Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 914South Africa
Mthembu v Woolworths (Pty) Limited and Another (44235/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 914 (29 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
29 July 2024
Headnotes
and the claim will be dismissed.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mthembu v Woolworths (Pty) Limited and Another (44235/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 914 (29 July 2024)
Mthembu v Woolworths (Pty) Limited and Another (44235/2019) [2024] ZAGPJHC 914 (29 July 2024)
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sino date 29 July 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 44235/2019
DATE
:
29-07-2024
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.REVISED.
29
July 2024
In
the matter between
NONHLANHLA MTHEMBU
Plaintiff
and
WOOLWORTHS
(PTY) LIMITED
1
st
Defendant
ABSA
(PTY) LIMITED
2
nd
Defendant
JUDGMENT
EX TEMPORE
WILSON,
J:
In her particulars of claim the
plaintiff advances a case of injury to dignity, and to freedom and
security of the person arising
from a search that took place on 13
December 2016. The plaintiff’s
particulars of claim and her summons were served on the first
defendant on 17 June 2020, and
on the second defendant on 11 February
2020.
It is trite that under the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
, an ordinary delictual debt of this
nature falls due when the plaintiff has the minimum facts necessary
to sustain her cause of
action. The debt prescribes three years after
that date. Given that both defendants were served well after three
years from the
date on which the plaintiff alleges she was subjected
to an unlawful search, the defendants raise special pleas of
prescription.
The facts necessary to determine the
pleas are all common cause. Mr Carstens, who appeared for the second
defendant, suggested that
the plaintiff’s knowledge of the
identity of the second defendant had not been established as a matter
of evidence, and out
of an abundance of caution, he led the evidence
of a Mr Edgar Yende who on 13 December 2016 was employed by the
second defendant
and who confirmed that he introduced himself to the
plaintiff on the day that she was searched, and that he disclosed to
the plaintiff
that he worked for the second defendant. He was not
cross-examined on that issue, and to the extent that the plaintiff’s
knowledge of the identity of the second defendant as at 13 December
2016 was not common cause before Mr Carstens led his evidence,
it
must now be taken as undisputed.
Counsel for the plaintiff quite
properly accepted that the date on which the search took place and
the date on which the summons
and particulars of claim were served
are all common cause. She submitted however, that the plaintiff only
acquired knowledge of
the claim she brings today on 5 October 2017.
That was the date on which the plaintiff was acquitted on charges of
fraud in connection
with which the search of 13 December 2016 took
place. Counsel was unable to suggest what it was that became known to
the plaintiff
on the date of her acquittal that was not already known
to her in connection with the claim an injury to her dignity, and to
the
freedom and security of her person arising from the search 13
December 2016.
I cannot see on the papers, nor have I
heard any evidence of, what the plaintiff became aware of on the 5
October 2017 that is relevant
to the claim. Had of course the
plaintiff claimed against either of the defendants or against the
Minister of Police, or against
the National Director of Public
Prosecutions, for malicious prosecution, then the date on which she
was acquitted would have been
relevant, and she would have had to
have known the date on which the prosecution was discontinued to
complete her cause of action.
But as should be abundantly clear by
now, the plaintiff does not pursue a claim for malicious prosecution
or wrongful arrest and
indeed neither the Minister nor the Director
of Public Prosecutions are joined to these proceedings.
It is therefore clear to me that the
debt that the plaintiff claims on her particulars of claim fell due
when she was searched on
13 December 2016.
Her claim, absent special
circumstances, none of which were pleaded or proved before me,
therefore prescribed on 14 December 2019.
The first defendant having
been served more than six months after that date and the second
defendant having been served approximately
two months after that
date, I have no choice but to conclude that the claim the plaintiff
pursues today has prescribed.
Accordingly, the special pleas of
prescription will be upheld, and the claim will be dismissed.
On the question of costs, Mr Makola
asked for costs of counsel on the C scale. Mr Carstens asked for
costs of counsel on the B scale.
However, given the simplicity of the
point of prescription I have had to determine, it seems to me that
the default position in
rule 67A
is the appropriate one.
Rule 67A
makes it clear that, absent the court ordering otherwise, the A scale
is the scale on which costs should be taxed on an ordinary
party and
party order, and that is the order I shall make.
I register a degree of discomfort with
what appears to have been on the face of it a set of facts which
demonstrate that the plaintiff
approached her attorney in time to
institute the claim so as to interrupt prescription, but for whatever
reason that her attorneys
did not serve her summons and her
particulars of claim in time to interrupt prescription. Counsel for
the plaintiff suggested that
the defendants were difficult to find. I
cannot accept that one of the country’s leading grocery
retailers and one of the
country’s leading banks were so
elusive as to be incapable of prompt service via Sheriff or
otherwise.
I am left somewhat disturbed by the
fact that the plaintiff’s attorneys did not act as promptly as
it appears they could have
done to serve her summons and particulars
of claim. However, I can put it no higher than that because the facts
surrounding the
plaintiff’s instructions to her attorneys, and
what her attorneys then did to give effect to those instructions,
have not
been established or tested before me.
For all of those reasons, and with
some regret, I make the following order;
1
The first and second defendants’
special pleas of prescription are upheld.
2
The action is dismissed with costs
.
WILSON, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
29 JULY 2024
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