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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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[2024] ZAGPJHC 188
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## Meiring and Another v Jones (2985-2019)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 188 (26 February 2024)
Meiring and Another v Jones (2985-2019)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 188 (26 February 2024)
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sino date 26 February 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2985/2019
1.REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES / NO
3.REVISED:
YES / NO
In
the matter between:
In
the matter between:
CARIKE
MEIRING
N.O.
First Applicant
NISHAN
MAIBCHUND
N.O.
Second Applicant
and
CARLA
MARIA JONES (formerly JANMAAT)
Respondent
JUDGMENT
D
T v R DU PLESSIS, AJ
[1]
The applicants, in their capacities as the joint executors of the
estate of the late BAREND MEIRING, apply for the variation
of a court
order granted on 12 September 2019 to reflect the correct policy
number. In terms of the said order, the
respondent was ordered
to pay the proceeds of a Brightrock buy and sell agreement policy in
the sum of R2 215 428,00
to the banking account of the
estate within five days of the date of the order.
[2]
The deceased and the respondent jointly owned a company named
Nouveatopia (Pty) Ltd (“the company”) with each
owning
50% of the shares. During or about 2016 the deceased and the
respondent entered into an oral buy and sell agreement
in terms
whereof each would take out a buy and sell policy on the life of the
other. The intention was to provide the surviving
co owner
with enough money to buy the shares of the other in the event of one
passing away.
[3]
In order to achieve that intention each nominated the other as the
beneficiary. The premiums of both policies were
paid by the
company.
[4]
The deceased passed away before the respondent and the applicants, as
the appointed executors of his estate, demanded
payment of the full
proceeds of the policy of which the deceased was the beneficiary.
The respondent disputed that the estate
was entitled to the
full proceeds but argued that the value of the shares had to be
determined at the share market value on the
date of death of the
deceased.
[5]
The applicants then launched the main application where the issue on
the papers was the amount that had to be paid to
the estate. The
respondent opposed the application on that basis but the learned
Judge found that the parties intended for
the full proceeds of the
respective policies to be paid to the estate of the party who passed
away first. The order was granted
on that basis.
[6]
After the order was granted, the respondent filed an application for
leave to appeal but withdrew the application on the
day before it was
to be heard. It is important to note that it was not a ground
for the application that the order referred
to the incorrect policy
number.
[7]
When the respondent failed to comply with the order, the applicants
launched an application for contempt of court about
a year after the
order was made, i.e. during September 2020. In response to the
application the respondent addressed an email
to the applicants’
attorney of record on 1 October 2020 in terms whereof she
inter
alia
stated that she intended to fully perform her obligations in
law and that it was never her intention to disobey the judgment of
the court.
[8]
Some further correspondence followed in terms whereof the respondent
inter alia
made certain settlement proposals. On
about 26 November 2020 the respondent caused R75 000.00 to be
paid into the trust
account of the applicants’ attorney of
record.
[9]
During about December 2020 the respondent apparently obtained legal
advice to the effect that the policy number on the
order was
incorrect and it was therefore impossible for her to comply with the
order. A letter to that effect was addressed
by her attorneys
to the applicants’ attorneys on 17 December 2020.
[10]
The policy of which the deceased was the beneficiary was numbered
700152986 (“the correct policy number”)
and the other was
numbered 700152887 (“the incorrect policy number”). The
order contained the incorrect policy
number which corresponded with
the relief sought in the notice of motion, although the respondent
had referred to the correct policy
number in her answering affidavit.
[11]
The applicants’ attorneys maintained that the error on the
order was simply typographical and that the respondent
was bound
thereto. On or about 11 March 2021 the applicants launched
an application for the variation of the order to
reflect the correct
policy number. This application was opposed by the respondent
and was argued as an opposed application
before the Honourable acting
Judge Movshovich on about 21 February 2022.
[12]
The learned acting Judge found that Rule 42(1)(c) was not applicable
as the order was not the product of a mistake common
between the
parties. The application was dismissed on the basis that it was
brought in terms of the said sub-rule but the
learned acting Judge
mentioned that he did not exclude the possibility that there may be
other grounds on which the judgment may
be varied or rescinded.
[13]
The present application was then launched on 3 May 2023. The
basis of this application is Rule 42(1)(b), alternatively
the common
law, alternatively such other basis as the court may deem fit.
[14]
From the history set out above it is clear that all the parties were
aware which policy the main application related
to, namely the policy
of which the deceased was the beneficiary. The respondent did
not oppose the application on the basis
that the incorrect policy was
being referred to in the notice of motion and founding affidavit, nor
was this the basis of her application
for leave to appeal. The
first time any mention was made of the fact that the order referred
to the incorrect policy number
was in December 2020 when her
attorneys addressed a letter to that effect to the applicants’
attorneys.
[15]
If one has regard to the judgment of the Honourable acting Judge
Sibuyi, who granted the order, it is clear that the
only issue was
how much of the respective policies had to be paid to the estate of
the deceased in return for the deceased’s
50% shareholding in
the company. He granted the order on the basis that the full
proceeds of the policy had to be paid to
the estate of the deceased.
[16]
In
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG
(“
Firestone
”)
[1]
it was found that in interpreting court orders, the same principles
apply as for construing documents. Thus:
“…
[T]he court’s
intention is to be ascertained primarily from the language of the
judgment or order as construed according to
the usual, well-known
rules.
…
Thus,
as in the case of a document, the judgment or order and the court’s
reasons for giving it must be read as a whole in
order to ascertain
its intention.”
[17]
In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2]
the following was held:
“
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the word used in a document,
be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or contract,
having regard to the context provided by reading the particular
provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a whole and
the circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence. Whatever
the nature of the document, consideration must
be given to the
language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears;
the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material known to those
responsible for its production. Where more than one
meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of all these
factors. The process is objective not subjective.
A sensible meaning
is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike
results or undermines the apparent purpose
of the document. Judges
must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to substitute
what they regard as reasonable, sensible
or businesslike for the
words actually used. To do so in regard to a statute or statutory
instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and
legislation. In a contractual context it is to make a contract for
the parties other than the one they in fact
made. The ‘inevitable
point of departure is the language of the provision itself’,
[3]
read in context and having regard to the purpose of the provision and
the background to the preparation and production of the document.”
[18]
Taking the abovementioned authorities into account it would, in my
view, make a mockery of the judgment and the order
if the learned
acting Judge in the main application in fact intended the respondent
to pay the proceeds of the policy of which
she was the beneficiary to
the estate. That policy has not been paid out as the respondent
is still alive. It will
only have proceeds on her death. It
must therefore follow that the learned Judge made an error in
referring to the incorrect
policy number in the order.
[19]
It matters not that the learned Judge followed the wording of the
notice of motion when granting the order. What
matters is what
he intended when making the order. The intention was clearly to
order the respondent to pay the proceeds
of the policy with the
correct policy number, as that was the policy in terms whereof the
deceased was the beneficiary and that
was in fact paid out on the
deceased’s death.
[20]
The order therefore contains a patent error, which falls squarely
within the provisions of Rule 42(1)(b).
[21]
Adv Schafer, who appeared for the respondent before me, argued the
opposition to the variation order on three bases,
namely:
21.1. The
application is out of time and the only explanation for the delay is
contained in the replying affidavit. In
terms of the common law
such an application has to be brought on the same day that the order
was granted;
21.2. No case was
made out in terms of Rule 42 or the common law and the applicants
cannot rely on
iustus error
for a variation;
21.3. The
applicants cannot rely on the court’s discretion as there is no
inherent discretion to rectify a judgment.
The interest in the
finality of judgments is also paramount and should trump any
interference at such a late stage.
[22]
In respect
of the time that has elapsed before the present application was
launched, the respondent relied on
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Van Rensburg NO and Others: In
Re First National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Jurgens
and Others
[4]
where Eloff JP concluded that “[a] reasonable time in this case
is substantially less than the three years referred to”.
[5]
[23]
The full
bench in
Money
Box Investments 268 (Pty) Ltd v Easy Greens Farming and Farm Produce
CC
[6]
held, in an application under Rule 42 launched some six months after
the applicant had obtained knowledge of a default judgment:
“
I
agree with the respondent that in bringing an application for
rescission of the judgment under Rule 42(1) and at common law, the
appellant had to bring the application within a reasonable time. The
appellant brought the application more than 6 (six) months
after it
became aware of the judgment. The appellant concedes that the
application was not brought within a reasonable time, the
reason why
it applied for condonation for the late filing of the
application.”
[7]
[24]
On the basis of these judgments the respondent argued that the court
should exercise its discretion to dismiss the application.
[25]
I have set out above the history to the present application. This
is not an application for the rescission of a
judgment, but one to
vary an order that clearly contains a patent error. The
applicants first became aware of the error when
it was brought to
their attention in terms of the letter on 17 December 2020. In
fact, it seems as if the respondent also
only became aware thereof
during about December 2020 when there was an application for contempt
of court pending. Prior to
that all the parties assumed the
order to be correct and acted on such assumption.
[26]
The first application was launched on 11 March 2021 when it became
clear that the respondent had no intention of honouring
the order and
that her reason for this stance was the incorrect policy number in
the order. In my view this was within a
reasonable time after
the applicants became aware of the error, especially as the
respective attorneys were exchanging correspondence
in the interim
period in an attempt to resolve the dispute.
[27]
The judgment in that application was handed down on 13 July 2022 and
the present application was launched on 3 May 2023.
This delay
is explained in the applicants’ replying affidavit. It
seems that the applicants did not have the
funds to continue with the
litigation after the dismissal of the first variation application and
that the present application was
only launched after their attorney
and counsel agreed to act on a
pro bono
basis. The
process commenced in about October 2022 and the application was only
finalised in about April 2023 due to,
inter alia
, the fact
that counsel who was involved in the matter from the outset was on
maternity leave during December 2022.
[28]
It is unfortunate that this explanation only appears in the replying
affidavit, but it was done in response to the respondent’s
criticism about the expiry of time. The applicants apply for
condonation insofar as it is necessary.
[29]
It is trite that a court has a
discretion to grant condonation, which must be exercised judicially
on a consideration of the facts
of each case. In essence it is
a matter of fairness to both sides. A judicial discretion is
not an absolute or unqualified
discretion but must be exercised in
accordance with recognised principles.
[30]
Certain
factors are usually relevant but the weight to be given to any factor
depends on the particular circumstances of each case.
These
factors are not individually decisive but must be weighed against
each other. In each case the question is whether
good or
sufficient cause has been shown for the relief sought.
Sufficient cause includes the applicant’s prospects
of
success.
[8]
[31]
Among the factors that the court has
regard to are the degree of non compliance; the explanation of
the delay; the prospects
of success; the importance of the case; the
nature of the relief; the other party’s interest in finality
(an inordinate delay
induces a reasonable belief that the order had
become unassailable); prejudice to the other side; the convenience of
the court;
the avoidance of unnecessary delay in the administration
of justice; and the degree of negligence of the persons responsible
for
the non-compliance.
[32]
A
court may condone non-compliance with time limits even where no
application for condonation has been brought.
[9]
Condonation will be granted if it is in the interests of justice to
do so. It is trite that the interests of justice
require that
all issues pertaining to a matter be ventilated fully and for all
parties to be given the opportunity to state their
case as
comprehensively as possible.
[33]
In my view the delay has been explained.
I am also convinced that in light of the applicants’
prospects of success in
this matter it will be in the interests of
justice to grant condonation. It will be a travesty of justice
if the respondent
escapes her obligations in terms of an agreement
reached with the deceased and a court order granted thereafter, only
on the basis
that the applicants have taken too long to enforce their
rights. Any prejudice that the respondent may have suffered as
a
result of the delay is of her own doing.
[34]
For these reasons I grant condonation to the applicants for the delay
in launching the present application.
[35]
As far as a case based on Rule 42(1)(b) is concerned, I have already
set the reasons why such a case has been made out
above. The
error in the order is clearly a patent error and the court may vary
same in terms of the said sub-rule.
[36]
The
discretion that the applicants want the court to exercise is the one
granted to a court in terms of Rule 42. Once the
applicants
have made out a case that the order contained a patent error and that
all parties whose interests may be affected have
notice of the
proposed order, the court may vary the order. In
Firestone
[10]
the following was said:
“
The
general principle, now well established in our law, is that, once a
court has duly pronounced a final judgment or order, it
has itself no
authority to correct, alter, or supplement it. The reason is that it
thereupon becomes
functus officio
: its jurisdiction in the
case having been fully and finally exercised, its authority over the
subject-matter has ceased. See
West Rand Estates Ltd v New Zealand
Insurance Co Ltd
.,
1926 AD 173
at pp 176, 178, 186–7 and
192;
Estate Garlick v Commissioner of Inland Revenue
,
1934 AD
499
at p. 502.
There
are, however, a few exceptions to that rule which are mentioned in
the old authorities and have been authoritatively accepted
by this
Court. Thus, provided the court is approached within a reasonable
time of its pronouncing the judgment or order, it may
correct, alter,
or supplement it in one or more of the following cases:
…
(iii)
The Court may correct a clerical, arithmetical or other error in it
(sic) judgment or order so as to give effect to
its true intention
(see, for example,
Wessels & Co. v De Beer
,
1919 AD 172
;
Randfontein Estates Ltd v Robinson
,
1921 AD 515
at p. 520; the
West Ran
d case, supra at pp. 186 – 7). This exception is
confined to the mere correction of an error in expressing the
judgment or
order, it does not extend to altering its intended sense
or substance. KOTZÉ, J.A., made this distinction manifestly
clear
in the
West Rand
case, supra at pp. 186 – 7, when,
with reference to old authorities, he said:
‘
The
Court can, however, declare and interpret its own order or sentence,
and likewise correct the wording of it, by substituting
more accurate
or intelligent language so long as the sense and substance of the
sentence are in no way affected by such correction;
for to interpret
or correct is held not to be equivalent to altering or amending a
definitive sentence once pronounced.’
Again,
this exception is inapplicable in the present proceedings since
neither the T.P.D. nor this court committed any error in
expressing
its relevant orders; those orders reflected respectively the
intention of each Court. The error related to the sense
or substance
of the relevant orders due to the T.P.D.’s erroneously
assuming, and this Court’s erroneously affirming,
that the
Fourth Schedule does prescribe a tariff for counsel’s fees.”
[37]
The
incorrect policy number in the order is a clerical error and the
correction thereof is so as to give effect to the true intention
of
the court that granted it.
[11]
This falls squarely within the exception to the general rule as
set out above.
[38]
For the reasons set out herein it follows that the applicants are
entitled to an order as sought in the notice of motion.
I
accordingly make an order in the following terms:
38.1.
The incorrect policy number in paragraph 1 of the Court Order handed
down on 12 September 2019 under the abovementioned
case number is
varied to reflect the correct policy number, being 700152986.
38.2.
The respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application.
D
T v R DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of The High Court
Johannesburg
Date
of Hearing:
31 January 2024
Date
of Judgment:
26 February 2024
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv
R Andrews
Instructed
By:
HJW Attorneys
Counsel
for Respondents:
Adv L Schafer
Instructed
By:
Amod & Van Schalk Attorneys
[1]
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at 298E and 304E.
[2]
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at para 18.
[3]
Re
Sigma Finance Corp
[2008]
EWCA Civ 1303
(CA) at para 98.
[4]
1994 (1) SA 677 (T).
[5]
At 681G.
[6]
[2021] ZAGPPHC 599.
[7]
At para 7.
[8]
Express
Model Trading 289 CC v Dolphin Ridge Body Corporate
[2014] ZASCA 17;
2015 (6) SA 224 (SCA).
[9]
De
Lange and Another v Eskom Holdings Ltd and Others
2012 (1) SA 280
(GSJ) at para 27.
[10]
Above n 1 at 306F-307G.
[11]
Mostert
NO v Old Mutual Life Assurance Co (SA) Ltd
[2001] ZASCA 101
;
2002 (1) SA 82
(SCA) at para
[5]
.
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