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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2025] ZAGPJHC 428
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## R.D.D v V.D.D (2024/067120; A2024/005340)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 428 (6 May 2025)
R.D.D v V.D.D (2024/067120; A2024/005340)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 428 (6 May 2025)
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sino date 6 May 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
6 May 2025
Case
nos.
2024-067120 and
A2024-005340
In the matter between:
R[...]
D[...] D[...]
Applicant / Appellant
and
V[...]
D[...] D[...]
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom MABESELE J agrees):
1
These two matters, an
appeal and a review of decisions of the clerk of the Magistrates’
Court on three bills of costs, were
set down before us by Mr. Dell,
who is the appellant in the appeal and the applicant in the review.
The
procedure Mr. Dell adopted
2
No doubt because he
appears in person, and has not benefited from the advice of a legal
practitioner familiar with the presentation
of an appeal or a review
before this court, Mr. Dell has not complied with the various rules
which govern the presentation of the
record on appeal or review of
proceedings in the Magistrates’ Court. The files in both of
these matters are substantial,
and they include a great deal of
irrelevant matter.
3
In addition, it seems
clear to me that the steps prescribed by Rule 35 of the Magistrates’
Court Rules have not been followed
in this case. Rule 35 stipulates
that anyone dissatisfied with the decision of a Magistrates’
clerk on the taxation of a
bill of costs ought first to apply to a
Magistrate to review that decision. If the applicant for review is
still dissatisfied,
the Magistrate may then lay a stated case before
a High Court Judge in chambers. The Judge may then correct or
substitute the Magistrate’s
decision with their own, or refer
the matter to a Full Bench consisting of two High Court Judges. A
litigant dissatisfied with
the decision of a Judge in chambers may
also, having obtained leave to do so, appeal to a Full Bench (see the
procedure summarised
in Jones and Buckle,
The Civil Practice of
the Magistrates’ Court in South Africa
, volume 1, RS 31, at
pages 575 to 578 and volume 2, RS 19, at pages 35-1 to 35-4).
4
There is no sign on the
record that a Judge in chambers has dealt with Mr. Dell’s
complaints by way of a stated case. In light
of the elaborate
procedure prescribed, Mr. Dell might be forgiven for simply bringing
the case before us with an oral summary of
his objections to the way
his bills were dealt with before the clerk and the Magistrate. The
first question we must face, however,
is whether the way Mr. Dell has
apparently short-circuited the procedure deprives us of the power to
deal with his complaint.
5
I do not think it does. We
are bound, in the first place, by section 81 of the Magistrates’
Court Act 32 of 1944. Section
81 states that “[t]axation by the
clerk of the court shall be subject to review free of charge by a
judicial officer of the
district; and the decision of such judicial
officer may at any time within one month thereafter be brought in
review before a judge
of the court of appeal in the manner prescribed
by the rules”. The procedure in section 81 has three stages:
taxation by
the clerk of the Magistrates’ Court; review by a
Magistrate; and a further review by a High Court Judge. It seems to
me that,
if we consider ourselves as constituting the third stage of
review, all three of these stages has been followed.
6
Section 81 makes clear
that a litigant must move through these three stages “in the
manner prescribed by the rules”.
In this case, Rule 35 applies
and regulates the procedure on appeal or review. Mr Dell has not
complied with the Rule 35 procedure,
but I do not think that
non-compliance can deprive us of our inherent power to hear his
appeal and his review, in the exercise
of our constitutional right to
protect and regulate our own process in the interests of justice (see
section 173 of the Constitution,
1996). Even were that power
not constitutionally entrenched, it has long been recognised that the
rules are made for the
court, and not the court for the rules (see
Trans-African Insurance Co Ltd v Maluleka
1956 (2) SA 273
(A)
at 278E-G). We are, in other words, empowered to overlook the fact
that this matter was neither referred to us by a Judge in
chambers,
nor brought before us with that Judge’s leave, so long as the
substance of section 81 has been observed. In this
case, I believe it
has. In any event, we are no doubt empowered to condone
non-compliance with Rule 35, which we intend to do for
the sake of
disposing of Mr. Dell’s principal complaint.
The
substance of Mr. Dell’s complaint
7
Mr. Dell’s complaint
is straightforward. Included in each of the three bills he submitted
to the clerk below for taxation
was a sizeable disbursement for sums
allegedly paid to a close corporation identified as R&R
Consulting. This is a firm of
cost consultants of which Mr. Dell is a
member. The invoices are presented to Mr. Dell by a Mr. van Rooyen,
who is the other member
of the firm. The line items in the invoices
strike me as obscure, but Mr. Dell told us at the hearing that the
expenses itemised
were chiefly for the preparation of documents in a
matrimonial action he is pursuing in person against the respondent,
Ms. Dell,
in the court below.
8
The clerk below taxed off
the full amount of every item in the invoices on the basis that they
were not true disbursements. The
Magistrate confirmed that decision.
Two reasons for this appear from the record. The first is that there
was no evidence that the
invoices were ever actually paid. The second
is that, given that Mr. Dell has an interest in the close corporation
presenting the
invoice, there was nothing to demonstrate that Mr.
Dell was not in effect charging for his own time in the pursuit of
his own case.
As Mr. Dell accepted before us, litigants appearing in
person are not generally entitled to recover a fee for their own time
spent
in the pursuit of their case. They may recover fees paid to a
legal professional, but that is something different.
9
The approach in an appeal
against or review of the taxation of a bill of costs is well-settled.
The question is not whether the
clerk or the Magistrate below were
correct. It is whether they exercised their functions reasonably,
having taken into account
all the relevant facts, and having
identified and applied the correct principles of law (see, for
example,
Visser v Gubb
1981 (3) SA 753
(C) at 754–5).
10
Adopting that approach, I
cannot see how we could interfere with the disposal of the bills in
the Magistrates’ Court. In the
first place, the clerk was right
to conclude that there was no evidence that the three invoices at
issue had actually been paid.
Mr. Dell sought to persuade us that the
electronic stamp of the word “paid” across the invoices
was evidence enough
of this. In circumstances where Mr. Dell is
himself a member of the firm presenting the invoices, that cannot be
taken at face
value. The clerk was right to demand more – for
example evidence that the money actually left Mr. Dell’s
private account.
Mr. Dell could not point to any such evidence.
11
Secondly, there is nothing
on the record that gainsays the clerk’s conclusion that Mr.
Dell has effectively invoiced for his
own time. The invoices do not,
on their face, evince true disbursements. Many of the line items
refer to fees for time spent on
a particular task. Mr. Dell could
point to nothing on the record that suggests that this was not his
own time, which he accepted
would not be recoverable.
12
There is accordingly no
basis on which we may properly interfere with the exercise of the
clerk’s discretion. Both the appeal
and the review must fail.
Costs
13
Ms. Dell appeared in
person before us to defend the appeal and the review. She was
understandably innocent of the rules that apply
to this area of law,
and confined herself to questions about the nature of the hearing and
what it meant for her. We helped her
with answers where we could
fairly do so. It is clear, however, that Ms. Dell was put to some
expense to attend the hearing. She
flew up from her home in Cape
Town, and was assisted by an attorney to defend the appeal and the
review before she ran out of money
to pay his fees on the eve of the
hearing. It seems to me that Ms. Dell is entitled to those costs.
Order
14
For all these reasons –
14.1 The applicant
/ appellant’s non-compliance with Rule 35 of the Magistrates’
Court Rules is condoned.
14.2 Both the
appeal and the review are dismissed, with costs, limited to the
disbursements the respondent reasonably incurred
to attend the
hearing, and to the respondent’s attorney’s fees and
disbursements reasonably incurred in preparing to
oppose the appeal
and the review.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 6 May 2025.
HEARD
ON:
22 April 2025
DECIDED
ON:
6 May 2025
For
the Applicant / Appellant: In person
For
the Respondent:
In person
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