Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 387South Africa
Mashavha v Enaex Africa (Pty) Ltd (2022/18404) [2024] ZAGPJHC 387; 2025 (1) SA 466 (GJ) (22 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mashavha v Enaex Africa (Pty) Ltd (2022/18404) [2024] ZAGPJHC 387; 2025 (1) SA 466 (GJ) (22 April 2024)
Mashavha v Enaex Africa (Pty) Ltd (2022/18404) [2024] ZAGPJHC 387; 2025 (1) SA 466 (GJ) (22 April 2024)
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sino date 22 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
COSTS – Party and party –
Uniform
Rule 67A
–
Purpose
and application of rule discussed – Scales A, B and C set
out – In this case the issues were uncomplicated
–
Entire case determined on bases of jurisdiction and standing and
merits never became relevant – Hearing lasted
under an hour
– A scale applicable – Misconduct of unsuccessful
party irrelevant once court has declined to award
punitive costs
order – What counts under Rule 67A is complexity of argument
that actually had to be advanced by counsel,
rather than the
potential complexity of the case in all its facets.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE: Yes
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
3.
REVISED.
22
April 2024
#### Case
No.2022-18404
Case
No.
2022-18404
In the matter between:
LUCKY
EPHRAIM
MASHAVHA
Applicant
and
ENAEX
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
SASOL
LIMITED
Second Respondent
AFRICA
ARISING CAPITAL (PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
ENTERPRISE
OUTSOURCING
Fourth
Respondent
EOH
NETWORK SOLUTIONS
Fifth Respondent
Summary
Rule 67A – meaning and
application discussed.
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
On 16 April 2024, I gave judgment
ex tempore
in
my opposed motion court dismissing this application. I came to my
decision in part because I lacked jurisdiction to decide the
application, and in part because the applicant lacked standing to
bring it. Most of the applicant’s claim fell within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Labour Court. The rest of the claim was
an attack on the first respondent’s award of a contract
to the
fourth respondent, which was a decision in which the applicant could
show no legal interest. I ordered the applicant, Mr.
Mashavha, to pay
the costs of the application, on the party and party scale.
2
After I had given judgment, but before I called the
next case, Mr. Coertze, who appeared for the fourth respondent,
Enterprise,
pointed out that, on 12 April 2024, rule 67A of the
Uniform Rules of Court had come into effect. Rule 67A (3) (a) now
requires
that party and party costs in the High Court be awarded on
one of three scales: “A”, “B”, or “C”.
In light of the fact that none of the parties had made out a case
under the new rule, I afforded them until 19 April 2024 to make
written submissions on whether rule 67A applies to this case, and, if
it does, the scale on which I should award costs. Before
addressing
those submissions, I shall briefly outline the purpose and scope of
the new rule.
Rule
67A
3
Costs orders in civil proceedings are made on one of
two scales: the “party and party” scale, or the “attorney
and client” scale. A costs award on the party and party scale
allows the person in favour of whom it is made to recover the
costs
they had to incur in bringing or defending a civil suit, but only to
the extent allowed by a set of tariffs designed to keep
recoverable
costs within reasonable limits. Those tariffs rarely keep pace with
the actual cost of legal services, meaning that
a party and party
costs order seldom permits the recovery of the legal costs really
incurred by the party in favour of whom it
is made.
4
Attorney and client costs orders, on the other hand,
allow the party to whom they are awarded to recover an amount much
closer to
the actual costs of the legal services they purchased to
participate in the suit. These orders are generally made against a
party
that has misconducted themselves in the course of the
litigation; against a party that has brought a suit or raised a
defence which
was so devoid of merit as to be a waste of the court’s
time; or against a party who has agreed that, if they are
successfully
sued in a particular set of circumstances, they will pay
costs on the attorney and client scale. However, the amounts
recovered
under an attorney and client order must still, in the
opinion of the taxing master, have been reasonably incurred, meaning
that
even an attorney and client costs order might not reimburse a
litigant for everything they spent.
5
Rule 67A addresses itself only to awards of costs as
between party and party. Its purpose is to permit a court to exercise
control
over the maximum rate at which counsel’s fees can be
recovered under such an award. “Counsel” in this context
should be understood to mean any legal practitioner, whether a
referral advocate, a trust account advocate or an attorney with
higher appearance rights, who actually does the work of counsel. The
focus is accordingly on assigning a maximum value that may
be
recovered in respect of the work done in the presentation of the case
before court. The professional affiliation of the person
undertaking
the work does not matter.
6
The court sets a maximum recoverable rate for that work
having regard to the importance, value and complexity of the matter
(Rule
67A (3) (b)). The court may also take into account any failure
to observe the provisions of rules 30A, 37, 37A and 41A; any
over-long
written argument, oral argument, examination or
cross-examination of witnesses; or any other misconduct that
might justify
a personal costs order (a costs order made against a
person other than one of the litigants – usually a legal
representative,
or someone else acting in an official capacity, who
has seriously misconducted themselves). It may also be relevant
that
the case fell within the jurisdiction of the Magistrate’s
Court, and might have been better determined there. Rule 67A (2)
identifies these considerations, and emphasises their relevance to
the making of a costs order under the rule.
7
Rule 67A (3) provides that a court “shall”,
when making a party and party costs order, “indicate the scale
in
terms of rule 69, under which costs have been granted”.
Those scales have been inserted into rule 69 (7) under the amendment
that created rule 67A. They are scales “A”, “B”,
and “C”. They set the maximum rate at which
counsel’s
fees may be recovered on a party and party bill. Scale “A”
provides a maximum tariff of R375 per quarter
hour; scale “B”
sets a maximum tariff of R750 per quarter hour; and scale “C”
sets a maximum tariff
of R1125 per quarter hour.
8
Rule 67A (3) (c) states that if a court declines to
indicate a scale in its order, the lowest scale – scale “A”
– applies.
9
Rule 67A (4) provides for the right to apply for an
order determining which parts of the proceedings, if any, were
urgent, and whether
the costs of more than one counsel may be
recovered. The effect of that subrule is, notionally, that a
different scale could be
assigned to the services of each counsel
whose fees are allowed under the rule. Given that each of the parties
in this case was
represented only by one counsel, I leave open the
question of whether, when and how such an order should be made.
10
Rules 67A (1), (5) and (6) instruct the taxing master
on the performance of their duties under the new rule.
11
It seems to me, therefore, that the approach to setting
a scale of costs under Rule 67A (3) should be, first, to identify the
appropriate
scale (“A”, “B” or “C”)
in light of the importance, value and complexity of the case, and
then
consider whether, because of inartful or unethical conduct of
the nature identified in Rule 67A (2), that scale should be reduced,
such that the successful party should not be able to recover
counsel’s costs to the extent that they would otherwise have
been entitled.
The
application of the rule to pending cases
12
It seems to me that the 12 April 2024 amendments can
only apply prospectively. This means that a costs order under Rule
67A (3)
should be made on cases instituted before 12 April 2024 but
heard thereafter. The scale nominated in the order will only apply to
work done on the matter after 12 April 2024. Take, for example, a
motion instituted in 2023, in which written argument was filed
in
January 2024, and in which oral argument was presented on 15 April
2024. A party and party costs order on the “C”
scale is
made on 15 April 2024. The “C” scale will only apply to
counsel’s preparation and attendances (if they
are otherwise
recoverable) after 12 April 2024, to the appearance itself, and to
any recoverable post-hearing attendances. Fees
for work done before
12 April 2024 will be recoverable under the rules applicable to the
taxation of counsel’s costs as they
were then.
13
To hold otherwise would either fail to give effect to
the rule, or retrospectively revalue legal services purchased under a
different
dispensation and structure of expectations. Neither of
these alternatives is desirable.
The
application of Rule 67A to this case
14
Despite its brevity, Rule 67A contains a potentially
sophisticated mechanism for placing a value on advocacy. Although it
has no
direct impact on what counsel will be able to recover from
their attorney or client, it has the potential to send a message to
the parties about the importance of their case, and how artfully and
ethically counsel for the winning side has pressed the case
entrusted
to them. When setting a scale under the rule, a court will generally
be careful to say whether its decision has been
influenced only by
the nature or complexity of the matter, or also by the way the case
was presented to it.
15
It also seems to me that the rule implies that the
power to reduce the scale on which counsel’s costs are awarded
should be
exercised sparingly, and only where a case for its exercise
has been made out. A Judge generally approaches a case on the
assumption
that it has been competently litigated, that counsel has
done what is within their power to ensure substantial compliance with
the applicable rules, and that argument and evidence has taken as
long as it needs to take. It is only where there has been a marked
departure from these norms that a court should consider lowering the
scale on which counsel’s costs are awarded.
16
Likewise, the default position set under the rule is
that, in the absence of contrary indication, counsel’s
costs will
be recovered on scale “A”. Scale “A”,
it seems to me, is the appropriate scale on which to make an award
unless the application of a higher scale has been justified by
careful reference to clearly identified features of the case that
mark it out as unusually complex, important or valuable.
Run-of-the-mill cases, which must be the vast majority of cases in
the
High Court, should not attract an order on the B or C scales.
17
In the case presently before me, the issues were
uncomplicated. The entire case was determined on the bases of
jurisdiction and
standing. The merits never became relevant. The
hearing lasted well under an hour. The case was competently and
ethically pursued
by all concerned. The “A” scale is
plainly applicable.
18
Perhaps predictably, both counsel for the first
respondent, Enaex, and Mr. Coertze, motivated for an order on the “C”
scale. Mr. Alli, who appeared for Enaex, emphasised that Mr. Itzkin,
who drew Enaex’s heads but did not appear at the hearing,
had
asked for an attorney and client costs order in his written
submissions. Mr. Alli did not press for that order at the hearing,
however, and I would not have been inclined to grant it if he had.
19
There mere fact that punitive costs were sought by the
successful party does not mean that a higher scale of counsel’s
costs
ought to be awarded on the party and party scale. The focus of
Rule 67A is not on the conduct of the losing party. It is primarily
on the nature of the case, and, secondarily, on the way that the
successful party presented it. The misconduct of the unsuccessful
party, if any, is irrelevant once a court has declined to award a
punitive costs order against them.
20
Mr. Alli also submitted that the “C” scale
is appropriate because the matter was one of considerable importance
to Enaex.
There are two reasons why that submission cannot be
accepted. The first is that there is no information on the papers
that tells
me just how important the case really is to Enaex. I am
happy to accept that litigation is
per se
important to the
parties embroiled in it, but the facts necessary to draw the
inference that this case is particularly important
to Enaex are not
on the papers. The second reason is that the importance of a case
must be assessed objectively. Whatever Enaex
subjectively believes
about the case, the facts on the papers suggest that this litigation
– a claim brought by a disgruntled
ex-employee – is an
ordinary business hazard. It is the sort of case that any corporate
entity ought at some point to expect
to have to fight. Objectively,
it is neither important nor unusual.
21
Finally, Mr. Alli submitted that the matter was one of
some complexity. Perhaps there might have been complex questions had
I reached
the merits. But the bases on which I dismissed the claim
were far from complicated. I accept that a litigant who takes a
simple
point
in limine
, such as the absence of standing or the
court’s lack of jurisdiction, will generally plead over and
deal with the matter
on its more complex merits just in case their
submissions
in limine
fail. However, what counts under Rule
67A is the complexity of the argument that actually had to be
advanced by counsel, rather
than the potential complexity of the case
in all its facets. In this case, the argument that had to be advanced
was short and straightforward.
22
Mr. Coertze also suggested that this is a particularly
complex case. For the reasons I have already given, that submission
must
be rejected.
23
Mr. Coertze finally argued that the amount of damages
Mr. Mashavha claimed in the event of success (some R27 million), also
took
the case out of the ordinary. It seems that Mr. Coertze may have
overlooked that the claim for damages was never advanced against
his
client. It follows that, formidable though they no doubt are, Mr.
Coertze’s skills, and the maximum that may be recovered
to
remunerate them, cannot be assessed in light of the size of Mr.
Mashavha’s damages claim.
No
order necessary
24
Over a decade ago, the Constitutional Court expressed
“disquiet” at how “counsel's fees have burgeoned in
recent
years”. “To say that they have skyrocketed”
the Court held, “is no loose metaphor”. “No matter
the complexity of the issues” the Court could “find no
justification, in a country where disparities are gross and
poverty
is rife, to countenance appellate advocates charging hundreds of
thousands of rands to argue an appeal” (see
Camps Bay
Ratepayers and Residents Association v Harrison
2012 (11) BCLR
1143
(CC) at paragraph 10).
25
There is no indication that fee inflation has checked
itself since then. Rule 67A is perhaps an acknowledgement of this
reality.
An advocate remunerated at the top end of scale “C”
will be able to charge R4500 per hour (R45000 per day under the
ten-hour per day billing system on which the referral bar operates).
At the top end of scale “B”, the figures are R3000
per
hour and R30000 per day. I emphasise that these figures are the
maximum that can be recovered on these scales from the losing
party
for the winning party’s counsel’s fees on the party and
party scale. They do not represent what may actually
be charged. At
the upper end of the commercial bar, counsel’s day fee is often
much higher than the top end of scale “C”
would allow. As
a result, and notwithstanding the Constitutional Court’s
strictures, counsel’s fees in contested matters
in the High
Court regularly run to the “hundreds of thousands of rands”.
26
Twelve years after the judgment in
Camps Bay
,
these levels of remuneration remain unimaginable to all but a tiny
minority of the most privileged in our society. They are handsome
rewards for long hours of sometimes very hard work in matters that
can be forensically challenging. But when Judges are required
to
assign a maximum recoverable value to counsel’s work, which is
what rule 67A now requires us to do, we would do substantial
injustice if we were help inflate fees still further by allowing
parties to recover on the “B” and “C”
scales
in anything but truly important, complex or valuable cases. The “duty
of diffidence” that the Constitutional
Court urged on the legal
profession in
Camps Bay
(at paragraph 11) ought also, in my
view, to be observed by Judges in applying rule 67A.
27
To do otherwise would surely push the cost of legal
services still further beyond the means of the vast majority of South
Africans.
In a society based on constitutional rules and a supreme
law bill of rights underwritten by an independent judiciary, the
courts
should ideally be accessible to everyone on equal terms. We do
not live in a society marked by equal access to justice for all,
and
there are limits to what a Judge can do to create one. But the least
that can be expected of us is to exercise the powers we
do have in a
manner that avoids making things worse.
28
In this case, recovery of counsel’s fees on scale
“A” is more than sufficient. Given that, under Rule 67A
(3)
(c), the application of the “A” scale is the effect
of my judgment as it currently stands, I decline to make any further
order.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 22
April 2024.
HEARD
ON:
16 April 2024
DECIDED
ON:
22 April 2024
For
the Applicant:
Z Buthelezi
Instructed by Letheba Makgato and
Associates
For
the First Respondent:
Y Alli (heads of argument on the merits having been
drawn
by R Itzkin)
Instructed
by Webber Wentzel
For
the Fourth Respondent A Coertze
Instructed by Pritchard Attorneys Inc
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