Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 723South Africa
Boshielo and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others (22/22259) [2024] ZAGPJHC 723 (5 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Boshielo and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others (22/22259) [2024] ZAGPJHC 723 (5 August 2024)
Boshielo and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others (22/22259) [2024] ZAGPJHC 723 (5 August 2024)
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sino date 5 August 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
###### IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
###### (GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 22/22259
1.
REPORTABLE YES/NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES YES/NO
3.
REVISED
In
the matter between:
LEBELOANE
DAVID BOSHIELO
1
st
Applicant
TSHEPO
MAESELA
2
nd
Applicant
RAMATSEMELA
HELLEN MAESELA
3
rd
Applicant
and
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
1
st
Respondent
MINISTER
OF POLICE
2
nd
Respondent
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTION
3
rd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Introduction
1
The applicants are plaintiffs in a suit in
which they seek damages against the respondents. In this application,
they seek condonation
for non-compliance with section 3(2) of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings against Certain Organs of State Act
49 of 2002 (Institution
of Legal Proceedings Act) for failure to give
notice of their intentions to institute their claim for damages
within the period
prescribed in section 3(2) of that Act. They seek
condonation in terms of section 3(4). The application is opposed by
the first
respondent, Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality, (the
“municipality”).
2
In the suit, the first and second
applicants claim damages for unlawful arrest and detention by members
of the municipality’s
Metro Police Department and South African
Police Service
,
the
first and second respondents respectively,
and
against the third respondent for malicious prosecution. The third
applicant claims damages only against the first and second
respondents for
“
wrongful and
unlawful misappropriation of liquor
”
.
3
In support of the application for
condonation, t
he first and second applicants rely on the
affidavit of the first applicant,
Lebeloane David
Boshielo, (with a confirmatory affidavit by the second applicant)
while the third applicant has separately deposed
to her affidavit in
support of condonation.
4
The first and second applicants allege that
they were arrested on 12 April 2020, an allegation admitted by the
municipality, that
they were detained by members of the SAPS and
released on bail on the same day and, following a trial in which they
were charged
with contravening the Disaster Management Act for
“
allegedly failing to remain
confined into our places of residence and for allegedly selling
liquor
”
, they were discharged in
terms of
section 174
of the
Criminal Procedure Act, 1977
. While in
her affidavit the third applicant makes reference to “
…
damages arising from unlawful arrest and
detention…
”
, she does not
allege or claim damages for arrest and detention and it appears that
the reference to unlawful arrest and detention
may be no more than
the result of her legal representatives inattentive drafting.
5
The municipality
opposes
condonation on the ground that the applicants have not shown good
cause for their non-compliance with
section 3(4)(b)
, in particular
that they have failed to give a proper explanation for their delay.
The case for condonation
6
Section 3 of the Institution of Legal
Proceedings Act prescribes the requirement for notice to be given to
an organ of state before
legal proceedings are instituted and gives
the court the power to condone non-compliance therewith and for the
organ of state to
consent to non-compliance with the prescribed
requirements. It is convenient that I quote section 3 in its entirety
“
3
Notice of intended legal proceedings to be given to organ of state
(1) No legal
proceedings for the recovery of a debt may be instituted against
an organ of state unless-
(a) the
creditor has given the organ of state in question notice in writing
of his or her or its intention to institute the
legal
proceedings in question; or
(b) the
organ of state in question has consented in writing to
the institution of that legal proceedings-
(i) without
such notice; or
(ii) upon
receipt of a notice which does not comply with all the requirements
set out in subsection (2).
(2) A notice must-
(a) within
six months from the date on which the debt became due, be served on
the organ of state in accordance
with section 4 (1); and
(b) briefly
set out-
(i) the
facts giving rise to the debt; and
(ii) such
particulars of such debt as are within the knowledge of the creditor.
(3) For purposes of
subsection (2) (a)-
(a) a
debt may not be regarded as being due until the creditor has
knowledge of the identity of the organ of state
and of the facts
giving rise to the debt, but a creditor must be regarded as having
acquired such knowledge as soon as he or she
or it could have
acquired it by exercising reasonable care, unless the organ of state
wilfully prevented him or her or it from
acquiring such knowledge;
and
(b) a
debt referred to in section 2 (2) (a), must be regarded as
having become due on the fixed date.
(4)(a) If an
organ of state relies on a creditor's failure to serve a notice in
terms of subsection (2) (a), the creditor
may apply to a court
having jurisdiction for condonation of such failure.
(b) The court may
grant an application referred to in paragraph (a) if it is
satisfied that-
(i) the
debt has not been extinguished by prescription;
(ii) good
cause exists for the failure by the creditor; and
(iii) the
organ of state was not unreasonably prejudiced by the failure.
(c)
If
an application is granted in terms of paragraph (b), the court
may grant leave to institute the legal proceedings
in
question, on such conditions regarding notice to the organ of state
as the court may deem appropriate.”
7
Accordingly, in terms of section 3, (i) no
legal proceedings for recovery of a debt may be instituted against an
organ of state
without prior written notice of the intention to do so
or the organ of state consents in writing to non-compliance with the
notice
requirement (s3(1)); (ii) a compliant notice must be served
within 6 months from the date when the debt became due (sec 3(2));
(iii) a debt becomes due on the date the creditor gains knowledge of
the identity of the organ of state and of the facts giving
rise to
the debt
,
and
a creditor shall be regarded as having acquired such knowledge as
soon as they could have acquired it by exercising reasonable
care,
unless the organ of state wilfully prevented him or her or it from
acquiring such knowledge of the debt (sec 3(3)(a), this
being the
fixed date contemplated in section 3(3)(b). The applicants do not
allege that they were prevented by the respondents
from acquiring
knowledge of the debt.
8
The applicants’ notice of intention
to institute legal proceedings was served on the municipality on 31
March 2022 and on
the South African Police Service on 7 April 2022.
On their own account, and for purposes of section 3(3)(a), the
applicants became
aware of the creditors’ identities and of the
fact on which their claims are based on 12 April 2020. This is the
fixed date
when the debt became due for purposes of section 3(2)(a).
Notice was accordingly served on the first respondent well
outside
of the six months period in section 3(2)(a), a few days short
of 24 months from the date when the debt became due.
9
In terms of section 3(4)(b), to succeed in
an application for condonation, an applicant must satisfy the court
that: (i) the debt
has not been extinguished by prescription;
(ii) good cause exists for the failure to comply
with the prescribed notice period;
and
(iii) the creditor was not unreasonably prejudiced by the delay. All
three requirements must accordingly be satisfied.
10
There is no controversy between the parties
that summons was served on the first respondent on 22 July 2022 and
on the second respondent
on 30 June 2022. This is not disputed by the
first respondent and is accordingly common cause. Accordingly,
prescription is not
an issue in this matter as summons was served
within 3 years of the date, 12 April 2020, when the debt became due
as prescribed
by
section 11(d)
of the
Prescription Act 68, of 1969
.
Have the applicants shown
good cause for the delay?
11
Our courts have avoided and declined to
define the concept “good cause" to avoid limiting the
discretion of a court in
determining whether on the facts before it,
there is sufficient cause to exercise its discretion to condone
non-compliance. Notwithstanding,
factors have emerged over time which
the courts have accepted as some of the factors to be considered in
establishing ‘good
cause’ and in this regard,
Madinda
v Minister of Safety and Security
[2008] ZASCA 34
;
2008
(4) SA 312
(SCA),
is instructive where that
court said that (at para [10]):
“
’
Good
cause’ looks at
all
those factors which bear on the fairness of granting the relief as
between the parties and as affecting the proper administration
of
justice
.
In any given factual complex it may be that only some of many
such possible factors become relevant. These may include prospects
of
success in the proposed action, the reasons for the delay, the
sufficiency of the explanation offered, the bona fides of the
applicant, and any contribution by other persons or parties to the
delay and the applicant’s responsibility therefor.
”
(own
underlining).
12
It is so
that no one factor is individually decisive of the question and
“
[t]he
relevant circumstances must be assessed in a balanced fashion.
The
fact that the applicant is strong in certain respects and weak in
others will be borne in mind in the evaluation of whether
the
standard of good cause has been achieved
.”
– see
Madinda
,
para [13].
13
The delay sought to be condoned is a few
days short of 24 months and is undoubtedly a significant delay
and the applicants
do not contend otherwise. Mr Boshielo’s
explanation for the significant delay is that it is only on 8 March
2022 that he
and the second applicant became aware from advice of
their attorney, Mr Mthombeni, that (i) they could claim damages; and
(ii)
that they were required to serve a
section 3(1)
notice before
they instituted legal proceedings. Mr Mthombeni accordingly served
notices on the respondents as I have mentioned
above. Accordingly,
the applicants explanation for the delay is that until advised by Mr
Mthombeni, they did not know that they
had a claim for damages. Mr
Boshielo further states that they are “
lay
persons in so far as the service of the notice of civil damages
against the organs of the state is concerned. Had I known about
the 6
(six) months' notice period, I would have instructed an attorney to
draft and serve same upon the Ist and 2nd Respondent
within the 6
(six) months.
”
14
On Mr Boshielo’s reason for the
non-compliance with
section 3(2)
, that the applicants only gained
knowledge on 8 March 2022 that they could lay a claim for damages,
was rejected by the Constitutional
Court in
Mtokonya
v Minister of Police
2018 (5) SA 22
(CC)
,
which concerned the similarly worded section 12(3) of the
Prescription Act, 1967, which reads “
(3)
A debt shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge
of the identity of the debtor and of the facts from which
the debt
arises: Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such
knowledge if he could have acquired it by exercising reasonable
care
”
. The Constitutional Court,
held that attaching a meaning to section 12(3) that “’
the
knowledge of the facts from which the debt arises' includes knowledge
that the conduct of the debtor giving rise to the debt
is wrongful
and actionable in law would render our law of prescription so
ineffective that it may as well be abolished. I say this
because
prescription would, for all intents and purposes, not run against
people who have no legal training at all. That includes
not only
people who are not formally educated but also those who are
professionals in non- legal professions.
”
(at
para [63]). This is equally applicable to the meaning of section 3(2)
in the present matter and to grant condonation on the
basis claimed
by Mr Boshielo would be an assault on the meaning of section 3(2),
which is not supported by our authorities, including
Mtokonya.
15
As is the case with section 12(3) of the
Prescription Act, section 3(2) requires only that the notice must
identify the organ of
state and set out facts giving rise to the
claim and such particulars as are known to the applicants. As counsel
for the municipality
correctly submits, the applicants became aware
on 12 April 2020 that the police officers who arrested them were
members of the
municipality and therefore were aware of the identity
of the debtor and were also aware the facts which gave rise to the
debt,
namely their arrests which they protest was unlawful because,
as they protest, they were not in contravention of the Disaster
Management
Act at the time of arrest. These are all the facts they
required to comply with section 3(2). Mr Boshielo’s assertion
that
he would have instructed the attorneys to serve the notice
within 6 months had he known of the requirement is perhaps an
inadvertent
admission that the applicants had the necessary facts to
comply with section 3(2). It follows that the alleged ignorance
that they could institute a claim arising from their arrest by
members of the municipality is not adequate explanation for the
non-compliance with section 3(2).
16
Perhaps recognising the inadequacy of their
explanation for the delay, the applicants belatedly in their written
and oral argument
submitted that “
The
whole cause of action was a continuous process from the day of the
arrest right through detention and finally prosecution
.”
This means, on the applicants’ contentions, that the six months
prescribed in section 3(2)(a) would have commenced
to run on 19
October 2021 when the first and second applicants were discharged in
terms of section 174, in which case, condonation
would not be
required by the first and second applicants as notice would have been
served timeously. Suffice to say that there
are two fatally
destructive reasons that this belated reliance on a single continuous
cause of action fails and they are –
(i) this characterisation
of an arrest, detention and prosecution as one continuous cause of
action has been firmly rejected by
our courts – see for
instance
Minister of Police NO v Yekiso
2019 (2) SA 281
(WCC)
and
Makhatholela
v Minister of Police (2021/3710) |2022| ZAGPJHC 983 (13 December
2022)
; and (ii) this is not the case
relied upon in the applicants’ founding papers - a party is not
permitted to introduce or
change their case midway of the matter for
the obvious reason that the first respondent has been denied an
opportunity to answer
the new case or grounds relied upon. I do not
consider that I need say more in this regard.
17
In addition to failing to provide an
adequate and satisfactory reason for the delay, as I have discussed
above, the applicants have
also failed to provide a full and frank
explanation for the delay, explaining every step and instance of the
delay. Mr Boshielo
offers no explanation why it is that he and the
second applicant would only have consulted with their attorney Mr
Mthombeni on
8 March 2022 when he allegedly informed them of their
claim for the first time. As the municipality points out, he was
after all
their attorney when they were released on bail on 12 April
2020 and discharged in October 2021, and is presently their attorney
of record. For his part, Mr Mthombeni provides only a standard
confirmatory affidavit which says no more than that he has read
the
affidavit of Mr Boshielo and confirms its contents as relate to him.
More was, in my view, required of him, in particular why
and how it
was only in March 2022 that he advised his clients of the
requirements of section 3(2), a failure which, if true, would
perhaps
be reflective of inattentiveness to his clients’ cause for
which recourse would lie elsewhere and not with the municipality.
In
the absence of an explanation from Mr Mthombeni, one is left to
speculation which includes the improbability that Mr Mthombeni
could
not have been aware of the requirement of section 3(2), an allegation
he and the applicants do not make.
18
Mr Boshielo’s explanation for the
delay falls woefully short of a frank and full explanation. His
reliance on his standing
as a lay person to avoid the consequence of
the delay is convenient considering that the applicants were at the
relevant time represented
by Mr Mthombeni. Neither the
applicants nor their attorney has offered a satisfactory explanation
for the substantial delay
and the non-compliance with section 3(2).
The first and second applicants have not provided a satisfactory
explanation for the
manifestly significant delay.
19
The first and second applicants have
offered no satisfactory explanation for the significant delay.
However, this is not the end
of the enquiry as I must consider the
applicants’ prospects of success in the action and determine
whether, if the prospects
of success are good or strong, they
compensate for the woefully inadequate explanation of the significant
delay and the reasons
provided. Addressing the prospects of success,
Boshielo states only that “
I state
that there are strong prospects of success of my claim against the
Respondent and we must be afforded an opportunity to
present the case
in court
. …”. Mr Boshielo
does not say why it is that he has come to this conclusion and leaves
one to surmise. The first and
second respondents were found at a
place that sells alcohol and Mr Boshielo admits that he was in
possession of and consuming alcohol
at the time when members of the
first respondent confronted him. He states that he ran away to avoid
arrest but was unsuccessful
and that this occurred at a time when the
sale of alcohol was prohibited and South Africans were, by decree of
the government prohibited
to from leaving their homes – the
lockdown period. The applicants have not demonstrated that they have
reasonable prospects
of success. In any event, any prospects of
success is far outweighed by the failure to provide a satisfactory
full and frank explanation
for the delay.
20
Regarding prejudice, Boshielo pleads that
“
The extreme prejudice that we I
am likely to suffer far outweighs the prejudice that the Respondents
may suffer should the condonation
for late filling of the notice not
be granted in our favour as we have never abandoned nor waived my
right to pursue the claim
against the Respondents
.”
It may well be that the applicants suffer prejudice if condonation is
refused, and yet this is not a reason to grant condonation,
as is
clear from the requirements in section 3(4)(b). Any prejudice that
may be suffered by the applicants would be the result
of their own
failure to show good cause for the court to condone their default and
is a consequence suffered by every unsuccessful
candidate for
condonation who failed to satisfy the court that there was good cause
to condone their non-compliance. So far as
it is necessary to say
anything about any prejudice to the municipality, suffice to say that
the municipality has not alleged or
shown that the non-compliance
unreasonably caused it prejudice and prejudice should not be assumed
in the absence of evidence from
the municipality which lays a basis
for any such prejudice –
Madinda
supra
para [21].
21
The third applicant fares no better. For
her part, she does not pretend to explain her delay whatsoever. She
contented herself with
stating only that she consulted with Mr
Mthombeni but does not state when and provides no other information
to explain why her
notice was not given within the prescribed period.
Mr Mthombeni too offers no explanation in this regard with his
confirmatory
affidavit that I have referred to which is obviously
inadequate and of no assistance to understand the third applicant’s
non-compliance with section 3(2)(a). It is fair to surmise that the
failure to provide any explanation at all must be because there
is no
reasonable and satisfactory explanation to offer. In the absence of
any explanation at all for the substantial delay, the
prospects of
success and whether the respondents are unreasonably prejudiced by
the default do not in my view arise for consideration
– in any
event, her affidavit says nothing about the prospects of success and
there are therefore no factors to balance to
determine whether there
is good cause to condone the third applicant’s delay. It
follows that the third applicant has failed
to satisfy me that there
is good cause to excuse the delay. The third applicant’s quest
for condonation is doomed for this
reasons.
Conclusion
22
The explanation for the substantial delay
offered by the first and second applicants is not satisfactory. They
have also failed
to show that their claim has reasonable prospects of
success and the prejudice that they claim is generic and speaks
nothing of
their case. It follows that the first and second
applicants have not shown good cause for the delay and for
condonation to be granted.
23
The third applicant offers no explanation
for the lengthy delay and is silent of n the prospects of success and
prejudice should
condonation be refused. This is fatal for her case
and her application stands to be dismissed for that reason.
Costs
24
The municipality has succeeded to resist
the application for condonation. There is no reason to depart from
the general rule that
a successful party must be awarded their costs.
The applicants have not offered any and I propose to make an order
accordingly.
I do so mindful that since the matter was heard and
judgment reserved, rule 67A has come into effect and it prescribes
different
scales for costs. However, since the matter was heard
before the rule came into effect, it is fair that the then prevailing
scale
of party and party costs, in the absence of facts that warrant
a punitive scale, must hold.
ORDER
25
In the premises, the following order is
made:
(i) The first, second and
third applicants’ application for condonation is dismissed.
(ii) The applicants are
to pay costs, on the ordinary scale of party and party, the one
paying, the other to be absolved.
MS BALOYI AJ
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
Mthombeni Attorneys Inc
For the
Respondent:
Adv. L Moela
Instructed
by:
State Attorney
Judgment
heard:
07 February 2024
Judgment
delivered:
05 August 2024
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