Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 201South Africa
Mazibo v Mahlangu and Another (038392/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 201 (29 February 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 February 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mazibo v Mahlangu and Another (038392/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 201 (29 February 2024)
Mazibo v Mahlangu and Another (038392/2023) [2024] ZAGPJHC 201 (29 February 2024)
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sino date 29 February 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 038392/2023
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
3.
REVISED
In the matter between:
PRIMROSE
NOKUTHULA MAZIBO
Plaintiff/Respondent
And
KHOSI
MAHLANGU
1
st
Defendant/ 1
st
Excipient
GAUTENG
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
2
nd
Defendant/ 2
nd
Excipient
JUDGMENT
MAKUME,
J
:
[1] This is an
application by the first and second Defendants (now the Excipients)
in terms of Rule 23 (1) of the Uniform
Rules of Court to declare the
Plaintiff’s particulars of claim as lacking the necessary
averments to sustain a cause of action
alternatively that the
particulars of claim are vague and embarrassing.
[2] On the 11
th
July 2023 the Excipients delivered a Notice in terms of that Rule
pointing out to the Respondent in what respects the Particulars
of
Claim do not disclose a cause of action and are thus vague and
embarrassing. In the notice the Respondent was afforded
an
opportunity to remove the cause of complaint within 15 (fifteen)
days.
[3] By the 15
th
August 2023 the Respondent had not heeded the request to remove the
cause of complaint instead the Respondent embarked on a futile
exercise by filling a replication and a Rule 30A notice instead of
amending and correcting the obvious and glaring defects in the
particulars of claim.
[4] Rule 18 of the
Uniform Rules of Court is headed “Rules relating to pleadings
generally.” The learned
writer Harms in “Amler’s
Precedents of Pleadings” ninth edition describes the purpose of
pleadings as follows:
“
A party must
define its cause of action and defence in the appropriate pleadings
in the Court of first instance to inform the other
parties to the
matter of the case they must meet and of the relief sought against
them in that Court. This is a fundamental
principle of fairness
in the conduct of litigation, which promotes the parties’
rights to a fair hearing guaranteed by Section
34 of the
Constitution.”
[5] It is therefore
not surprising that Rule 18 (4) and Rule 18(10) have been drafted in
the manner to precisely meet that
requirement of clarity of cause.
Rule 18(4) reads as follows:
“
Every pleading
shall contain a clear and concise statement of the material facts
upon which the pleader relies for his claim defence
or answer to any
pleading as the case maybe with sufficient particularity to enable
the opposite party to reply thereto.”
[6] Rule 18(10)
reads as follows:
A Plaintiff suing for
damages shall set them out in such a manner as will enable the
defendant reasonably to assess the quantum
thereof provided that a
Plaintiff suing for damages for personal injuries shall specify his
date of birth, the nature and extent
of the injuries and the nature
and the effects and duration of the disability alleged to give rise
to such damages and shall as
far as practicable state separately what
amount if any is claimed for:-
(a)
medical costs and hospital
and other similar expenses and how these costs and expenses are made
up.
(b)
pain and suffering,
stating whether temporary or permanent and which injuries caused it.
(c)
disability in respect of:
i)
The earning of income
(stating the earnings lost to date and how the amount is made up and
the estimated future loss and the nature
of the work the Plaintiff
will in future be able to do.
ii)
Enjoyment of amenities of
life and stating whether the disability concerned is temporary or
permanent, and
(d)
disfigurement, with full
description thereof and stating whether it is temporary or permanent.
[7] It is trite law
that pleadings must be lucid and logical and in an intelligible form
the cause of action must appear clearly
from the factual
allegations. Mc Creath J in
Trope v South African Reserve
Bank and Another
1992 (3) SA 208
at 211 B
concluded as follows:
“
An
exception to a pleading on the ground that it is vague and
embarrassing involves a two-fold consideration. The first is
whether the pleading lacks particularity to the extent that it is
vague. The second is whether the vagueness causes embarrassment
of such a nature that the Excipient is prejudiced.”
[8]
In the
particulars of claim the Plaintiff alleges that “on the day in
question” she collapsed and had a miscarriage
on the school
premises and that the first Defendant obstructed medical personnel by
refusing entrance of the ambulance into the
school premises.
[9] This allegation
is vague as it fails to allege the date, time and year on which the
incident occurred. This is prejudicial
to the Excipient as it
is unable to determine whether a claim if any has prescribed or not
or some other possible defence open
to a defendant.
[10] The
particulars of claim which in my view are badly drawn up allege that
before the Plaintiff’s husband could arrive
at the school
premises the first Defendant gave instructions that no one should
attend to the Plaintiff by not giving her water.
The Plaintiff
fails to indicate when did this take place and to whom the first
Defendant gave such instructions.
[11] All these
allegations set out in the lumped up particulars of claim are
so vague and embarrassing and do not comply
with the provisions of
Rule 18(4).
[12] The next
aspect is Rule 18(10). This subrule stipulates the minimum
particulars to be furnished by the Plaintiff
with regard to personal
injuries to enable the Defendant reasonably to estimate the quantum
of the Plaintiff’s damages and
plead thereto.
[13] The Plaintiff
has failed to comply with the requirements of subrule 18(10) in the
following respects:
a)
Her
date of birth is not indicated.
b)
Failed
to state the nature and extent of any injury she sustained.
c)
The
R40 million claim in paragraph 16.1 is said to be for general
damages, being loss of life, wrongful death, funeral expenses,
ritual
expenses, damages to her good name, loss of dignity and psychological
shock.
[14] This prayer in
paragraph 16 is so vague and embarrassing as it does not say and
detail how much is to be allocated to
each class of injury being
claimed everything is lumped up together and this results in the
Defendant not being able to ascertain
whether or not the Plaintiff’s
assessment of the quantum is correct.
[15] Makgoka J as
he then was in
Living Hands v Ditz
2013 (2) SA 368
at 374 G
set out the general principles in exception proceedings as follows:
15.1 In
considering an exception that a pleading does not sustain a cause of
action the Court will accept as true the allegations
pleaded by the
Plaintiff to assess whether they disclose a cause of action.
15.2 The object of
an exception is not to embarrass one’s opponent or to take
advantage of a technical flaw, but to
dispose of the case or a
portion thereof in an expeditious manner or to protect oneself
against embarrassment which is so serious
as to merit the costs.
15.3 The purpose
of an exception is to raise a substantive question of law which may
have the effect of settling the dispute
between the parties if the
exception is not taken for that purpose an Excipient should make out
a very clear case before it would
be allowed to succeed.
15.4 An Excipient
who alleges that the summons does not disclose a cause of action must
establish that, upon any construction
of the particulars of claim no
cause of action is disclosed.
15.5 An over
technical approach should be avoided because it destroys the
usefulness of the exception procedure which is
to weed out cases
without legal merits.
15.6 Pleadings
must be read as a whole, and an exception cannot be taken to a
paragraph or a part of the pleading that is
not self-contained.
15.7 Minor
blemishes and unradical embarrassments caused by a pleading can and
should be cured by further particulars.
[16] The
particulars of claim in this matter are so badly drawn up that they
will not survive amendment. In my view
upon any construction of
the particulars of claim no cause of action is disclosed against any
of the Defendants. In the result
I make the following order:
ORDER
a)
The
Exception Is upheld.
b)
The
Plaintiff’s particulars of claim are vague, embarrassing and do
not disclose or sustain a cause of action and are accordingly
struck
off.
c)
The
Plaintiff/ Respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this application
on a party and party scale.
Dated at Johannesburg on
this day of February 2024
M A MAKUME
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
Date of
hearing:
28 February 2024
Date of
Judgement:
February
2024
For
Excipient:
Adv Ntshangase
Instructed
by:
Office of the State Attorney
For
Respondent:
Att Hadebe
Instructed
by:
Messrs TS Hadebe
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