Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 537South Africa
Redec Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Kansai Plascon (Pty) Ltd ( Application for Leave to Apeal) (2020/29803) [2025] ZAGPJHC 537 (29 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 May 2025
Headnotes
judgment and the plaintiff's conjoined application for condonation for the late filing of that summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Redec Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Kansai Plascon (Pty) Ltd ( Application for Leave to Apeal) (2020/29803) [2025] ZAGPJHC 537 (29 May 2025)
Redec Services (Pty) Ltd and Others v Kansai Plascon (Pty) Ltd ( Application for Leave to Apeal) (2020/29803) [2025] ZAGPJHC 537 (29 May 2025)
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sino date 29 May 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2020/29803
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE: 29 May 2025
In the matter between:
REDEC
SERVICES (PTY) LTD
First Applicant
ENGELBRECHT,
SCHALK WILLEM BURGER
Second Applicant
ASSNESS,
LIRAN BARUCH
Third Applicant
And
KANSAI
PLASCON (PTY) LTD
Respondent
In re:
KANSAI
PLASCON (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
And
REDEC
SERVICES (PTY) LTD
First Defendant
ENGELBRECHT,
SCHALK WILLEM BURGER
Second
Defendant
ASSNESS,
LIRAN BARUCH
Third Defendant
JUDGMENT:
APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
H M VILJOEN AJ
# INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an
application by the defendants
[1]
for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal, alternatively to
the Full Bench of this Court, against my entire judgment of
18
February 2025.
[2]
On 3 February 2025, I heard five applications arising from the action
between the parties. In my judgment, I granted an
order striking out
the defendants' defence. This sanction was imposed as a direct
consequence of their failure to comply with a
prior court order dated
7 September 2022 ("the compelling order"). That order
directed them to file heads of argument
in respect of the plaintiff's
application for summary judgment and the plaintiff's conjoined
application for condonation for the
late filing of that summary
judgment application.
[3]
As a result of the defence being struck out, the plaintiff's claim
became undefended. I consequently granted judgment
in favour of the
plaintiff for the sum claimed as sought in the second and third
prayers of the application to strike out.
[4]
It is important to clarify that the judgment granted was
consequential upon the striking out of the defence, and was not
a
determination of the summary judgment application itself, which,
along with other pending applications, became moot in light
of the
striking out.
[5]
The defendants’ principal ground for seeking leave to appeal is
their assertion that I erred in entertaining the
application to
strike out their defence before the plaintiff's application for
condonation regarding its late summary judgment
application had been
decided. They contend that until such condonation was granted, the
summary judgment application was not properly
before the Court, and
therefore, they were not obliged to file heads of argument thereon,
and should not have faced the sanction
of their defence being struck
out.
[6]
An important aspect of the proceedings on 3 February 2025, when the
consolidated applications were heard, is that the
defendants had
filed heads of argument only in respect of their own applications for
leave to amend their plea. They did not file
the heads of argument
concerning the plaintiff's summary judgment or condonation
applications as stipulated in the compelling order
of 7 September
2022, nor did they file any affidavit opposing the striking out
application to explain their disregard of the compelling
order. At
the hearing, the defendants submitted that their intention to amend
their plea – and the asserted need for those
amendment
applications to be considered first – effectively nullified
their obligations under the prior court order.
#
# THE TEST FOR LEAVE TO
APPEAL AND NATURE OF DISCRETION APPEALED AGAINST
THE TEST FOR LEAVE TO
APPEAL AND NATURE OF DISCRETION APPEALED AGAINST
[7]
The
governing test for leave to appeal is set out in
Section 17(1)(a)
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. Leave may only be given where the
judge concerned is of the opinion that "the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success; or there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard". As noted
in
Mont Chevaux Trust (IT 2012/28) v Goosen & 18 Others:
[2]
"It
is clear that the threshold for granting leave to appeal against a
judgment of a High Court has been raised in the new
Act. The former
test whether leave to appeal should be granted was a reasonable
prospect that another court
might
come to a different conclusion... The use of the
word 'would' in the new statute indicates a measure of certainty that
another court
will differ from the court whose judgment is sought to
be appealed against.”
[8]
The
discretion to strike out a defence due to non-compliance with rules
or court orders falls into the category of matters "so
essentially for determination by the court of first instance that it
would ordinarily be inappropriate for a Court of appeal to
substitute
its exercise of the discretionary power for
the
exercise thereof decided on by the court of first instance
”.
[3]
This principle limits appellate interference. The defendants do not
dispute the discretionary nature of my order.
[9]
It is
well-established that an appellate court's power to interfere with
the exercise of such a discretion by a lower court is circumscribed.
As stated in Ex parte Neethling and Others,
[4]
and Rex v Zackey,
[5]
an
appellate court does not interfere merely because it might have
exercised the discretion differently. Interference is only justified
if the court a quo exercised its discretion capriciously, upon a
wrong principle, failed to bring an unbiased judgment to bear
on the
question, or did not act for substantial reasons; in essence, if a
judicial discretion was not exercised.
[6]
#
# SUMMARY OF APPLICANTS'
GROUNDS FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
SUMMARY OF APPLICANTS'
GROUNDS FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
[10]
The defendants seek leave to appeal on multiple grounds. They contend
that I fundamentally erred in striking out their
defence and
consequently granting judgment in favour of the Plaintiff. Their
principal submissions include:
10.1. That the
plaintiff's application for condonation for the late filing of its
summary judgment application should have
been determined first. Until
condonation was granted, they argue, the summary judgment application
was not properly before me,
and thus no obligation arose for them to
file heads of argument in respect thereof (the "condonation
first" argument).
10.2. That I failed
to consider or determine their own pending applications for leave to
amend their plea. They submit that
their defence was not "finalised"
or "complete" due to these pending amendments, and it was
therefore premature
and incorrect to strike out the defence before
these amendment applications were adjudicated.
10.3. That my
finding that their explanation for non-compliance with the compelling
order to file heads – specifically
their submission at the
hearing that their intention to amend their plea "overtook"
the compelling order – was
unconvincing, constituted an error.
10.4. That I erred
in finding them dilatory and failed to properly consider alleged
dilatoriness on the part of the plaintiff,
particularly its delay of
nearly two-and-a-half years in bringing the strike-out application
after the compelling order was granted.
10.5. That I
misinterpreted the effect of the compelling order of 7 September
2022, which they argue was not an automatic
entitlement for the
plaintiff to have their defence struck out.
[11]
They further contend that the outcome prejudiced their constitutional
rights to a fair hearing and to have their case
properly ventilated.
#
# ANALYSIS OF GROUNDS
ADVANCED
ANALYSIS OF GROUNDS
ADVANCED
[12]
Having summarised the principal grounds upon which the defendants
seek leave to appeal, I turn now to consider whether
these grounds,
individually or collectively, meet the requisite threshold for the
granting of such leave.
[13]
The Right to be Heard and Timeous Exercise of Rights:
The
right to be heard is a fundamental tenet of our legal system.
However, this right is not absolute or unconditional. It does
not
equate to an entitlement to be heard at any time of a party's
choosing or in a manner that disregards the Rules of Court, Court
Orders, and the orderly progression of litigation. Litigants are
obliged to avail themselves of their rights and opportunities
to
present their arguments and defences in a timeous and procedurally
compliant manner. A failure to do so, as is evident here,
carries
consequences.
[14]
Failure to Formally Explain Non-Compliance in the Strike-Out
Application:
A point of considerable significance, emphasised by
the plaintiff, is the defendants' failure to deliver a substantive
answering
affidavit in the strike-out application itself. It argued
that if no such affidavit was filed, or if it failed to articulate
the
defences now raised, then the explanations proffered for their
non-compliance with the compelling order (such as the "condonation
first" argument or the argument that their amendments "overtook"
the order) were not formally before me as their
pleaded defence to
the strike-out application at the time that application was heard and
decided. I agree. The absence of a formal,
affidavit-based
explanation at the critical juncture renders their current arguments
for leave to appeal largely ex post facto
justifications, and more
importantly, raises nothing on which to assess their bona fides.
[15]
Contradictory Litigation Postures and Impact on
Bona Fides
:
The argument presented by the defendants on 3 February 2025 –
that their intention to amend their plea and the need for
their
amendment applications to be heard first "overtook" the
prior compelling order – is fundamentally at odds
with the
"condonation first" argument now forming the main ground
for this leave to appeal application.
[16]
If their operative reason for not filing heads of argument for the
plaintiff's summary judgment and condonation applications
was that
their
own amendment applications took precedence
and needed to
be resolved first, this directly contradicts the assertion that their
non-compliance was justified because the plaintiff's
condonation
application was pending. These are two distinct, and mutually
exclusive, justifications for their failure to comply
with the
compelling order of 7 September 2022.
[17]
This shift of primary justification significantly impacts the
assessment of the bona fides and
soundness
of the "condonation first" argument. It strongly suggests
that the "condonation first" point was not the genuine,
primary legal shield upon which they relied when their non-compliance
was squarely before the Court. My finding that no satisfactory
explanation was tendered for this non-compliance reflects the
inadequacy of the explanation(s) actually proffered at the hearing.
[18]
Failure to Utilise Available and More Nuanced Procedural Options:
The compelling order of 7 September 2022 required the defendants to
file heads for the plaintiff's summary judgment and condonation
applications. Even if they believed their amendments needed to be
heard first, or that the summary judgment was premature pending
condonation, nothing prevented them from filing heads of argument. At
a minimum, they could have addressed the plaintiff's condonation
application, which they had opposed, and explained their position on
the remaining applications. Their choice to file heads at
the very
last minute only for their own amendment applications, while
completely ignoring the compelling order concerning the plaintiff's
applications, demonstrates a selective and wilful disregard for a
specific part of a court order, not a principled stand based
on the
plaintiff's pending condonation.
[19]
Prior Opportunities to Assert a Coherent Defence:
The
defendants had several earlier junctures to formally and
substantively raise a consistent legal defence for their escalating
non-compliance. Their failure to do so, culminating in an argument at
the hearing that their amendments "overtook" the
order
which contradicts their current primary ground for appeal, further
weakens their position.
[20]
The Defendants' Focus on Plaintiff's Procedural Lapses:
The
defendants' attempt to deflect from their own non-compliance by
focusing on the plaintiff's earlier procedural misstep (the
late
summary judgment filing) does not assist them. The plaintiff’s
need for condonation was a distinct issue. It did not
absolve the
defendants of their duty to obey a subsequent, direct court order
aimed at progressing the hearing of, amongst other
things, that very
condonation application.
[21]
Critique of Specific Assertions in Defendants' Grounds for Appeal:
The defendants, in their attempt to establish error, have advanced
certain submissions which are based on incorrect factual premises
and
flawed legal reasoning.
[22]
One such
notable submission is the assertion that:
[7]
"The
learned Judge further erred in finding that the applicants' failure
to file heads due to the intention to amend the plea,
was
unconvincing. The learned Judge failed to consider that there was no
application before him to compel the applicants' compliance,
nor was
there any summary judgment application properly before him, which
necessitated any heads being filed by the applicants,
despite the
order to compel, and, as such, it is submitted that the applicants'
behaviour was indeed correct."
[23]
This statement is untenable:
23.1.
An
intention to amend a plea, or an argument that such an intention
"overtook" a court order, is not a legally sound
justification for disobeying that order.
[8]
A party's unilateral intention or pending application to amend its
pleadings cannot, as a matter of law, suspend or nullify a
pre-existing, specific, and peremptory court order directed at that
party. To hold otherwise would permit litigants to bypass court
orders at will merely by signalling an intention to amend, thereby
creating procedural uncertainty and undermining the authority
of the
court.
23.2.
The assertion that there was "no application...to
compel...compliance" before me at
the hearing of 3 February 2025
(in the context of the strike-out for non-compliance with a prior
compelling order) is factually
baseless. The strike-out application
was predicated entirely on the defendants' failure to comply with the
explicit court order
of 7 September 2022, which did compel them to
file heads of argument.
23.3.
The claim that the summary judgment application was not "properly
before [me]...despite
the order to compel" misunderstands the
binding nature of court orders. An order stands until set aside; the
defendants never
sought to set aside the compelling order.
Furthermore, that order also pertained to the plaintiff's condonation
application.
23.4.
The conclusion that the "applicants' behaviour was indeed
correct" is unsustainable
given their direct failure to comply
with a court order, a failure they attempt to justify with flawed
premises. Reliance on such
assertions further diminishes any
reasonable prospect of success on appeal.
[24]
Argument Regarding "Incomplete Defence" Due to Pending
Amendments:
The defendants further contend, as a ground for
appeal, that I erred in striking out their defence when there was a
pending
application to amend such defence, arguing that their defence
"had not at that stage been finalised, and it was therefore
premature and incorrect... to strike out the Applicants' defence."
This submission is misconceived. The striking out of the
defence was
not predicated on an assessment of the substantive merits or
completeness of the plea as it stood or as it might potentially
be
amended. Rather, the sanction was imposed due to a distinct
procedural default: the defendants’ failure to comply with
the
compelling order to file heads of argument for the plaintiff’s
summary judgment and condonation applications. A party's
pending
application to amend its plea does not create an immunity against
sanctions for non-compliance with other unrelated court
orders or
rules of procedure. The orderly progression of litigation requires
adherence to all court directives, and a party cannot
unilaterally
suspend its obligations under one order by pointing to its own
aspirations to amend its pleadings for a different
purpose. The
argument that the defence was "incomplete" or "not
finalised" is therefore not a valid legal justification
for the
non-compliance which led to the striking out.
[25]
The
Court's Discretion, Governing Legal Principles, and the Explanation
for Non-Compliance:
The decision to strike out a defence is discretionary. As established
in
Wanson
(supra)
and supported by
Leask
v East Cape Forest (Pty) Ltd,
[9]
and
Millu
v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and another
,
[10]
contumacy is not the sole ground for the imposition of a such a
sanction. A history of non-compliance, dilatoriness, and the failure
to provide a satisfactory explanation for disobeying a court order –
especially where the explanation offered is legally
untenable –
can justify striking out a defence. The principle from Chetty v Baker
McKenzie,
[11]
that in the
absence of a full and reasonable explanation for a material default,
prospects of success are immaterial, is also relevant
by analogy. My
original decision was grounded in the lack of a satisfactory
explanation for non-compliance.
[26]
The Interests of Justice
: The defendants invoke the "interests
of justice" as a standard for granting leave to appeal. While
the interests of
justice are indeed paramount, they encompass not
only the rights of the defendants but also those of the plaintiff and
the integrity
of the judicial process. The interests of justice
require litigants to comply with court orders, to participate in
proceedings
meaningfully and timeously, and to ensure finality in
litigation. Allowing an appeal based on shifting justifications for
clear
non-compliance with court orders, particularly where no formal
explanation was tendered in the primary proceedings, would not serve
the broader interests of justice. Indeed, the interests of justice
are better served by ensuring that litigation is conducted
efficiently, that limited court resources are effectively utilised,
that court orders are respected, and that finality is achieved
where
a party has, through its own conduct and lack of satisfactory
explanation for defaults, effectively forfeited its right to
further
contest the merits.
#
# CONCLUSION ON APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
CONCLUSION ON APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
[27]
The defendants' conduct at the hearing of 3 February 2025,
specifically filing heads of argument only for their own amendment
applications and arguing that their intention to amend "overtook"
the compelling order, significantly undermines their
current primary
reliance on the "condonation first" argument. The
explanation actually offered at the hearing for non-compliance
with
the compelling order was, and remains, unconvincing.
[28]
The contradictory postures adopted by the defendants, their failure
to avail themselves of more appropriate procedural
responses, their
reliance on flawed assertions, and the stringent test for appellate
interference with a discretionary order of
this nature, collectively
demonstrate a lack of reasonable prospects that an appellate court
would find my exercise of discretion
to strike out the defence to be
improper.
[29]
In these circumstances, the defendants have not established that
their appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success.
[30]
No other compelling reasons for the appeal to be heard have been
demonstrated.
#
# ORDER
ORDER
[31]
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
H M Viljoen
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION OF
THE HIGH COURT, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered: This judgment
was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically by circulation
to the Parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be
29 May 2025.
Date of hearing: 23 May
2025
Date of judgment: 29 May
2025
Appearances:
Attorneys for the
defendants: Darryl Furman & Associates
Counsel for the
defendants: Adv. N Riley
Attorneys for the
plaintiff: AD Hertzberg Attorneys
Counsel for the
plaintiff: Adv. L Hollander
[1]
Parties
are referred to as cited in the action.
[2]
2014
JDR 2325 (LCC) at para [5]
[3]
Tjospomie
Boerdery (Pty) Ltd v Drakensberg Botteliers (Pty) Ltd and Another
1989 (4) SA 31
(T) at 36C
[4]
951
(4) SA 331
(A) at 335D-E
[5]
1945
AD 506
at 511-513
[6]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Ltd and another
2015
(5) SA 245
(CC) at [88]
[7]
Paragraph
4.16
[8]
See
Leask v East Cape Forest (Pty) Ltd 2008 JDR 1316 (E) at 9
[9]
2008
JDR 1316 (E)
[10]
2024
JDR 1329 (GJ)
[11]
(2022)
43 ILJ 1599 (LAC) at [10] and [29]
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