19 June
2024 loaded onto CaseLines wherein the defendant’s
attorneys
were invited to comment on a proposed joint practice note. The
response from the defendant’s attorneys was that
they did not
agree to the draft joint practice note, which they deemed to be
premature in any event.
35.
A further
letter from the plaintiff’s attorneys dated 13 September 2024
called for three dates convenient to the defendant’s
attorneys
to hold a formal pre-trial conference. There was no response to this
letter.
36.
There can
therefore be no criticism of the plaintiff for absence of a joint
practice note.
37.
Ultimately,
the matter was not ripe for hearing because the condonation
application was not ready to be heard. There had been no
time for the
filing of heads or argument on the opposed condonation application.
38.
As I indicate
above, I am of the view that the parties are equally to blame for
this and accordingly, there should be no order as
to costs.
39.
In the
circumstances, I order as follows:
a.
The
summary judgment application is postponed
sine
die,
no
order as to costs.
X
STYLIANOU, AJ
Acting
Judge of the Hight Court
Heard:
12 March 2025
Judgment
delivered: 19 March 2025
Appearances:
For
Applicant: Adv RG Cohen
Instructed
by: Glynnis Cohen Attorneys
For
Respondents: Adv S McTurk
Instructed
by: UMS Attorneys
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