Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 234South Africa
P. v Housing Development Agency (21/50612) [2024] ZAGPJHC 234 (4 March 2024)
Headnotes
with costs. [8] During the oral argument, I asked the defendant’s representative whether the upholding of the exception (without granting either a dismissal of the claim or an opportunity to amend) would not leave the case in limbo and that there may then be uncertainty as to the status of the plaintiff’s claims. [9] The defendant’s counsel accordingly contended that the following relief would be appropriate:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## P. v Housing Development Agency (21/50612) [2024] ZAGPJHC 234 (4 March 2024)
P. v Housing Development Agency (21/50612) [2024] ZAGPJHC 234 (4 March 2024)
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 21/50612
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTREST OF OTHER JUDGES : NO
3.
REVISED : NO
4
March 2024
In
the matter between:
U[...]
P[...]
Plaintiff/Respondent
and
HOUSING
DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
Defendant/Excipient
JUDGMENT
KORF,
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This matter concerns an exception by the defendant/excipient
to the plaintiff/respondent’s amended particulars of claim
dated
24 April 2022 because it fails to disclose a cause of action.
[2]
The parties shall be referred to as they have been cited in
the summons, to wit, the excipient as the defendant and the
respondent
as the plaintiff.
[3]
On or shortly after 22 October 2021, the plaintiff, U[...]
P[...], an adult female employee of the defendant, instituted an
action
against the defendant, the HOUSING DEVELOPMENT AGENCY, cited
as an entity duly established under the Housing Development Act, 23
of 2008.
[4]
As will be alluded to more fully below, the plaintiff’s
action comprised two claims. As pleaded, Claim A is pleaded as a
claim
for delictual damages caused by the defendant’s breach of
a common law legal duty. Claim B is for constitutional damages
sustained due to the defendant’s infringement of certain
constitutional rights of the plaintiff.
[5]
The defendant’s first exception is essentially that the
plaintiff’s claim is precluded by section 35(1) of the
Compensation
for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act, 130 of 1993
(“COIDA”). The second exception is that the plaintiff’s
claim for constitutional damages is wrong in law because the
applicant has a common law remedy.
Relief
sought
[6]
In its exception, the defendant prayed for an order that:
“
a) The
exception be upheld;
b) The Plaintiff
pays the costs of the exception;
c) Further and/or
alternative relief.”
[7]
According to the defendant’s heads of argument, it seeks
its exception to be upheld with costs.
[8]
During the oral argument, I asked the defendant’s
representative whether the upholding of the exception (without
granting
either a dismissal of the claim or an opportunity to amend)
would not leave the case in limbo and that there may then be
uncertainty
as to the status of the plaintiff’s claims.
[9]
The defendant’s counsel accordingly contended that the
following relief would be appropriate:
1. In respect of
Claim A, that the exception be upheld inasmuch as the allegations
relate to negligence,
alternatively
, if the court finds that
this exception cannot be upheld at the exception state, that the
excipiability of Claim B be reserved
for determination at the end of
the trial.
2. Regarding Claim
B, the exception should be upheld, and Claim B should be dismissed
with costs.
[10]
The plaintiff prayed that both objections be dismissed with
costs. If upheld concerning Claim B, the plaintiff should be afforded
time to amend its pleading and not be penalised with costs.
Overview
of the facts pleaded in the Particulars of Claim
[11]
Under
the heading “
CONDUCT
”,
the plaintiff pleads that: [
[1]
]
“
Jobs
for Sex and Rape
4.
In December 2018 and February 2019, the defendant [through its
employee [RI] acting in the course and scope of her employment
or as
an agent of the defendant] presented [MM]…and [LM] with …
charge sheets, inter alia [for]:
4.1. sexually
harassing the plaintiff;
…
4.5 sexual
favours pertaining to the secondment of the plaintiff to the
Strategic Support Department;
4.6 gang
raping the plaintiff;
…
4.8 …bringing
the good name of the employer [the defendant] into disrepute in that
in the assembly party held in September
2017, [LM] was identified as
one of the men who took “advantage” of [the plaintiff]
who appeared extremely intoxicated
as he is alleged to have been seen
in sexual acts with [the plaintiff] in full view of others passing
by, as the doors and windows
were left open and the lights on….
Board
Meeting:
5.
On or about 23 October 2018…the defendant [through its
employee [RI] acting in the course and scope of her employment
or as
an agent of the defendant]…reported to the Board of Directors
of the … defendant,
inter alia
[that]:
5.1 the
plaintiff had been sexually harassed;
5.2 the
plaintiff had sexual intercourse with senior executives employed by
the defendant in return for job promotion;
5.3 the
plaintiff would not admit that she was either gang raped; or
5.4 sexually
harassed.
”
[
[2]
]
(hereinafter referred to
as the “Conduct”)
[12]
Under the heading “
CONSEQUENCES
”, the
plaintiff pleads the following:
“
11.
As a result of the aforesaid conduct of the defendant and its
employee mentioned above in paragraphs 4 to
5.4, the plaintiff:
11.1
suffered emotional shock and trauma;
11.2
suffered and still suffers impaired mental health, for which she
requires medical treatment;
11.3
suffered financial loss;
11.4
suffered constitutional damages.
12.
The defendant and its employee’s aforesaid conduct, as
mentioned above, was the sole and/or the main cause of the
above-mentioned consequences.
”
[
[3]
]
(hereinafter referred to
as the “Consequences”)
[13]
The portions quoted above, read in the context of the
Particulars of Claim, show that both plaintiff’s claims stem
from the
same set of facts. In the plaintiff’s heads of
argument, counsel for the plaintiff agreed with this assessment.
[14]
The plaintiff’s pleading is by no measure a textbook
example of clarity. It has various unnecessary allegations and
mistakes,
and it is incomplete. However, as will appear from what is
stated below, the defendant’s exception is not that the
pleading
is vague and embarrassing.
[15]
In the following section, I shall further consider Claim A and
the defendant’s exception based on the provisions of COIDA.
After that, Claim B and the exception (that the claim for
constitutional damages is wrong in law) will be considered.
Claim
A
[16]
Claim
A is essentially founded on the defendant’s alleged failure to
act in accordance with a common law duty to maintain
a safe working
environment, including taking necessary steps to ensure that the
plaintiff is not abused or harassed emotionally
or psychologically.
Apart from the Consequences referred to above, the plaintiff pleads
that the Conduct caused her to “…
suffer
emotional shock, trauma and damages…
”.
[
[4]
] The plaintiff consequently
claims general damages of R 5 million, interest and costs.
[17]
In the defendant’s exception to Claim A, it pleads
essentially that in terms of section 35(1) of COIDA, an employee who
is
covered by COIDA has no claim against an employer for damages
suffered following an occupational injury arising out of or within
the scope of the employee’s employment. Under section 35(2), as
the defendant pleads, occupational injuries sustained due
to
negligence by certain employees are deemed attributable to the
employer. The defendant pleads that the employee whom the plaintiff
alleges to have engaged in conduct resulting in vicarious liability
is deemed under the provisions of section 35(2)(b) to be an
employer.
The defendant concludes that the emotional shock, trauma and mental
impairment that she suffered constitutes an occupational
injury, and
the plaintiff is precluded under COIDA from claiming such damages
from the employer.
[18]
For the defendant’s exception to be upheld, it would
require this court, at the exception stage of the proceedings and
based
on the plaintiff’s pleading, to find that all the
jurisdictional requirements for a claim under COIDA are satisfied and
that
the defendant is not liable under the provisions of the said
act. This notion is tainted with difficulties.
[19]
By
way of example, a jurisdictional requirement for the applicability of
COIDA is that a claimant (such as the plaintiff) must have
sustained
injury (
in
casu
,
emotional shock, trauma and impaired mental health as a result of the
Conduct) while acting in the course of his/her (the plaintiff’s)
employment. [
[5]
]
[20]
In
Churchill
v Premier of Mpumalanga and Another
[
[6]
], the Supreme Court of
Appeal emphasised the following: “
[34]
…[B]ut the nature and severity of the assault and the extent
of the incursion upon the dignity and bodily integrity
of the victim,
cannot be the factors that determine whether it arose out of their
employment.
As
held in MEC v DN it is difficult to see on what basis, as a general
proposition, attacks on a person's dignity and bodily integrity
are
incidental to their employment.
In simple language, they are not things that 'go with the job'.
”
[
Emphasis
added
]
[21]
In
Member
of the Executive Council for the Department of Health, Free State
[
[7]
], the SCA concluded that:
“
[33]
Dealing with a vulnerable class within our society and contemplating
that rape is a scourge of South African Society, I have
difficulty
contemplating that employees would be assisted if their common law
rights were to be restricted as proposed on behalf
of the MEC. If
anything, it might rightly be said to be adverse to the interests of
employees injured by rape to restrict them
to COIDA.
It
would be sending an unacceptable message to employees, especially
women, namely, that you are precluded from suing your employer
for
what you assert is a failure to provide reasonable protective
measures against rape because rape directed against women is
a risk
inherent in employment in South Africa. This cannot be what our
Constitution will countenance.
”
[
Emphasis
added
]
[22]
The above cases make it plain that the applicability of COIDA
to injuries sustained by an employee is i) intricate, ii) requires
careful interpretation of the provisions of COIDA and, for example,
the Constitution (1996), and iii) demands a considered finding
on the
facts of the case. These considerations render the exception state of
proceedings inappropriate to make any findings that
the plaintiff’s
claim falls under COIDA.
[23]
I believe it would be incumbent upon the defendant to plead
COIDA as a defence. As such, the defendant would bear the onus to
demonstrate
that all the disputed elements for a claim under COIDA
are present and, therefore, that the defendant is exonerated under
COIDA
from any liability stemming from the Conduct.
[24]
Counsel for the defendant argued that if the COIDA objection
cannot be decided at the exception state, this question should be
reserved
for determination at the end of the trial.
[25]
It must be borne in mind that the trial court will ultimately
adjudicate the applicability of COIDA based on the pleadings and the
evidence before it and not on the plaintiff’s Particulars of
Claim. Consequently, it would serve no purpose to reserve the
determination of the COIDA exception at the end of the trial.
[26]
For these reasons, the defendant’s exception to Claim A
cannot be upheld.
Claim
B
[27]
Under
Claim B, the plaintiff claimed R 2 million (plus interest and costs)
as constitutional damages. According to the plaintiff’s
pleading, Claim B arose because the defendant breached its
constitutional duty to the defendant not to infringe upon and failed
to protect the plaintiff from infringement of her constitutional
rights. The plaintiff further pleaded that through the Conduct,
the
defendant violated her rights afforded by the Constitution, i.e., the
rights to dignity under section 10 [
[8]
],
to be free from all forms of violence, and not to be treated or
punished in a cruel, inhumane or degrading way under section
12
[
[9]
]. Consequently, the
plaintiff avers that she suffered constitutional damages.
[28]
The defendant excepts against Claim B because the plaintiff
failed to disclose a cause of action for constitutional damages. The
defendant pleads that: i) the plaintiff has available to it and, in
fact, concurrently claims common law general damages and
constitutional
damages; ii) that a claim for constitutional damages
is inappropriate, unavailable and not recognised in law; and iii)
with the
availability of common law damages, a claim for
constitutional damage is not available to the plaintiff.
[29]
Counsel for the defendant relied strongly on the matter of
Fose
, in which it was held that, on the facts in that matter,
there was no place for punitive constitutional damages. Accordingly,
the
defendant’s exception was upheld. The plaintiff further
relied on the cases of
Komape
and
Industry House
in
support of the latter contentions. It was submitted that the cases of
Modderklip
and
Kate
were distinguishable from the
plaintiff’s case. I shall deal more fully with
Fose
,
Komape
,
Industry House
,
Modderklip
and
Kate
below. Counsel for the defendant highlighted that the judgement in
Kate
was criticised by Jafta J in
Industry House
,
stating that the SCA departed from its own previous decisions,
including
Modderklip
, and was at variance with the principles
previously espoused by both the Constitutional Court as well as the
SCA.
[30]
Counsel
for the plaintiff argued that a party’s right to claim
constitutional damages where it has a claim in delict is not
precluded in absolute terms. In support of this contention, counsel
relied on
Thubakgale
,
in which it was stated that “
Courts
are under an obligation in terms of section 38 of the Constitution to
grant “appropriate relief” when approached
by someone who
seeks to enforce a right in the Bill of Rights that has been
infringed or threatened, and this may include constitutional
damages”
.
Further, it was highlighted in
Fose
[
[10]
] that courts have a
particular responsibility to “forge the tools” and shape
innovative remedies to vindicate the Constitution.
Counsel contended
that the defendant’s proposition was inconsistent with the
constitution because courts must be innovative
in fashioning new
remedies to meet constitutional obligations, and courts enjoy wide
discretion to decide on what remedy would
be effective, suitable or,
just and equitable. During his address, the plaintiff’s counsel
emphasised the degree of seriousness
of the references in the charge
sheet and the report to the Board of Directors concerning the
plaintiff. Consequently, the claim
for constitutional damages in
addition to delictual damages was justified. As pleaded by the
plaintiff, Claim B is premised on
infringing her constitutional
rights, whereas the common law claim is premised on the duty to
create a safe work environment. Counsel
contended that the facts of
Komape
were distinguishable from the instant matter.
Case
Law
[31]
In
Fose v
Minister of Safety and Security
[
[11]
] (“
Fose
”),
the plaintiff sued the defendant for damages arising out of a series
of assaults by members of the South African Police
Force. The
plaintiff alleged that these incidents constituted an infringement of
the plaintiff’s fundamental rights as enshrined
in chapter 3 of
the interim Constitution, more particularly, the right to human
dignity, freedom and security of the person, privacy,
and to be
arrested and detained lawfully.
[32]
The
Constitutional Court was not required to answer the question, in
broad terms, whether an action for damages in the nature of
constitutional damages exists in law and whether an order for payment
of damages qualifies as appropriate relief for purposes of
section
7(4)(a) of the interim Constitution in respect of a threat to or
infringement of any of the rights in Chapter 3. That court
was
concerned with the much narrower task of answering these questions
concerning the rights allegedly infringed in the case before
it and
only for the separate claim for constitutional damages formulated in
the claimant’s particulars of claim. [
[12]
]
[33]
In paragraph [70] of the
Fose
judgment, Ackerman J
states, "…
I
have come to the conclusion that we ought not, in the present case,
to hold that there is any place for punitive constitutional
damages
….”.
This conclusion is fortified by two considerations:
first
,
the notion that granting punitive damages against the government will
serve as a deterrent against further infringements of rights
is an
illusion, and
second
,
awarding punitive damages will place undue economic pressure on the
already scarce resources of the fiscus. In the concurring
judgment of
Kriegler J, he expressed more robust views that
punitive
damages are inappropriate to vindicate the Constitution and deter its
further violation. In paragraph [91], he states,
"
On one
point, I respectfully suggest, Ackermann J is uncharacteristically
ambivalent. As I understand the reasoning in paragraphs
69 to
73 of his judgment, my learned colleague in principle condemns
punitive damages as a potential remedy for infringements of
constitutional rights but at the same time seeks to found the current
rejection on the particular facts of this case. For
reasons
that I hope to make plain shortly, I agree that we should
unequivocally reject punitive damages as a remedy in this case.
I do believe, however, that we should refrain from any broad
rejection of any particular remedies in other circumstances.
”
[34]
Minister
of Police v Mboweni
[
[13]
] (“
Mboweni
”)
concerned the case of assault of the plaintiff by fellow inmates
detained at a local police station, as a result of which
the
plaintiff died five days after his release from custody. The High
Court awarded delictual damages for loss of support and
constitutional damages. The Minister appealed the award of
constitutional damages. Wallis JA held that the proper starting
point was to consider whether the delictual remedy for damages for
loss of support was appropriate for compensating the children
for a
breach of their constitutional rights. If the common law remedy was
inadequate, the court should have considered whether
the development
of the common law could remedy this.
[35]
The
case of
Komape
and Others v Minister of Basic Education and Others
[
[14]
] (“
Komape
”)
stemmed from the tragic circumstances of a little boy who fell into a
pit latrine and succumbed by drowning in faeces.
The court recognised
no other cases in which damages had been awarded for physical or
psychiatric injuries. The court held that
additional damages would be
equivalent to punishment because the parties had received
compensation for general damages. As such,
the parties have already
been compensated for the breach of the right in question. [
[15]
]
Leach JA held that in South Africa, there was a “
chronic
shortage of what would in foreign jurisdictions be regarded as basic
infrastructure…
”
and that circumstances in this state had not changed so much as to
regard the approach followed in
Fose
as no longer applicable. Despite the tragic facts before it, the
court found that there was no reason why the deceased child’s
family should be the beneficiaries of an additional award for
constitutional damages and that there was no room for an award of
constitutional damages. [
[16]
]
[36]
In
Residence
of Industry House et al. v Minister of Police and Others []
(“Industry House”),
the claimants comprised a group of approximately 3000 people who
lived in 11 buildings situated in the inner city of Johannesburg.
Over the period of a year, they had been subjected to “cruel,
invasive and degrading raids” by the police without warrants.
[
[17]
] The claimants claimed,
inter
alia
,
an amount of R 1000 each as constitutional damages for the
infringement of their constitutional rights to dignity and privacy.
[
[18]
] The High Court
dismissed the claim for constitutional damages, partly because there
was no evidence that every room had been searched,
and the court held
that it was not appropriate to grant a blanket order for
constitutional damages. [
[19]
]
The claimants approached the Constitutional Court claiming leave to
appeal against the High Court’s dismissal of their claims
for
constitutional damages, which application was dismissed. The
following is germane:
1.
Based on an
analysis of the relevant case law, Mhlantla J (for the majority)
formulated general principles concerning claims for
constitutional
damages. The learner judge referred,
inter
alia
,
to
Fose
,
holding that the law of delict would, in most cases, be broad enough
to provide appropriate relief for the infringement of constitutional
rights. [
[20]
] Where a
delictual remedy would be available, constitutional damages would
seldom be available in addition to a common law remedy.
[
[21]
]
2.
The
majority further held that the availability of an alternative common
law or statutory law remedy was “
not
an absolute bar to the granting of constitutional damages, but a
weighty consideration against the award for such damages.
”
[
[22]
] Sometimes, a delictual
remedy would be available, but it would not be effective. The
damage-causing conduct could be an inherent
barrier to the remedy
because wrongful conduct itself created a complete barrier to
providing one of the elements of delict. [
[23]
]
In these instances, a court might consider an award of constitutional
damages even though there was an alternative remedy. [
[24]
]
3.
The court
enunciated the legal position in the following terms: “…
The
uncertainty and unpredictability would be at variance with the rule
of law, a linchpin of the Constitution. Therefore, constitutional
damages must be the most appropriate remedy available to vindicate
constitutional rights with due weight attached to other alternative
remedies available within the common law and statutes…
”
[
[25]
] The court further found
that once an appropriate remedy has been identified, it becomes
unnecessary to award constitutional damages
in addition to damages
awarded in terms of the delictual remedy, stating further that “…
[I]t
is not fair to burden the public purse with financial liability where
there are alternative remedies that can sufficiently
achieve that
purpose, because that would effectively amount to punishing the
taxpayers for conduct for which they bear no responsibility.
[
[26]
]
4. Jafta J
concurred with the majority. In paragraph [157], Jafta J stated the
following: “…
The other alternative remedy available
to the applicants was a delictual claim. The delictual claim
did not cease to be an
alternative remedy only because it may be
onerous to prove it. The principle is not that the alternative
remedy must be easy
to prove. Nor should it be convenient for
the claimant to pursue it. It will be recalled that
in Fose and
Dikoko
, this Court stressed the
fact that constitutional damages may be allowed where it is
necessary. It cannot be necessary to
award them where there is
an adequate alternative remedy that is not easy to prove
…”.
[37]
In
President
of the Republic of South Africa v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty) Ltd
[
[27]
] (“
Modderklip
”).
In that case, the landowner exercised its remedies, proverbially,
according to the book, to have some 80,000 unlawful
occupiers on its
land evicted. It succeeded in being granted an eviction order, only
to find that the organs of state were either
unwilling or unable to
assist in enforcing it. The court found that although the landowner
had a claim in delict, constitutional
damages would be a more
effective remedy.
[38]
Member
of the Executive Council: Welfare v Kate
[
[28]
] (“
Kate
”)
concerned the failure on the part of the Department of Welfare to
process the plaintiff’s application for a disability
grant
timely. Discussing
Fose
,
the court noted that “
in
principle, monetary damages are capable of being awarded for a
constitutional breach.
”
[
[29]
] The court held that “…
in this
case we are not called upon to answer those questions broadly and in
the abstract – and I do not do so – but
only to decide
whether the particular breach that is now in issue is deserving of
relief in the form of the monetary damages that
are now claimed.
Whether relief in that form is appropriate in a particular case must
necessarily be determined casuistically with
due regard to, amongst
other things, the nature and relative importance of the rights that
are in issue, the alternative remedies
that might be available to
assert and vindicate them, and the consequences of the breach for the
claimant concerned…
”.
[
[30]
]
[39]
Thubakgale
and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others
[
[31]
] (“
Thubakgale
”)
does not deal with the availability of constitutional damages where
delictual damages are available. That matter dealt
with
constitutional damages as a means to enforce socio-economic rights.
The Constitutional Court held that constitutional damages
were not
open to the claimants because of the availability of remedies in
terms of legislation. [
[32]
]
Analysis
[40]
In my view, the legal principles expressed in the above cases
concerning constitutional damages where a party has a common law
remedy
established may be summarised as follows:
1. Courts generally
followed
Fose
.
2. Courts followed
a casuistic approach.
3. The purpose of
constitutional damages is not to penalise a party.
4. Courts will not
grant constitutional damages in addition to common law damages
arising from the same set of facts.
5.
It is
accepted that there was no reason why “appropriate relief”,
as envisaged by section 38 of the Constitution [
[33]
],
could not include an award for damages.
6. Constitutional
damages will only be awarded if a common law remedy is ineffective.
7. Constitutional
damages will only be available where they are demonstrated to be the
most effective and appropriate remedy.
8. Most courts held
that constitutional damages should not be awarded when delictual
damages were available.
[41]
On a plain reading of the Particulars of Claim, the plaintiff
claims constitutional and common law damages. Both claims stem from
the same set of facts. The defendant’s exception to Claim B
asks whether the plaintiff is entitled to claim concurrently
common
law damages and constitutional damages.
[42]
The plaintiff does not describe its claim for constitutional
damages as “
punitive constitutional damages
”.
However, concurrently with common law damages, the plaintiff’s
claim for constitutional damages renders Claim B squarely
as punitive
constitutional damages.
[43]
Based on the case law referred to above, constitutional
damages, in addition to common law damages, as the plaintiff seeks to
claim,
have no legal basis. In addition, the plaintiff failed to
plead facts that may be relevant to determine what appropriate relief
would be. The exception to Claim B should accordingly be upheld.
[44]
The next inquiry is whether the plaintiff’s Claim B
should be dismissed or whether the plaintiff should be allowed to
amend
its Particulars of Claim inasmuch as it concerns Claim B.
[45]
Counsel for the defendant submitted that the dismissal of
Claim B at the exception stage would align with Fose and that there
is
no possibility that an amendment will cure the plaintiff’s
defective claim. In any event, the plaintiff has had ample
opportunity
to amend its case.
[46]
I appreciate that the circumstances
under which constitutional damages will be awarded are limited.
However, in my view, it would
not serve the interest of justice at
this junction to dismiss the plaintiff’s Claim B without
allowing it to amend its claim.
A dismissal of Claim B would finally
shut the court’s doors to the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s
right to access the courts
warranted under section 34 of the
Constitution is accordingly at stake.
[47]
The objection to Claim B, on the basis of the punitive effect
of the plaintiff’s concurrent claims, may be resolved (albeit
in part) by an amendment to plead these claims in the alternative.
For clarity, I do not find it will or ought to remove the defendant’s
cause of complaint.
[48]
In
Mboweni
,
Wallis
JA held that the court
a
quo
had
not addressed the factual and legal issues important to the decision
it had to make. Consequently, the award of constitutional
damages was
overturned. Referring to
Fose
,
Modderklip
and
Kate
,
the court found that in those cases, the court was apprised of
the facts on which the claim was based. The SCA, however,
found that
the parties did not plead the facts necessary to determine an
appropriate remedy and concluded that the issue (of an
appropriate
remedy) could arise only once the relevant facts had been identified
and pleaded and it had been shown that the rights
in question had
been infringed. [
[34]
]
[49]
Mboweni
,
in my view, is authority for the proposition that a court must ensure
that all the facts necessary to determine an appropriate
remedy have
been pleaded. I am not convinced that this is the case in the matter
at hand.
[50]
Accordingly, I believe that Claim B
should not be dismissed and that the plaintiff should be allowed to
reconsider its pleading,
given this judgment and the authorities to
which I have referred.
Costs
[51]
Although
the issue of costs remains the discretion of the court, the
discretion cannot be exercised arbitrarily but judicially on
grounds
upon which a reasonable person could have arrived. The approach to
awarding costs is succinctly set out in
Ferreira
v Levin NO and Others, Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others
[
[35]
] in paragraph 3:
"
The
Supreme Court has, over the years, developed a flexible approach to
costs which proceeds from two basic principles, the first
being that
the award of costs, unless expressly otherwise enacted, is in the
discretion of the presiding judicial officer, and
the second that the
successful party should, as a general rule, have his or her costs.
Even this second principle is subject to
the first. The second
principle is subject to a large number of exceptions where the
successful party is deprived of his or her
costs. Without attempting
either comprehensiveness or complete analytical accuracy, depriving
successful parties of their costs
can depend on circumstances such
as, for example, the conduct of parties, the conduct of their legal
representatives, whether a
party achieves technical success only, the
nature of the litigants and the nature of the proceedings. I mention
these examples
to indicate that the principles which have been
developed in relation to the award of costs are by their nature
sufficiently flexible
and adaptable to meet new needs which may arise
in regard to constitutional litigation…
"
[52]
Recently,
in
Dhlamini
v Schumann, Van den Heever and Slabbert Inc and Others
[
[36]
], the Supreme Court of
Appeal dealt with a matter in which both parties were partially
successful. In that matter, the court ordered
each party to pay its
own costs.
[53]
It is true that the plaintiff enjoyed partial success in
defeating the challenge to Claim A.
[54]
It was argued that the plaintiff is
an individual litigating against a state-owned agency and that the
court should pay due consideration
to this factor.
[55]
It is to be noted that the exception to Claim B was caused by
the plaintiff’s failure to plead her case for constitutional
damages adequately. There is no reason why the public purse should
pay for the defendant’s costs while the defendant was
successful in its exception to Claim B.
Order
[1] The defendant’s
exception to Claim A is dismissed.
[2] The defendant’s
exception to Claim B is upheld.
[3] The plaintiff
is afforded 20 days from the date of this order to deliver a notice
in terms of Rule 28(1) of the Uniform
Rules of Court to amend its
Particulars of Claim (as amended), should it wish to do so.
[4] The plaintiff
shall be liable for the defendant’s costs, which excludes costs
incurred by the defendant regarding
its exception to Claim A.
C. A. C. KORF
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Excipient/Defendant: Y
Peer instructed by ENS Africa
For
the Respondent/Plaintiff:
MW Mawesh
[1]
The quoted section excludes parts that do not refer to the
plaintiff.
[2]
Grammatical errors have been corrected.
[3]
Grammatical errors have been corrected.
[4]
Particulars of Claim, paragraph 19
[5]
COIDA, section 1- “accident” is defined as an accident
arising out of and in the course of an employee’s employment
and resulting in a personal injury, illness or the death of the
employee…”.
[6]
Churchill
v Premier of Mpumalanga and Another
2021 (4) SA 422.
[7]
Member
of the Executive Council For the Department of Health, Free State
Province v EJN
[2015] 1 All SA 20
(SCA).
[8]
Section 10:
“
Human
dignity
Everyone has inherent
dignity and the right to have their dignity respected and
protected.
”
[9]
Section 12:
“
12
Freedom and security of the person.
(1)
Everyone has the right to freedom and security of the person, which
includes the right-
(a)
…
(b)
…
(c)
to be free from all forms of violence from either public or private
sources;
(d)
…
(e)
not to be treated or punished in a cruel, inhuman or degrading way.
”
[10]
Fose
at [69].
[11]
Fose v
Minister of Safety and Security
1997 (1) SA 786
(CC), in particular paragraphs [58], [60], [67],
[69], [70] and [71].
[12]
Fose
at [20].
[13]
Minister
of Police v Mboweni
2014 six SA 256 (SCA)
[14]
Komape
and Others v Minister of Basic Education and Others
[2019] ZASCA 192
[15]
Ibid at [59].
[16]
Ibid at [63].
[17]
Ibid at [6] – [18].
[18]
Ibid at [19].
[19]
Ibid at [27].
[20]
Ibid at [96].
[21]
Ibid at [97].
[22]
Ibid at [104].
[23]
Ibid at [104] and [105].
[24]
Ibid at [104].
[25]
Ibid at [118].
[26]
Ibis at [120].
[27]
President
of the Republic of South Africa v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty) Ltd
2005 (5) SA 3
(CC).
[28]
Member
of the Executive Council: Welfare v Kate
2006 4 SA 478 (SCA).
[29]
Ibid at [23]
[30]
Ibid at [25]
[31]
Thubakgale
and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others
(2021) ZACC 25.
[32]
Ibid at [145] and further; [171] and [178].
[33]
“
38
Enforcement of rights
Anyone listed in this
section has the right to approach a competent court, alleging that a
right in the Bill of Rights has been
infringed or threatened, and
the court may grant appropriate relief, including a declaration of
rights…
”.
[34]
Ibid at [6] – [7].
[35]
Ferreira
v Levin NO and Others, Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others
[1996] ZACC 27; 1996 (2) SA 621 (CC).
[36]
Dhlamini
v Schumann, Van den Heever and Slabbert Inc and Others
(505/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 79
(29 May 2023).
sino noindex
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