Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 418South Africa
Rand Water Board and Another v Kariki Pipeline and Water Project (Pty) Ltd (A2023/080029 & 2017/2774) [2024] ZAGPJHC 418 (22 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
22 April 2024
Headnotes
“in this instance, we are concerned with a matter where the SCA, under its powers in terms of section 17(2)(b), was approached for and granted leave to appeal. As indicated, section 17(5) empowers the court in such circumstances to set conditions to attach to a leave to appeal. Logically, it would seem to me that, since the SCA was the court that considered the application for leave to appeal, its adjudication of the application would have to be regulated by the rules applicable to process in that court”.
Judgment
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## Rand Water Board and Another v Kariki Pipeline and Water Project (Pty) Ltd (A2023/080029 & 2017/2774) [2024] ZAGPJHC 418 (22 April 2024)
Rand Water Board and Another v Kariki Pipeline and Water Project (Pty) Ltd (A2023/080029 & 2017/2774) [2024] ZAGPJHC 418 (22 April 2024)
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sino date 22 April 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no: A2023-080029
&
2017/2774
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
DATE: 22/04/2024
In
the matter between:
RAND
WATER
BOARD
First Applicant
CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER: RAND WATER BOARD
Second Applicant
and
KARIKI
PIPELINE AND WATER PROJECT (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Wijnbeek,
AJ
1.
The
respondent filed its appeal record and heads of argument in an appeal
before the full bench of this court without entering good
and
sufficient security for applicants’ costs in the appeal.
2.
The
applicant accordingly applies for an order setting aside the
aforesaid as irregular steps. In argument the respondent
also
asks that the court declare that the appeal lapsed, yet such relief
does not form part of the Notice of Motion.
3.
The
applicants, represented by Advocates Tsatsawane SC and Loabile-Rantao
argues that the respondent failed to comply with Uniform
Rule 49(13)
and that the steps taken in prosecuting the appeal are irregular. The
respondent, represented by Mr Marumoagae argues
that the Respondent
is not bound to enter security for the applicants’ costs in the
appeal because the Supreme Court of Appeal
granted leave to appeal.
4.
To
avoid confusion in reference to the parties in this application
vis-à-vis their description in the appeal, the applicants
will
jointly be referred to as “Rand Water” and the respondent
as “Kariki”.
Brief
History on the Facts
5.
In
June 2020, Kariki filed a notice of intention to amend the main
application it instituted against Rand Water. The main application
deals with allegations of tender irregularity.
6.
Rand
Water objected to the notice of intention to amend, and the court
subsequently dismissed Kariki’s application for leave
to amend
its notice of motion. Kariki thereafter applied for leave to
appeal to this court, and upon its dismissal, petitioned
for leave to
appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal. The SCA granted leave to
appeal to the Full Bench of this Court.
7.
In
granting leave to appeal, the Supreme Court of Appeal did not speak
about security for costs of the appeal.
8.
Kariki
proceeded to lodge copies of the appeal record and filed heads of
argument without providing security for the pending appeal.
9.
Rand
Water says that Kariki had to provide security for its costs:
Rand Water argues that the Supreme Court of Appeal did
not release
Kariki from the obligation to provide security for costs as required
by Rule 48(13)(a), Kariki did not ask for such
an exemption from the
Supreme Court of Appeal, and Rand Water has not waived its right to
security for costs.
10.
Kariki,
on the other hand, argues that section 17(2)(b) of the Superior
Courts Act read with Supreme Court Rule 9 finds application
and that
it was accordingly not obliged to render security for costs in an
instance where the SCA granted leave to appeal to the
full bench of
this court.
Consideration
11.
Uniform
Rule of Court 49(13) reads as follows:
(a)
Unless
the respondent waives his or her right to security or the court in
granting leave to appeal or subsequently on application
to it, has
released the appellant wholly or partially from that obligation, the
appellant shall, before lodging copies of the record
on appeal with
the registrar, enter into good and sufficient security for the
respondent’s costs of appeal.
(b)
In
the event of failure by the parties to agree on the amount of
security, the registrar shall fix the amount and the appellant
shall
enter into security in the amount so fixed or such percentage thereof
as the court has determined, as the case may be.
12.
Section
17(2)(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
provides for the
application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of appeal if the
High Court refused leave and reads as follows:
If
leave to appeal in terms of paragraph (a
[1]
)
is refused, it may be granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal on
application filed with the registrar of that court within one
month
after such refusal, or such longer period as may on good cause be
allowed, and the Supreme Court of Appeal may vary any order
as to
costs made by the judge or judges concerned in refusing leave.
13.
Supreme
Court
Rule 9
deals with security, stating the following:
When
required
(1)
If
the court which grants leave to appeal orders the appellant to
provide security for the respondent’s costs of appeal, the
appellant shall, before lodging the record with the registrar, enter
into sufficient security for the respondent’s costs
of appeal
and shall inform the registrar accordingly.
Form
or amount of security
(2)
If
the form or amount of security is contested, the registrar of the
court a quo shall determine the issue and this decision shall
be
final.
14.
Kariki
argues that the decision in
Allem
[2]
is dispositive of the argument and that the Court ought not to follow
the decision in
Strouthos
[3]
.
14.1.
The
Court in
Allem
per paragraph 60 held that “
in
this instance, we are concerned with a matter where the SCA, under
its powers in terms of
section 17(2)(b)
, was approached for and
granted leave to appeal. As indicated,
section 17(5)
empowers
the court in such circumstances to set conditions to attach to a
leave to appeal. Logically, it would seem to me that,
since the SCA
was the court that considered the application for leave to appeal,
its adjudication of the application would have
to be regulated by the
rules applicable to process in that court
”.
14.2.
In
dealing with
Rule 9
, the court in
Allem
held in paragraph 61 that “
in
cases where leave to appeal is granted by the SCA under its rules,
the precondition for a demand that security be given must
be an order
by the SCA that it be done. I am of the view that
Rule 49(13)
does not find application, because the order is one made by the SCA.
And under that order there is no entitlement that must
be waived and
the order granting leave to appeal by implication absolved the
respondent form any duty to furnish costs.
”
15.
In
Strouthos
[4]
Daniels J held that the Court in granting leave to appeal as opposed
to the court in which the appeal is made or the court hearing
the
appeal, is the court designated to order
the
release
of the appellant from his or her obligation to lodge security. (my
emphasis)
16.
Rand
Water argues that
Strouthos
was correctly decided. Rand Water also places reliance on the
judgments of
Boland
Konstruksie
[5]
,
Eagle
Creek Investments
[6]
and
Panayiotou
[7]
.
Strouthos,
Boland Konstruksie, Eagle Creek,
and
Panayiotou
deal with applications where the SCA granted leave to appeal to the
full bench of the High Court.
16.1.
It
was held in
Boland Konstruksie
that
where security is not provided as stipulated in
Rule 49(13)
an appeal
may be struck off the roll. The Court has a discretion to
condone such non-compliance.
[8]
16.2.
The
relief sought in
Eagle
Creek
was that certain steps taken by the respondents, such as filing of
the record, applying for an appeal date, and filing of heads
of
argument be set aside as irregular steps
plus
a declaratory order that the appeal lapsed.
[9]
16.3.
The
court in
Eagle
Creek
[10]
referred to
Jyoti
Structures Africa
[11]
concluding that the lodging of the record with the Registrar prior to
the provision of security constitutes an irregularity as
envisaged in
Uniform Rule of Court 30A.
16.4.
In
Panayiotou
the
court held that the failure to serve an application for leave to
appeal within the prescribed time resulted in the lapsing of
the
right to apply for leave to appeal, and only on the granting of
condonation would it be revived.
[12]
17.
Two
recent judgments, namely that of
Jeanru
[13]
and
Gruskin
[14]
are informative of the decision that this court is bound to make.
18.
In
both
Jeanru
and
Gruskin
,
the SCA granted the parties leave to appeal whereafter the appellants
did not enter security for costs. Issues arose on
whether the
appellants were obliged to enter into security for the respondents’
costs in terms of Uniform
Rule 49(13).
0cm; line-height: 150%">
19.
In
Jeanru
,
the appellant ‘accepted the legal position’ to be that it
was obliged to enter security, unless it was released from
such
obligation by court or by the respondent waiving its right.
[15]
The court said that the consequence of a finding of irregularity
would be that the appeal would have to be removed from the
roll or
that the appeal run the risk of being struck off.
[16]
20.
The
appellant in
Jeanru
’s
argument was that
Rule 47(13)
was promulgated outside the powers of
the Rules Board. This argument was dismissed.
[17]
Consequently the application for a date for hearing of the appeal,
was set aside as constituting an irregular step.
21.
In
Gruskin,
the appellant argued that because the SCA granted leave to appeal and
not the High Court, it was only the SCA that could order
the
respondent to provide security. Accordingly, in the absence of
an order pursuant to SCA
rule 9(1)
, the respondent was under no legal
duty to furnish security for costs in the pending appeal. The court
dismissed the argument and
ordered the appellant (as respondent in
the application before that court) to provide security.
[18]
The facts in
Gruskin
are on all fours with the application that this court must decide.
22.
Windel
J holds the view in
Gruskin
that
Rule 49(13)
and SCA
Rule 9
deal with the same subject matter and
that the respective rules are to be construed together and
harmoniously. Accordingly,
she concludes that –
22.1.
SCA
Rule 9
only finds application in cases where leave to appeal was
granted by the High Court to the SCA, and not to cases where leave to
appeal was granted by the SCA to the Full Court.
[19]
22.2.
SCA
Rule 9(1)
must, to make sense, be read to apply to instances where
the High Court did not release the appellant from providing security
for
costs. When not released from the obligation, an appellant
cannot lodge its record with the Registrar at the SCA before security
for costs has been provided. This interpretation explains the logic
of SCA
Rule 9(2)
that provides for the Registrar of the court of
first instance that shall determine the form or amount of security if
the form
of security is contested.
[20]
22.3.
Rule
49
governs all Full Court appeals in the High Court and
Rule 49(13)
must therefore be given effect to when the SCA grants leave to appeal
to the Full Court.
[21]
23.
Although
Rand Water presented a compelling argument that the appeal lapsed,
inviting the court to make such finding, the court is
not willing to
make such finding where the notice of motion does not expressly seek
such relief.
Findings
24.
This
Court forms the view that it cannot follow the
dicta
in
Allem
;
Gruskin
is correct.
25.
I
accordingly find that Kariki is bound to comply with
Rule 49(13)
where the SCA granted leave to appeal. The steps taken by Kariki to
file the appeal record and heads of argument are irregular.
There is no reason why costs ought not to follow the result, albeit
that the Court cannot sustain the claim that costs be on the
attorney
and client scale. Rand Water accordingly succeeds with the
relief sought in prayer 1 of its Notice of Motion dated
5 October
2023, with costs on the ordinary scale.
26.
In
the result, the following order is made:
26.1.
The
filing of the respondent’s appeal record and the filing of the
respondent’s heads of argument in the appeal under
case number
A2023/080029 are declared irregular steps.
26.2.
The
respondent is to pay the applicant’s costs on a party and party
scale.
WIJNBEEK
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties/ their legal representatives by email and
by uploading to the
electronic file on Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
22 April 2024.
Appearances
For
the applicants:
Adv Tsatsawane SC with Adv
Loabile Rantao
Raborifi
R Inc Attorneys
For
the respondent:
Mr Cmarumoagae
Instructed
by:
Marumoagae Attorneys Inc.
Date
of hearing:
15
April 2024
Date
of judgment:
22 April 2024
[1]
Subsection
2(a) reads:
Leave
to appeal may be granted by the judge or judges against whose
decision an appeal is to be made or, if not readily available,
by
any other judge or judges of the same court or Division.
[2]
Dr
Maureen Allem Inc v Baard
2022 (3) SA 207
(GJ) (“Allem”)
[3]
Strouthos
v Shear
2003 (4) SA 137
(T) (“Strouthos”) at 140G
[4]
Strouthos supra also with reference to 140H-I
[5]
Boland
Konstruksie Maatskappy (Edms) Bpk v Petlen Properties (Edms) Bpk
1974 (4) SA 291
(C) (“Boland Konstruksie”)
[6]
Eagle
Creek Investments 472 (Pty) Ltd v Focus Connection (Pty) Ltd and
Another
[2018] JOL 40609
(GJ) (“Eagle Creek”)
[7]
Panayiotou
v Shoprite Checkers
2016 (3) SA 110
(GJ) (“Panayiotou”)
[8]
Boland
Konstruksie supra
at
293D-H
[9]
Eagle
Creek supra paragraph 1
[10]
Eagle Creek supra paragraph 12
[11]
Jyoti
Structures Africa v KRB/Masana
2011 (3) SA 231
(GSJ)
[12]
Panayiotou
paragraphs
11 and 13-15
[13]
Jeanru
Konstruksie (Pty) Ltd v Botes
[2023] JOL 59475
(GP) (“Jeanru”)
[14]
Gruskin
v Gruskin
[2023] JOL 58986
(GJ) (“Gruskin”)
[15]
Jeanru
supra paragraph 15
[16]
Jeanru
supra paragraph 10
[17]
Jeanru
supra paragraph 29
[18]
Gruskin
supra paragraph 30
[19]
Gruskin
supra paragraph 15
[20]
Gruskin
supra paragraph 18
[21]
Gruskin
supra paragraph 20
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