Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 670South Africa
Eagle Two Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v City of Johannesburg (A5034/21) [2024] ZAGPJHC 670 (24 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 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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## Eagle Two Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v City of Johannesburg (A5034/21) [2024] ZAGPJHC 670 (24 July 2024)
Eagle Two Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v City of Johannesburg (A5034/21) [2024] ZAGPJHC 670 (24 July 2024)
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sino date 24 July 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEAL
CASE NUMBER: A5034/21
COURT
A QUO CASE NUMBER: 49337/2017
1.
REPORTABLE:
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
3.
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
EAGLE
TWO PROPERTY INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
EAGLE
THREE PROPERTY INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
and
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Respondent
In
re:
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
Appellant
and
EAGLE
TWO PROPERTY INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
EAGLE
THREE PROPERTY INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
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 July 2024.
Order: Paragraph [20] of
this judgment.
JUDGMENT
TODD, AJ:
[1]
This matter came before me on the unopposed
motion roll on Thursday 6 June 2024.
[2]
Although it had not been opposed and was
properly enrolled on the unopposed roll, when the matter was called
Mr Sithole appeared
for the Respondent, the City of Johannesburg. Mr
Sithole accepted that no notice had been given to oppose the matter
and that no
papers had been filed in opposition, but nevertheless
sought a postponement and an opportunity for the Respondent to file
papers.
He tendered the costs occasioned by the postponement.
[3]
Mr le Roux, who appeared for the
Applicants, submitted that no notice to oppose had been filed and
that the Respondent did not meet
the basic threshold of grounds for a
postponement.
[4]
The underlying application is a somewhat
unusual one. The Applicants seek to have an order made on terms which
it contends were
agreed between the parties’ legal
representatives in the course of settlement discussions entered into
previously, during
the course of a Full Court appeal.
[5]
The settlement agreement which the
Applicants rely upon followed discussions that had taken place
between the parties’ respective
legal teams, including
attorneys and counsel, after the appeal had been adjourned and the
parties had been encouraged by the Full
Court to settle the matter.
[6]
The terms of the agreement were set out in
an exchange of emails which recorded the key terms agreed, and in a
draft order incorporating
those terms, with some minor differences,
also exchanged and approved by both sides’ attorneys and
counsel.
[7]
The parties’ legal representatives
then agreed that the draft order would be sought on an unopposed
basis, and the matter
was enrolled on 2 February 2023 for that
purpose.
[8]
When the matter was called on that date, Mr
Sithole appeared and submitted that the Respondent’s legal
representatives had
not had authority to settle the matter on the
terms reflected in the draft order. The matter was then removed from
the unopposed
roll.
[9]
This led to the present application. The
Applicants contend that the matter was indeed settled on terms that
are clear, that were
negotiated between legal representatives who had
authority to resolve the matter, and that an order should
consequently be granted
in the terms agreed.
[10]
The matter has a regrettably long
litigation history having regard to the amount of money that is at
stake. It is a matter of significant
concern that a matter involving
a public authority should produce so much litigation, including a
significant number of interlocutory
applications, resulting in an
escalation of legal costs which, since legal representatives appear
able to agree on the terms of
an appropriate commercial settlement,
can and should be avoided and are already, or are likely to become,
disproportionate to the
amount in issue in the underlying dispute.
This was no doubt a consideration in the minds of the Full Court,
confronted with an
appeal by the Respondent against a refusal of a
rescission application, when it encouraged the parties to attempt to
settle the
matter and postponed the appeal for this purpose.
[11]
The parties’ respective legal
representatives successfully negotiated a settlement, on the terms
which the Applicants now
seek to embody in an order of this Court.
All of this seems eminently sensible.
[12]
Having
said that, Mr Sithole referred to the recent decision of the
Constitutional Court, handed down a few days before the matter
came
before me, in the matter of
City
of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality In re: Unlawful Occupiers 1
Argyle Street and Others v Rohlandt Holdings CC and Others
[1]
.
In that matter the Constitutional Court was satisfied that grounds
existed to rescind an order to which a legal representative
had
consented without the requisite authority.
[13]
Although there are presently no facts
before me to indicate that the legal representatives who concluded
the agreement reached between
the parties to this matter lacked
authority to do so, it is conceivable, in light of Mr Sithole’s
submissions, that this
may be established in answering papers if the
Respondent is permitted to deliver them. The point that Mr Sithole
made, as I understand
it, is that the Respondent contends that it has
legitimate grounds on which to dispute the authority of those who
purported to
settle the matter and should be given an opportunity to
deliver answering papers explaining why this is so.
[14]
In circumstances in which the Respondent
disputes that authority, even if I were to make an order on an
unopposed basis there is
a significant risk that this will lead to a
further rescission application in which the same issues will be
ventilated.
[15]
In those circumstances it seems to me that
the proper course of action is to postpone the matter and give the
Respondent an opportunity
to deliver answering papers explaining the
grounds on which it contends that the order sought should not be
made.
[16]
The Respondent should, at the same time,
carefully consider what I state in paragraph [10] above, and should
take care to ensure
that it does not continue to incur substantial
legal expenses which can and should be avoided. The costs order that
I make below
will result in further such expenses, which could have
been avoided if the matter had been attended to timeously. There is a
real
risk, if litigation continues, that further such costs will be
incurred. If they are, the question will arise whether the Respondent
is being properly advised by its legal representatives, whether
further costs should be awarded on a punitive scale, and whether
it
is the Respondent, its responsible officials, or its legal
representatives personally who should bear those costs. These will,
however, be questions for this court to consider further down the
line.
[17]
Mr Sithole indicated that the Respondent
tendered the costs wasted by the appearance on 6 June 2024. Mr le
Roux submitted that in
light of the late arrival of the Respondent in
the matter and the grounds on which it objected to an order being
made, costs should
be granted on a punitive scale.
[18]
In my view having regard to the litigation
history of the matter there are grounds on which to grant costs on a
punitive scale.
A Respondent is of course entitled to advance its
defence to an application, but it has timeframes within which to do
so and must
do so properly and not in a manner that results in
Applicants being strung along with the result, as here, that ongoing
costs are
incurred in litigation that could and should be dealt with
expeditiously and, where possible, resolved.
[19]
The order I make will now give the
Respondent an opportunity to lay out in plain terms the factual basis
on which it objects to
the settlement terms that were negotiated
between the parties’ respective legal representatives. Absent
good grounds, in
my view, the Respondent may face further punitive
costs orders in due course.
[20]
For present purposes, as regards the
unopposed application that came before me on 6 June 2024, I make the
following order:
1. The matter is
removed from the roll.
2. The City is
afforded ten (10) days from the date of this order to deliver
answering papers together with a condonation
application explaining
the late delivery of those papers.
3. The Respondent
is ordered to pay the Applicants’ costs, including the costs of
preparing for and appearing on 6 June
2024, on an attorney and client
scale.
C TODD
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of Hearing:
6 June 2020
Date of
Judgment:
24 July 2024
APPEARANCES
Counsel for the
Applicants: Adv. JHF le
Roux
Instructed
by:
DBM Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent: Adv. E Sithole
Instructed
by:
Nozuko Nxusani Attorneys
[1]
[2024]
ZACC 10
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