Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 949South Africa
Micheals v Firstmile Prop JHB CBD Crown Mines (Pty) Ltd and Another (070685/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 949 (20 September 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Urgency – set down on Thursday for following Tuesday – meaning – not to wait until Thursday to ambush opponent but matter to be ripe for hearing when the roll closes on Thursday at noon. Proper time periods to be set out in notice of motion taking into account prejudice to respondent as well as need for urgent enroilment. Every deviation from Rules to be substantiated.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Micheals v Firstmile Prop JHB CBD Crown Mines (Pty) Ltd and Another (070685/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 949 (20 September 2024)
Micheals v Firstmile Prop JHB CBD Crown Mines (Pty) Ltd and Another (070685/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 949 (20 September 2024)
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sino date 20 September 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.
REPORTABLE: YES
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
3.
REVISED: YES
Case
number:070685/2024
In
the matter between:
ANNIE
DORGES MICHAELS
Applicant
and
FIRSTMILE
PROP JHB CBD CROWN MINES (PTY) LTD
TAKE
SHAPE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
First
Respondent
Second
Respondent
Case
number: 070849/2024
and
in the matter between:
AFRICAN
CELLULAR (PTY) LTD
First
Applicant
WAJAHAT
CHOUDARY
Second
Applicant
and
FIRSTMILE
PROP JHB CBD CROWN MINES (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
TAKE
SHAPE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Second
Respondent
Summary:
Urgency
–
set down on Thursday for
following Tuesday – meaning – not to wait until Thursday
to ambush opponent but matter to be
ripe for hearing when the roll
closes on Thursday at noon. Proper time periods to be set out in
notice of motion taking into account
prejudice to respondent as well
as need for urgent enroilment. Every deviation from Rules to be
substantiated.
JUDGMENT
YACOOB, J
[1]
The applicants in these matters are, or
were, commercial lessees of the respondents and were locked out of
the premises that they
leased on 23 June 2024. They instituted urgent
proceedings, filing a notice of motion with a founding affidavit on
27 June 2024
setting the matter down for 28
June, a Friday, on extreme urgency.
The founding affidavits were commissioned on 24
June and there is no explanation was
provided as to why the matters were only issued and served on 27
June, or of why the applications
were set down on 28 June.
[2]
The matters were removed from the roll of
28 June on the basis that extreme urgency had not been established
and on the basis that
the respondents had not been given an
opportunity to file opposing papers. It must be noted that neither
notice of motion provided
for a time period within which the
respondents should file their notices to oppose or their answering
affidavits or that the applicants
should file their replying
affidavit.
[3]
Not discouraged by this setback, the
applicants then did nothing from Friday 28 June until the following
Thursday, 4 July. They
then simply set the matter down again on the
Thursday for the following Tuesday, 9 July. There was no amendment to
the notice of
motion despite the deficiencies having been pointed
out. There was no supplementary affidavit explaining the urgency. And
there
was no justification or substantiation for the condonation that
has to be sought from the Court for the non-compliance with the
rules.
[4]
The respondents were taken by surprise and
had to file an answering affidavit, after the roll was closed, which
the court then had
to read and take into account, in the midst of a
busy urgent week in recess. A replying affidavit was then filed, the
last paragraph
of which sets out what Mr Silamulela for the
applicant states is the basis of the urgency. I will come back to
this paragraph
shortly.
[5]
The Rules and practice of this court
regarding urgency are clear and well established. Rule 6(12)(b)
requires an applicant to “set
forth explicitly the
circumstances which is averred render the matter urgent and the
reasons why the applicant claims that applicant
could not be afforded
substantial redress at a hearing in due course”.
[6]
In
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd and
Others
,
it was emphasised that an applicant must set out facts and
circumstances which support the conclusion that the matter is urgent
and the applicant cannot get sufficient redress in due course.
[1]
The degree of urgency imposed must be properly considered and
supported, and the notice of motion must be tailored to the relevant
degree of urgency.
[2]
That means
that the time periods imposed must be related to the degree of
urgency and prejudice claimed.
[7]
In
addition it should be trite that, unless there are strong reasons
that balance the prejudice to the respondents, service and
the
procedure set out in the notice of motion must be sufficient to
permit the respondents a proper opportunity to consider and
respond
to the application. This principal is fundamental to the rule of
law.
[3]
An applicant should not
need a court, or, indeed, an opponent, to tell it that.
[8]
In
this court, the Practice Manual specifies at paragraph 9.23 that the
ordinary time of bringing an urgent application is 10h00
on a
Tuesday, with the relevant papers to be filed by the preceding
Thursday at 12h00. A set down at any other time is the imposition
of
a further degree of urgency, which must be properly substantiated.
This is a codification of the principles articulated in
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin
.
[4]
In addition, paragraph 28 of the latest consolidated Practice
Directive of this court,
[5]
in
an apparently vain attempt to assist practitioners and litigants in
determining whether a matter is urgent and successfully
navigating
the urgent court, also explains that the urgent roll closes at noon
on a Thursday for the following Tuesday, and advises
an applicant to
consider the appropriate notice period to give to the respondent.
[9]
Leaving aside the also trite proposition
that the case, including that for urgency, must be made out in the
founding affidavit,
I then consider the apparent (identical)
justification for urgency contained in the applicants’ belated
replying affidavits.
The relevant paragraph does not explain the
failure to set out time periods in the notice of motion. It simply
makes the bald allegations
that there are employees depending on
income generated; there are creditors; the business has not been
operating, and that the
matter remains urgent. That initial urgency
was not established is apparently not a relevant consideration to the
applicant’s
contention that the matter remains urgent.
[10]
As far as explanations for the date and
manner of set down is concerned, there is simply a statement that the
matter was removed
from the extremely urgent roll and then placed on
the roll since the applicants had to “wait” for 4 July.
This portrays
a fundamental misunderstanding of how the urgent roll
works. One does not simply wait for the Thursday to issue papers or
to set
a matter down. The Thursday is the day on which the urgent
roll closes. By the Thursday pleadings should have closed. The papers
should be properly uploaded and indexed and paginated (or the
relevant digital equivalents). Heads of argument, if any, should
be
already filed, If pleadings have not closed by noon on Thursday when
the roll closes the founding affidavit has to explain in
detail why
it was not possible for this to happen.
[11]
In this case it was clear that it was
possible for this to happen. The applicants could have amended their
notice of motion or simply
made an arrangement with the respondents’
legal representatives in writing or asked the Court on 28 June to
make a direction
that the Respondents file their papers perhaps by
the Monday or Tuesday and that replying affidavits be filed by the
Wednesday.
Having closed pleadings heads could have been filed by the
Thursday and the matter would have been ripe for hearing by the
closing
of the urgent roll at noon on Thursday 4 July. This how an
urgent matter is should be set down, where time permits. Every
deviation
from that procedure has to be explained. No explanation is
provided in these applications.
[12]
Mr Silamulela submitted to the Court that,
while he acknowledges the fundamentally flawed nature of the
procedures followed, as
a matter of substance the respondents have
been able to file their answering affidavits, the applicants have
replied and therefore
the court can entertain the matter. That is not
a reason to grant condonation. There has to be more.
[13]
Another submission that was made was that
the applicants' prospects of success in the spoliation application
are relatively high
and that this, weighed in the balance against the
deplorable lack of compliance should tip the scales in favour of the
applicants
in the two matters.
[14]
Unfortunately, I cannot agree with this
submission. There are too many failures to even attempt to comply
with the Rules and directives
of this court. The Rules do not exist
simply to make life difficult for applicants. They exist so that all
litigants know what
to expect, so that everyone has proper time to
respond, so that the court can properly determine whether litigants
have acted reasonably
and so that courts can manage their rolls
appropriately. Deviations which are properly supported which impact
against the purpose
of the Rules can be condoned. There has been
simply no attempt to deal with any of that in these applications. In
addition, there
may be situations where the prospects of success are
so strong, or where the interests of justice so obviously outweighs
the need
for a proper and manageable procedure, that the lapses can
be overlooked. This is not one of those instances.
[15]
For those reasons I strike the matters for
lack of urgency.
[16]
Ms Mutenga who appeared for the respondents
submitted that a punitive costs order should be made because the
issue of no provision
being made for filing of answering affidavits
in the notice of motion was brought to the applicants attention the
first time the
matter was set down. This is the second time they have
set the matter down and they still did not remedied the issue, either
by
amending the notice of motion or by filing a supplementary
affidavit to explain the apparently extreme urgency and justify the
irregular notice of motion. I agree that a punitive costs order is
justified.
[17]
I make the following order in each
application:
“
1.
The application is struck from the roll for want of urgency.
2. The applicant is
to pay the costs on an attorney and client scale.”
S YACOOB
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
For
the Applicants (both applications):
For
the Respondents (both applications):
Instructed
by:
SF
Silamulele (attorney)
H
Mutenga
Phambane
Mokone Incorporated
Date
of Hearing: 10 July 2024
Date
of Judgment: 10 July 2024
Date
of Revision: 20 September 2024
[1]
[2011]
ZAGPJHC 196 at para [6].
[2]
Nelson
Mandela Metropolitan Municipality v Greyvenouw CC
2004
(2) SA 81
(SE) at para [37];
Luna
Meubel Vervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin (t/a Makin’s Furniture
Manufacturers)
1977
(4) SA 135
(W) at 137A-E
[3]
South
African Airways SOC v BDFM Publishers (Pty) Ltd
2016 (2) SA 561
(GJ) at para [22]
[4]
Footnote
2 above.
[5]
Revised
consolidated practice directive 1 of 2024.
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