Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 211South Africa
Impac Prop CC v Mohammad & Others (2021-44017) [2024] ZAGPJHC 211 (8 March 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – application for rescission of costs order – good cause to rescind the costs order shown by respondents – there may be merit in respondents contention that costs order should not have been granted – equates to bona fide defence – explanation for non-appearance reasonable and adequate – application granted.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Impac Prop CC v Mohammad & Others (2021-44017) [2024] ZAGPJHC 211 (8 March 2024)
Impac Prop CC v Mohammad & Others (2021-44017) [2024] ZAGPJHC 211 (8 March 2024)
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sino date 8 March 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
CASE
NO
:
2021-44017
DATE
:
8
th
MARCH 2024
In
the matter between:
IMPAC
PROP
CC
Applicant
and
MOHAMMAD
,
AZEEM N O
First
Respondent
PATEL
,
MOHAMAD ZUBER DAUBHAL N O
Second
Respondent
MOHAMMAD
,
AZEEM
Third
Respondent
PATEL
,
MOHAMAD ZUBER DAUBHAL
Fourth
Respondent
KHAN
,
MUHAMMED ALI
Fifth
Respondent
MUHAMMAD
,
ASLAM
Sixth
Respondent
AYOB
,
FATIMA
Seventh
Respondent
VADIWALA
,
NASRNBANU MUSTAK
Eighth
Respondent
RANCHOD
,
INDRAVADAN
Ninth
Respondent
RANCHOD
,
PRAVKN RANCHOD
Tenth Respondent
RIMSHAH
TRADING CC
Eleventh
Respondent
REGAP
MANSIONS BODY CORPORATE
Twelfth Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Impac Prop v Mohammad and Others
(2021/44017)
[2024] ZAGPJHC ---
(8 March 2024)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
on
: 4 March 2024
Delivered:
8 March 2024 – This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed to be 10:30 on 8 March 2024.
Summary:
Civil procedure – application for rescission of costs order
– good cause to rescind the costs order shown by respondents
–
there may be merit in respondents contention that costs order should
not have been granted – equates to
bona fide
defence –
explanation for non-appearance reasonable and adequate –
application granted.
ORDER
(1) The costs order
granted on 17 May 2023 in favour of the applicant against the third
and fourth respondents be and is hereby
rescinded.
(2) The first to
the eleventh respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, shall pay the applicant’s
costs of this
opposed rescission application.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
I shall refer to the parties as referred
to in the main application, in which a costs order was granted
in
absentia
against the second and the
third respondents (‘the respondents’) on 17 May 2023 in
favour of the applicant. In this
application, the respondents apply
for a rescission of the said costs order. Their attorney explains
that, whilst the notice of
set down for 17 May 2023 had clearly been
served on his offices, it did not come to his attention for whatever
reason. Had it come
to his attention, so the attorney says, he would
most certainly have attended court on the aforesaid date to oppose
the granting
of the costs order, as his clients were of the view that
the applicant is not entitled to be awarded costs of the main
application.
[2].
The rescission application is vigorously
opposed by the applicant on the basis that the respondents were in
wilful default when
the costs order was granted by this Court on 17
May 2023. This, so it is submitted by the applicant, is confirmed by
the fact that
the notice of set down was served on the respondents’
attorneys. Pre-hearing applications were also held, during which the
applicant’s attorneys brought to the attention of the
respondents’ attorneys that the matter was set down for hearing
on the said date. On the morning of the hearing of the costs argument
on 17 May 2023, the applicant’s Counsel and its attorneys
tried
to get hold of the respondents’ attorneys, without success. The
aforegoing, coupled with the fact the respondents do
not have a
bona
fide
defence to the granting of the
costs order, mean, so the applicant contends, that good cause for the
rescission of the judgment
has not been demonstrated by the
respondents.
[3].
It
is trite that an applicant for rescission of a judgment or the
setting aside of an order is required to show ‘good cause’
to have the order rescinded. ‘Good cause’, in turn,
requires a demonstration by the applicant that his default was
not
wilful and that he has a
bona
fide
defence to the claim underpinning the default judgment. Lastly, the
application for rescission must be
bona
fide
and not directed at frustrating the respondent’s attempts to
vindicate his entitlement to the relief claimed. As was held
by the
Constitutional Court, albeit in the context of a condonation
application, in
Laerskool
Generaal Hendrik Schoeman v Bastian Financial Services (Pty) Ltd
[1]
,
an applicant for condonation ‘must establish that the extent of
its default is pardonable in the light of its prospects
of success on
the merits of the appeal, combined with the strength of its
explanation for its default, in order for condonation
to be granted’.
[4].
In casu
,
I am therefore required to
consider the
reasonableness of the explanation given by the third and the fourth
respondents for their non-appearance on 17 May
2023, and, secondly, I
need to consider their prospects of successfully opposing the
applicant’s application for the costs
order granted by the
court on the aforesaid date.
[5].
As I have already indicated, the
respondents’ explanation for their non-appearance at court on
17 May 2023 is simply that
their attorney did not realise that the
matter was on the roll. I have no reason not to accept the
explanation by the respondents’
attorney. The simple fact of
the matter is that the notice of set down did not come to his
attention and that is an explanation
which, in my view, is a
reasonable one, supported by the evidence, notably the fact that
later on the very day on which the matter
was on the roll, the
respondents’ attorneys placed on record that he did not realise
that the matter was on the roll for
that day.
[6].
As regards the
bona
fide
defence to the application for
a costs order, the respondents contend that there was no need for the
applicant to have instituted
the proceedings in question. There were
other avenues open to the applicant, which it ought to have explored
before launching into
legal proceedings. It is the case of the
respondents that, irrespective of the fact that the matter resolved
itself after the institution
of the main application, the application
should not have been issued for starters. They therefore intended
arguing the issue of
the costs at the hearing on 17 May 2023 and they
believe that they have cogent arguments against the granting of the
costs order,
including the punitive costs award in favour of the
applicant on the scale as between attorney and client. So, for
example, the
third and the fourth respondents aver that they are not
the trustees of the Body Corporate in question, but merely acted as
de facto
trustees in the absence of lawfully elected Trustees at a formal
Annual General Meeting called in accordance with the Sectional
Titles
Act. The point made by the respondents is simply that, whilst the
main application seemingly had the desired effect in that
the
disputes between the parties were resolved, the applicant had no
right to lawfully institute the proceedings against them.
[7].
I find myself in agreement with these
submissions on behalf of the respondents. In my view, there may very
well be merit in the
respondents’ contention that the costs
order, especially a punitive one on the scale as between attorney and
client, ought
not to have been granted by this court.
[8].
This then means that the respondent has,
in my judgment, demonstrated good cause to have the costs order
rescinded. Their application
should therefore be granted.
Costs
[9].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers
v Abramson
[2]
.
[10].
During the hearing of the rescission application on 4 March 2024,
Mr Clayton, the respondents’ attorney,
seemingly accepted
that, in the circumstances of this matter, the first to eleventh
respondents, who are the applicants in this
application, should be
paying the costs. I agree. There would not have been a need for the
rescission application if the notice
of set down had not been missed
by respondents’ attorney.
[11].
I am therefore of the view that the first to the eleventh respondents
should pay the applicant’s costs of this
application.
Order
[12].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1) The costs order
granted on 17 May 2023 in favour of the applicant against the third
and fourth respondents be and is hereby
rescinded.
(2) The first to
the eleventh respondents, jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, shall pay the applicant’s
costs of this
opposed rescission application.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON: 4
th
March 2024
JUDGMENT
DATE: 8
th
March 2024
FOR THE
APPLICANT: Adv
N Lombard
INSTRUCTED
BY: Shirish
Kalian Attorneys, Bramley, Johannesburg
FOR THE FIRST TO THE
ELEVENTH RESPONDENTS: Attorney
B C Clayton
INSTRUCTED
BY: Bryan
Clayton & Company, Houghton, Johannesburg
[1]
Laerskool
Generaal Hendrik Schoeman V Bastian Financial Services (Pty) Ltd
2012
(2) SA 637
(CC) at para 11.
[2]
Myers
v Abramson
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
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