Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 676South Africa
Ntintili v City Of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (788/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 676 (15 July 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ntintili v City Of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (788/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 676 (15 July 2024)
Ntintili v City Of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (788/2015) [2024] ZAGPJHC 676 (15 July 2024)
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sino date 15 July 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case No: 788/2015
1.REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
2.OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
YES
/NO
3. REVISED
15 July 2024
In
the matter between:
NOKUTLA
LUCY NTINTILI
Applicant
and
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment/reasons is deemed to be 15 July 2024.
JUDGMENT
MALINDI J
Introduction
[1]
On 26 or 27 February 2024 I made an order
dismissing the applicants application for condemnation of her late
delivery to the respondent
of her notice of intention to institute
legal action against the respondent within a period of six months
from date of the incident
giving rise to because of action that her
claim for damages is based on.
[2]
This constitutes the reasons for the
judgment after a request for reasons were served on or about 7 March
2024.
Background
[3]
the applicant is a 59 year old woman who at
the time of the incident was approximately 48 years old.
[4]
The applicant agrees that on 29 September
2013 “approximately 21h15, at or near Mlangeni Street, in the
vicinity of White
City Jabavu, Soweto … (she) was walking when
she stepped on an open municipal drainage opening, stumbled and fell
into such
drainage opening.” As a result of the incident she
suffered injury for which she sues the City of Johannesburg.
[5]
The applicant issued summons on 8 January
2015, a year and three months after the incident. She alleges that
she complied with section
3 of the Institution of Legal Proceedings
Against Certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002 (“the Act”).
Section 3(1)
and (2) of the Act requires that notice in writing of
the intention to institute legal proceedings must be served on the
organ
of state “within six months from the date on which the
debt became due”.
[6]
The summons was served by the Sheriff at
the City of Johannesburg's offices on 19 January 2015.
[7]
In the application for condonation dated
25
April 2017
the applicant’s
attorney states that on 4 December 2013 he erroneously served the
notice on the Minister of Roads and Transport.
It was a year later on
12 December 2024 that he became aware that the notice ought to have
been served on the City of Johannesburg
and did so on the same day.
[8]
When the plaintiff stated in her summons
served on 19 January 2015 that she had complied with section 3 of the
Act it was not true
to the extent that the notice had not been served
within six months of the debt arising on the City of Johannesburg,
although it
was true that the late notice had been served on 12
December 2024.
[9]
The applicant’s attorneys were served
with the respondents special plea and the plea over on 18 June 2015
wherein the respondent
raised a special plea of non-compliance with
the Act. It was only on 24 April 2017, some 22 months after the
special plea, that
an application for condonation was launched.
[10]
On 23 March 2016 the respondent requested
to be furnished with the notice referred to in the particulars of
claim but it was not
forthcoming. This is the third instance when the
applicant should have acted expeditiously in respect of the
application for condonation.
Discussion
[11]
An application for condonation must be
brought as soon as a party becomes aware that condonation of their
late pleading will be
required. The applicant’s attorney became
aware when they realised that the notice was served on the wrong
organ of state
and corrected the error on 12 December 2014. Knowledge
of the requirements to serve the notice presupposes that they were
aware
of the six month period applicable. They failed to act on this
knowledge.
[12]
The second occasion that the applicant’s
attorneys ought to have launched the application, if for whatever
reason they did
not appreciate the six months requirement when
they read the Act in December 2023, is when they received the special
plea
on 18 June 2015. Instead they waited for about 22 months before
they did so on 25 April 2017.
[13]
Both
occasions manifest negligence on the part of the attorneys. As was
said in
Saloojee
v
Minister
of Community Development,
[1]
the
negligence of an attorney cannot always be an excuse for failure to
discharge their mandate to prosecute their client’s
case
professionally. This is one case where the litigant cannot be excused
on account of the negligence of her attorneys.
[14]
In
Mohlomi
v Minister of Defence
[2]
the
reason for the notice requirements is so that an organ of state is
afforded an opportunity to immediately investigate the alleged
incident and to investigate claims against it so that it can take
appropriate legal steps timeously.
[15]
This
principle was explained in
Mothupi
v Member of the Executive Council, Department of Health Free State
Province
[3]
as
follows:
“
The
object of a provision such as s 3 is to enable the State, a large and
cumbersome organisation, to investigate claims so as to
consider
whether to settle or compromise a claim before costs escalate
unnecessarily, or to properly prepare its defence –
which may
be frustrated if it is unable to investigate relatively soon after
the alleged incident occurred
.”
[16]
The respondent learnt about the incident
for the first time when it was served with the already late notice on
12 December 2014,
a year and three months after the alleged incident.
By this time, the respondent had lost the opportunity to investigate
where
the “drainage opening” is and whether it was true
that it was open on 29 September 2013. In my view, the respondent
was
greatly prejudiced by the lack of detail as to the condition of the
“drainage opening” at the time of the alleged
incident.
[17]
Secondly, save for stating that the notice
was served seven months out of time, and therefore not inordinately
late, and that lateness
was not willful, the applicant does not
explain fully the circumstances that led to the lateness of the
notice. As stated above,
the first period is from December 2014 when
she became aware that the notice was served on the wrong organ of
state and will therefore
be late when served on the City of
Johannesburg; the second period is from 18 June 2015, the date of the
special plea, to April
2017 when the application was launched.
[18]
In
her heads of argument, the applicant attributes these inexplicable
separate delays to the “lack of experience of the attorney.”
Firstly, this was not pleaded in the application. Secondly, it is
negligence that does not excuse the applicant’s failure
to
apply for condonation timelessly. Thirdly, no prospect of success are
pleaded. It has been said that reasonable prospects of
success
militate in favour of the grant of condonation even if the
explanation for the delay is not satisfactory.
[4]
Such
a case has not been made in this case.
[19]
I conclude that no good cause has been
shown for this court to grant condonation.
Conclusion
[20]
Although
the claim has not prescribed in terms of the Prescription Act,
[5]
the
notice prescribed by act 40 of 2002 is inordinately late, without a
full and proper explanation for its lateness. Secondly,
the lateness
defeats the purpose of the enactment of the Act which is to prevent
or avoid prejudice to organs of state in instances
where
investigations of the claim would be undermined by the disappearance
of evidence required to prepare a defence especially
in circumstances
such as those of the respondent. The “drainage opening”
or manhole situation would have changed drastically
one year and
three months from 29 September 2013 to when the incident allegedly
took place, to 12 December 2014 when the notice
was received.
[21]
Therefore, the order made on 26 February
2024 is confirmed as follows:
1.
The application for condonation in terms of
Section 3 of Act 40 of 2002 is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is to pay the cost of the
application.
MALINDI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT:
Adv R Mthembu
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MN Mkansi Incorporated
COUNSEL FOR THE
RESPONDENT:
Adv S Dlali
INSTRUCTED
BY:
K Matji & Partners Attorneys
DATE OF
HEARING:
26 February 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT:
15 July 2024
[1]
1965
(2) SA 135 (A).
[2]
1997
(1) SA 124 (CC).
[3]
[2016]
ZASCA 27.
[4]
Melane
v Santam Insurance Co Ltd 1962 (4) SA 531 (A).
[5]
Prescription
Act 68 of 1969
.
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