Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 588South Africa
SA Retail Properties (Pty) Limited v Black Panther Lounge (Pty) Limited and Another (2023/013774) [2024] ZAGPJHC 588 (24 June 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## SA Retail Properties (Pty) Limited v Black Panther Lounge (Pty) Limited and Another (2023/013774) [2024] ZAGPJHC 588 (24 June 2024)
SA Retail Properties (Pty) Limited v Black Panther Lounge (Pty) Limited and Another (2023/013774) [2024] ZAGPJHC 588 (24 June 2024)
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sino date 24 June 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023/013774
1.
REPORTABLE:
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
3.
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
SA
RETAIL PROPERTIES (PTY) LIMITED
Plaintiff
and
BLACK
PANTHER LOUNGE (PTY) LIMITED
First
Defendant
HENRI
EL HAGE
Second
Defendant
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
via e-mail, by being uploaded
to CaseLines/Court online and by
release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand- down is deemed to be
10h00 on 24 June 2024.
Order: Paragraph [24] of this
judgment.
JUDGMENT
TODD, AJ:
[1]
This matter became before me on the
unopposed motion roll on 4 June 2024.
[2]
The Plaintiff brought three claims arising
out of the conclusion of a written agreement of lease between the
Plaintiff and the First
Defendant. The Second Defendant had bound
himself as surety for and co-principal debtor with the First
Defendant for its obligations
under the lease.
[3]
Following a breach of the agreement by the
First Defendant, the Plaintiff cancelled the agreement and secured an
eviction order
against the First Defendant.
[4]
The Plaintiff then instituted these
proceedings, making three claims. The first, Claim A, was for arrear
rental due under the lease
agreement. The second, Claim B, was for
damages caused by the early cancellation of the lease agreement. The
third, Claim C, was
for a portion of a tenant installation allowance
provided for in the lease agreement, following its early
cancellation.
[5]
In the default judgment application which
came before me on 4 June 2024 the Plaintiff sought judgment for
Claims A and C only. In
an affidavit explaining the reasons for
re-enrolling the matter on the unopposed roll the Plaintiff’s
attorney set out the
history of the matter in some detail. In brief
summary, the Defendants had entered appearance to defend but then
failed to deliver
a plea. On 6 November 2023 the Plaintiff served a
notice of bar on the First and Second Defendants. No plea was
subsequently delivered
and both First and Second Defendants have
accordingly been barred from pleading.
[6]
The matter was then enrolled for default
judgment on 18 January 2024. On 17 January 2024, the day before that
hearing, the Defendants
served various requests and an “application
for condonation and extension of time limits to plead”, in
effect applying
to uplift the bar. These papers were served on the
Plaintiff but had not been filed, by being uploaded to Caselines,
when the matter
was called on 18 January 2024.
[7]
Nevertheless the Defendants’ counsel,
Mr Mawere, appeared for the Defendants on that date and sought a
postponement of the
matter to enable the Defendants to proceed with
their application to uplift the bar. The matter was then postponed,
with the Defendants
ordered to pay the wasted costs on an attorney
and client scale.
[8]
The purpose of the postponement, as
explained by the Plaintiff’s attorney in the affidavit that I
have referred to, which
has not been answered or contradicted, was to
give the First and Second Defendants an opportunity to file the
application for the
upliftment of bar which had been served the day
before the hearing on 18 January 2024 but had not been uploaded to
Caselines. The
postponement provided the First and Second Defendants
with an opportunity to ensure that that application was properly
delivered
and to take steps to prosecute it.
[9]
In fact, the Defendants took no such step
and did not, in the days and weeks the postponement of the
matter on 18 January
2024, either deliver or in any other way proceed
with that application.
[10]
On 20 February 2024 the Plaintiff’s
attorneys addressed correspondence to the Defendants recording that
despite the Defendants
having sought condonation and an extension of
the time limit within which to file a plea to the main action they
had still not,
as at that date, filed their application on the Court
Online platform, and that this had caused unnecessary complications
and undue
and prejudicial delays. The letter continued as follows:
“
Failure
to upload your client’s application means that it is not
actually before the Court, which cannot consider it, and
we cannot
formally respond to it. Your clients’ failure to upload the
application is indicative of its males fides and intention
to delay
the matter indefinitely.
We therefore
request that you file your clients’ application on the court
online platform without delay, and by no later than
26 February 2024.
Should you fail to do so our instructions are to proceed with an
application for default judgment and a copy
of this letter will be
used in further legal proceedings against your client.
”
[11]
The Defendants did not answer this
correspondence, and did not take any further steps to ensure that
their application to uplift
the bar was delivered. Nor did they take
any other steps to prosecute that application.
[12]
As a result, the Plaintiff did what it had
said it would, which was to again take steps to enrol the matter on
the unopposed roll
and to seek judgment by default.
[13]
When the matter was called on the unopposed
roll on 4 June 2024 Mr Mawere again appeared for the Defendants. He
conceded that the
Defendants had taken no steps to file their
application to uplift the bar that had been placed on them, and
similarly conceded
that they had taken no steps to prosecute that
application in any manner. Mr Mawere submitted, however, that the
Plaintiff was
nevertheless not entitled to re-enrol the default
judgment application.
[14]
Mr Mawere submitted that the Plaintiff was
precluded from re-enrolling the matter for default judgment in
circumstances in which
there was an unresolved application to uplift
a bar. This was so, Mr Mawere submitted, notwithstanding the fact
that the Defendants
had not in fact filed that application or taken
any steps to proceed with it. Instead, Mr Mawere submitted, the
Plaintiff was restricted
to filing a notice under Rule 30 of the
Rules of this Court, contending that an irregular step had been taken
by the Defendants,
and applying to set that step aside. The “step”
in this case, Mr Mawere submitted, which the Plaintiff needed to set
aside, was the service of an application which had never been filed
or proceeded with by the Defendants. Mr Mawere submitted that
by
re-enrolling the matter for default judgment in these circumstances,
the Plaintiff was attempting to by-pass the provisions
of Rule 30,
that this was impermissible, and that the only step available to the
Plaintiff in those circumstances was to make use
of the provisions of
Rule 30.
[15]
Mr Mawere concluded by submitting, in the
alternative, that an appropriate course of action in the
circumstances would be for this
Court to stand the matter down until
its Thursday roll in order to give the Defendants an opportunity to
file the application which
they had thus far failed to file or
otherwise to pursue over a period of some 6 months, so that this
Court could then consider
the Plaintiff’s application for
default judgment in the context of that application. Mr Mawere made
this submission accepting
that at the time when this matter was
called on 4 June 2024 the Defendants’ application to uplift the
bar, which had been
served on the Plaintiff on 17 January 2024, had
still not been filed.
[16]
I declined Mr Mawere’s invitation to
stand the matter down until my Thursday roll, and reserved judgment
on the application
for default judgment. In the course of preparing
this judgment I noted from the court file that on 6 June 2024, two
days after
I had reserved judgment, a further notice of motion was
uploaded by Mudzusi Molobela Atttorneys on behalf of the Second
Defendant
supported by an affidavit deposed to by the Second
Defendant. Those papers had been signed on 31 May 2024, but had not
been uploaded
prior to the hearing on 4 June 2024 and they were not
mentioned by Mr Mawere when he appeared for the Defendants on that
date.
The new application apparently seeks to have the matter removed
from the unopposed roll, ostensibly in reliance on the provisions
of
Rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules.
[17]
As indicated, that application was not
before Court on 4 June 2024 when the matter was argued in Court, and
Mr Mawere made no reference
to it. The application has not been
properly brought, and it is not clear what the purpose was of
uploading it after judgment had
been reserved in the mater.
Nevertheless, since it is possible that the Second Defendant may
nevertheless seek to contend that
it constitutes a further reason why
judgment should not be granted in this matter, I will deal with it
briefly. In short, the application
was brought late, was not advanced
when the matter was called on 4 June 2024, and in any event has no
merit.
[18]
As to Mr Mawere’s principal
submission, that when Defendants such as those in the present matter
have given notice of their
intention to bring an application and have
served papers on the Plaintiff without filing them, and have failed
to proceed with
the application, this constitutes an irregular step
and that a Plaintiff is precluded from seeking judgment to which it
is otherwise
entitled without first invoking the provisions of Rule
30 and requesting this Court to set aside the irregular step, this is
in
my view clearly not correct. If it were, a Defendant in the
position of the present Defendants would be able to delay judgment
indefinitely by taking one spurious step after another on each
occasion when a Plaintiff is otherwise entitled to judgment.
[19]
This is manifestly not the purpose of Rule
30. The authorities make it clear that a party is not obliged to
invoke the provisions
of Rule 30 but may also make use of any other
remedy available to it under the rules, and that a Plaintiff may
apply for judgment
by default without first making application to
have an irregular notice set aside: see
KDL
Motorcycles (Pt) Ltd v Pretorius Motors
1972 (1) SA 505
(O), Swart v
Flugel
1978 (3) SA 265
(E).
[20]
In my view, there are no grounds on which
to extend any further opportunity to the Defendants to bring an
application which they
ostensibly wished to prosecute in January of
this year but have failed to do so. I agree with the submission of Mr
Muchopa, who
appeared for the Plaintiff, that the conduct of the
Defendants constitutes an abuse of the process of this court, and is
clearly
a
male fides
and
dilatory attempt to avoid judgment being granted in a matter in which
the Plaintiffs are entitled to judgment.
[21]
Mr Mawere was unable to explain why, having
received notice of set down on the unopposed roll, the Defendants had
not placed any
material before this court that they might wish it to
consider. When the matter was argued there was no no application
before court
to uplift the bar, and it seems to me in any event that
in circumstances in which condonation was sought for that application
back
in January 2024 and no steps have been taken since then to
prosecute it, the prospects of condonation being granted would have
been remote.
[22]
In summary, it is clear that the strategy
being adopted by the Defendants is dilatory and amounts to an abuse
of the processes of
this Court. Had the Plaintiff sought such an
order I might have been inclined to grant costs on a punitive scale
on those grounds,
including an order that some or all of those costs
be paid
de boniis propriis
.
As it happens, costs on an attorney and client scale are provided for
in the agreement on which the claims are founded.
[23]
In the circumstances I am satisfied that
the Plaintiff was entitled to enrol the matter for default judgment
on the unopposed roll
as it did on 4 June 2024. I am also satisfied
that a case has been made for default judgment to be granted in
respect of Claims
A and C.
[24]
I make the following order:
Default judgment is granted against
the First and Second Defendants jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved,
for:
CLAIM A
1.
Payment of the sum of R1,368,140.96;
2.
Interest thereon at the rate of 10.75% per
annum,
a tempore morae,
to date of final payment; and
3.
Costs of suit on the scale as between
attorney and client.
CLAIM C
1.
Payment in the sum of R1,530,000.00;
2.
Interest thereon at the rate of 10.75% per
annum
, a tempore morae
,
to date of final payment; and
3.
Costs of suit on the scale as between
attorney and client.
C TODD
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of
Hearing:
4 June 2024
Date of Judgment:
24 June 2024
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Plaintiff:
M Muchopa
Instructed
by:
Hadar Incorporated
Counsel for the First and Second
Defendants: M Mawere
Instructed
by:
Carl van Zyl Attorneys and
Onah Attorneys Inc
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