Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 196South Africa
Mbalati v CSG Security Projects (Pty) Ltd (2022-12595) [2024] ZAGPJHC 196 (29 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 February 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mbalati v CSG Security Projects (Pty) Ltd (2022-12595) [2024] ZAGPJHC 196 (29 February 2024)
Mbalati v CSG Security Projects (Pty) Ltd (2022-12595) [2024] ZAGPJHC 196 (29 February 2024)
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sino date 29 February 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2022 – 12595
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
In
the application by
MBALATI, DZUNISANI
ALDWORTH Applicant
and
CSG SECURITY PROJECTS
(PTY) LTD Respondent
In re
CSG SECURITY
PROJECTS (PTY) LTD Plaintiff
and
MBALATI, DZUNISANI
ALDWORTH Defendant
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Reconsideration of
order granted by Registrar in terms of rule 31(5)(d) –
condonation in terms of rule 27 - Good cause –
reasonable
explanation for four-month delay and bona fide defence –
explanation not reasonable - application dismissed
Order
[1]
In this matter I make the following order:
1.
The
application is dismissed;
2.
The
applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the application.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
This is an application for the rescission of a judgement granted by
the registrar of this Court on 6 July 2022. The applicant
relies,
erroneously, on uniform rule 31(2)(b), alternatively on rule 42, and
further alternatively on the common law.
[4]
The judgement sought to be rescinded was granted by the registrar and
the application should be made under rule 31(5)(d).
The rule provides
that a party dissatisfied by the judgement may set the matter down
for reconsideration by the court. Nothing
turns on the reference to
the incorrect rule as the requirements of good cause apply in
applications under rule 31(5)(d) just as
they apply in applications
under rule 31(2)(b) and the common law.
The
same twenty-day period applies
[1]
to rule 31(2)(b) and 5(d) while under the common law the application
must be brought within a reasonable time.
[5]
The courts
have refrained from an exhaustive definition of good cause as any
such definition might hamper the discretion of the
court.
[2]
The court will however not come to the assistance of an applicant who
was in wilful default or was grossly negligent: The applicant
must
not merely seek to delay the claim of the plaintiff but must be
acting in good faith.
[6]
Good faith requires a reasonable explanation for the delay or the
failure to respond to a summons or application, and
a
bona fide
defence. Granting a rescission when the applicant has no defence to
the plaintiff’s claim would be an exercise in futility
and
would merely delay the claim of the plaintiff and the application
would not be
bona fide
.
[7]
The applicant did not file a replying affidavit in response to the
respondent’s answering affidavit and the averments
made in the
answering affidavit are not challenged.
The
applicant’s condonation application: The explanation for the
delay
[8]
The applicant did not file his application within 20 days from
becoming aware of the judgment and seeks condonation for
the late
filing. The applicant became aware of the default judgement on 15
July 2022. The application therefore ought to have been
launched by
mid-August 2022. The application was served on 19 December 2022, four
months later.
[9]
In the founding affidavit the applicant states that after becoming
aware of the judgment in July 2022 he tried to settle
the dispute and
for this reason he did not apply for a rescission. These negotiations
broke down.
The
applicant provides no details about these negotiations and settlement
attempts, and the respondent denies that there were settlement
negotiations other than a settlement offer and counter offer made and
rejected in writing on 11 August 2022. On the same day the
applicant
intimated that he would apply for rescission of the default judgment.
[10]
A party
seeking condonation for a delay is required to give a full
explanation covering the whole period of the delay.
[3]
The applicant only gives a cursory explanation for the period 15 July
to 11 August 2022, and no explanation whatsoever for the
period
August to December 2022. For this reason the application must fail.
The application was neither brought within the 20-day
period referred
to in rule 31 nor within a reasonable time as required by the common
law.
Bona
fide defence
[11]
The applicant is not required to prove his defence (either in the
sense of a full onus or an onus of rebuttal) but most
make averments
that if established at trial would constitute a defence. The
applicant’s averments are however not to be read
in isolation
but with the averments made by the respondent.
[12]
The applicant alleges that the oral agreement relied upon by the
respondent was an agreement between the respondent and
DNG Energy
(Pty) Ltd, the company that he is the director and owner of. The
agreement was for the provision of guarding services
at his home
address rather than at the company’s premises. This defence was
raised for the first time in the rescission application
and was never
raised during the currency of the agreement or after its
cancellation. The invoices were made out to the applicant
and not to
the company, and were accepted as such by the applicant.
[13]
The applicant also alleged that the provisions of the
National Credit
Act, 34 of 2005
was not complied but this argument was abandoned
during argument. This concession was properly made as the applicant
did not make
any averments in the founding affidavit to support the
argument.
[14]
I am not satisfied that the applicant has disclosed a
bona fide
defence.
Rule
42(1)(a)
[15]
The applicant also relies on an allegation that the judgement was
erroneously sought or granted in terms of
rule 42(1)(a).This
argument
can be rejected on the basis of the argument made out in the
applicant’s heads of argument and the common cause
facts.
[16]
The summons was served on 22 April 2022 at the business address of
the applicant. He is the owner of the DNG Energy (Pty)
Ltd and the
summons was served on a staff member, being the person encountered by
the sheriff when the sheriff attended at the
office of the applicant
to serve the papers and was then identified by him as the
receptionist and the person apparently in charge
of the premises. The
applicant was absent from the office at the time and it was
never brought to his notice.
[17]
The
application was properly served in terms of the rules of court
[4]
and the phrase “
apparently
in charge of the premises”
in
rule 4(1)(a)(ii)
does not require service on the most senior
person who works at the business, such as the chief executive officer
or managing director
of a company. A receptionist or clerk may be in
charge or apparently in charge of the premises for the purposes of
service. Process
may not be served for instance on a bystander who
happens to be on the premises, but service on a receptionist or other
staff member
is (depending on the facts of course – each case
must be considered on its own merit) usually good service.
[18]
This of course does not mean that the summons necessarily came to the
attention of the intended party. I accept that
the summons did not
come to the applicant’s notice immediately after service and
that he only learned of the judgment in
July 2022.
Conclusion
[19]
In conclusion I find that the applicant has not shown good cause for
rescission under
rule 31(5)(d)
or the common law, and that the
application must fail. I therefore make the order in paragraph 1
above.
J
MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting 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 of
the judgment is deemed to be
29 FEBRUARY 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT/ DEFENDANT: L A MARKS
INSTRUCTED
BY:
LARRY MARKS ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL FOR RESPONDENT/
PLAINTIFF:
R DE LEEUW
INSTRUCTED
BY: HATTINGH
& NDZABANDZABA
ATTORNEYS
DATE OF
ARGUMENT: 22
FEBRUARY 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT: 29
FEBRUARY 2024
[1]
The subrule reads as follows: “
Any
party dissatisfied with a judgment granted or direction given by the
registrar may, within 20 days after such party has acquired
knowledge of such judgment or direction, set the matter down for
reconsideration by the court.”
[2]
See
Silber
v Ozen Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
1954 (2) SA 345
(A) 353A and the various cases referred to by Van
Loggerenberg
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
D1-365
et seq.
[3]
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as
Amicus Curiae)
2008 (2) SA 472 (CC) paras 20 to 22.
[4]
Rule
4(1)(a)(ii)
provides for service of process on a person
“
by
leaving a copy thereof at the place of residence or business of the
said person, guardian, tutor, curator or the like with
the person
apparently in charge of the premises at the time of delivery, being
a person apparently not less than sixteen years
of age. For the
purposes of this paragraph when a building, other than an hotel,
boarding-house, hostel or similar residential
building, is occupied
by more than one person or family, ‘residence’ or ‘place
of business’ means that
portion of the building occupied by
the person upon whom service is to be effected;”
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