Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 963South Africa
Mahlangu and Others v Tshikululu Social Investment NPC (2018/19141) [2024] ZAGPJHC 963 (25 September 2024)
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mahlangu and Others v Tshikululu Social Investment NPC (2018/19141) [2024] ZAGPJHC 963 (25 September 2024)
Mahlangu and Others v Tshikululu Social Investment NPC (2018/19141) [2024] ZAGPJHC 963 (25 September 2024)
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sino date 25 September 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no: 2018-19141
(1)
REPORTABLE:
Yes
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes
In
the matter between:
SOLOMON
SIPHO MAHLANGU
First
applicant
THABISENG
MAHLANGU
Second
applicant
KATLEGO
MAHLANGU
Third
applicant
GOD’S
WAY EVANGELISTIC MINISTRIES
Fourth
applicant
UMLONDOLOZI
(PTY) LTD
Fifth
applicant
and
TSHIKULULU
SOCIAL INVESTMENT NPC
Respondent
This
judgment was delivered by uploading it to the court online digital
database of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of South
Africa,
Johannesburg, and by email to the attorneys of record of the parties
on 26 September 2024.
JUDGMENT
VAN
DER WALT AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is a judgment in respect of an
application
for the rescission of an order
granted by default against the first applicant (Mr Mahlangu), on 15
November 2021. The applicants
ask also that the warrant of execution
issued consequent upon the default judgment be reviewed and set
aside.
Factual background
[2]
Tshikululu Social Investments NPC is a
non-profit company. As far as it is relevant to this application, it
receives contributions
from donors, and administers funds intended to
be spent on the building and improvement of infrastructure for
schools. In June
2015, Tshikululu and Mr Mahlangu concluded an
employment agreement. According to the agreement, Mr Mahlangu would
be a manager
in Tshikululu’s operations department. He would
not be permitted to engage in any other form of employment without
Tshikululu’s
prior consent. One of his duties was to authorise
payments to service providers used by Tshikululu.
[3]
On 1 June 2018 Tshikululu issued summons,
instituting claims against Mr Mahlangu, God’s Way Evangelistic
Ministries and three
others. The fundamental basis of the claims
against Mr Mahlangu was simply that funds meant for Tshikululu’s
projects and
beneficiaries were, in breach of contract and
fraudulently, directed to other projects and beneficiaries.
Tshikululu led damages
as it had to refund those donors whose
donations didn’t reach their intended beneficiaries.
[4]
Mr Mahlangu gave notice of his intention to
defend the action on 20 June 2018. Neither he nor any of the other
defendants have,
to date, pleaded to the claims against them. That
notwithstanding, an application for summary judgment was filed on 5
July 2018.
The defendants elected to give notice of their intention
to oppose the application and to file an affidavit resisting it. In
that
affidavit, it was said that God’s Way, alleged by
Tshikululu to have benefited from Mr Mahlangu’s fraudulent
scheme
and breach of contract, is a shelf company that had no
offices, premises or bank accounts. Mr Mahlangu, in addition to
making bold
denials, also asserted that Tshikululu had not attached
proof to substantiate some of the claims made in the particulars of
claim,
and that the particulars of claim were vague and embarrassing.
The summary judgment application was set down for hearing on 12
February 2018. On the day, it was, among other things, ordered that
the application be postponed sine die. On 7 May 2019, 25 May
2020 and
15 June 2020 the defendants filed Rule 30(2)(b) notices, all with the
same content. They also included the arguments made
in the affidavit
resisting summary judgment.
[5]
Default judgment was granted against Mr
Mahlangu on 15 November 2021.
Postponement
[6]
The notice of set down of the hearing of the rescission application
was filed and served on the applicants on 19 March
2024. On 23 April
2024, the attorney for the applicants wrote to Tshikululu informing
it that he had a hearing in Bloemfontein
on 25 April 2024, the day
the rescission application was to be heard. He asked that Tshikululu
agree to a postponement of the hearing.
Tshikululu declined the
request. No formal application for a postponement was made. Instead,
the attorney for the applicants sent
counsel to court to ask for a
postponement from the Bar.
[7]
An
application for postponement must be made in accordance with the
Rules that regulate applications.
[1]
To dispense with that requirement, the court must be told of
“exceptional circumstances” from the Bar.
[2]
I was not told of any relevant exceptional circumstances. The mere
fact that the attorney for the applicants had to be in Bloemfontein
on the day of the hearing does not amount to exceptional
circumstances. No explanation was given why an email could be sent to
Tshikululu days before the hearing, but the giving of proper notice
and the making of a short affidavit were impossible. I find
that
there was in fact no application for postponement before me and
proceed to the merits of the matter.
Rescission
[8]
The applicants ask for rescission on the bases of Rule 31(2)(b), Rule
42(1)(a) and the common law. All three bases for
rescission includes
time limits and substantive requirements.
Was
the application for rescission brought in time?
[9]
Rule
31(2)(b), Rule 42(1)(a) and the common law place time limits on
applications for rescission. Rule 31(2)(b) requires that the
application be brought by a defendant “within 20 days after
acquiring knowledge of such judgment.” Applications for
the
rescission in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) and the common law must be
brought within a reasonable time of the court making the order
sought
to be rescinded.
[3]
The
rescission application is a rehashing of the points taken in the
proceedings leading up to the default judgment and the case
sought to
be made for the purposes of Rule 31(2)(b) is the same as the case
sought to be made for the purposes of common law rescission.
In these
circumstances, the 20-day requirement in Rule 31(2)(b) was also a
reasonable time within which the rescission application
could be
brought.
[10]
The factual issue to be determined is when Mr Mahlangu knew of the
order against him. Mr Mahlangu, in the founding affidavit
in support
of the rescission application, says under oath that he learned of the
order against him only when the sheriff of the
court arrived at his
residence on 15 January 2022. This is difficult to believe. This
court uses a digital filing system. Documents
filed by litigants or
which issues out of court, are uploaded to the system near
immediately. Litigants are notified via email
of new documents,
including judgments, also more or less immediately after they are
uploaded to the system. Mr Van Deventer, in
the answering affidavit
for Tshikululu, says that the applicants “had, at all relevant
times, access to Caselines [the digital
system then in use] and would
have received notice [by email to their attorney’s email
address] of any movement on the matter”.
[11]
Mr Mahlangu’s reply is perhaps as striking for what it says, as
for what it does not say. To the facts that, through
his attorney, he
throughout had access to the court’s digital filing system and
would have received immediate notice of documents
filed in the
matter, he says merely that Mr Van Deventer fails to annexe copies of
the emails sent to his attorney, that filing
on the court’s
digital system is not service as required by the Rules of Court and
that he was “never
served
with any process in the
default judgment application” (my emphasis). Clever as this may
be, it does not address Mr Mahlangu’s
knowledge or lack thereof
in light the digital filing system. Mr Mahlangu, in his failure to
engage with this issue, also does
not show that his attorney in fact
(somehow) did not receive the system’s notification about the
default judgment or that
his attorney had knowledge of the judgment,
while he (somehow) didn’t.
[12]
Ultimately, I do not to dismiss the application on this basis because
Tshikululu did not make the allegation that Mr
Mahlangu actually
learned of the order on the day it was made, but merely said that he
“would have” had knowledge of
the order. I would imagine
that, had Mr Van Deventer for Tshikululu forthrightly said that Mr
Mahlangu “had known”,
it would certainly not have been so
far-fetched, so clearly untenable or so palpably implausible as to
warrant its rejection on
the papers. To the contrary, it would have
been perfectly reconcilable with the practice in this court and its
digital filing system.
I imagine in future, where it has been shown
that an applicant’s attorney received documents via the court’s
digital
system, an applicant would have to provide a detailed
explanation as to how it came about that he did not have knowledge of
an
order on the day that it issued.
The
merits
[13]
Rule
31(2)(b), 42(1) and the common law on rescission treat the
requirement that an applicant for rescission must put up a defence,
that could be pursued subsequent to rescission, differently. Rule
31(2)(a) empowers the court to rescind a default judgment “upon
good cause shown”. There is no exhaustive definition of what
might amount to “good cause”. An applicant for rescission
could satisfy the requirement through, among other things, providing
an explanation for the default and showing that he has a bona
fide
defence.
[4]
A bona fide defence
could, therefore, form part of an applicant’s case to satisfy
the prerequisites to the court’s
power to order rescission. The
court’s common law powers to rescind default judgments are
similar. As is the case with Rule
31(2)(b), what constitutes “good
cause” is not exhaustively and precisely defined,
[5]
but it is beyond doubt that one of the relevant considerations is
whether an applicant has shown that he has a bona fide defence
that
carries some prospects of success.
[6]
Rule 42 is different in this regard. Applicants do not have to show
“good cause” or a bona fide defence to obtain relief
in
terms of it. They do, however, have to satisfy the requirements
contained its subrules. The first three words of the Rule are
“The
court may”. The phrase applies to all the subrules of Rule 42.
The word “may” entails that the Rule
gives the court a
discretion.
[7]
I.e., even in
cases where the requirements of each subrule are satisfied, the court
retains a discretion as to whether to grant
rescission. The absence
of factors which go to showing good cause for a recission, including
the absence of a bona fide defence,
might move a court not to grant
rescission notwithstanding the fact that the prerequisites to the
exercise of its power have been
satisfied.
[8]
[14]
Mr Mahlangu has failed to show a bona fide defence. His assertion
that God’s Way has never traded, had no offices,
no premises
and no bank accounts, does not establish one. The claims against Mr
Mahlangu are for damages led as a result of breach
of contract and
fraud. As to breach, the contract does not prohibit dealings with a
specific entity. It prohibits dealings with
entities other than
Tshikululu. I.e., it is no less a breach of the contract by Mr
Mahlangu if a third party other than God’s
Way was involved in
the breach. It is also entirely irrelevant to the allegation that
Tshikululu led damages because of the breach.
As to the claim for
damages because of fraud, one might say that the involvement of a
dormant company in a fraudulent scheme is
not entirely unheard of.
But more pertinently, this attempt at a defence goes only to what
exactly happened to Tshikululu’s
funds after Mr Mahlangu is
alleged to have defrauded it. It does not address the fraud itself or
the damages led because of it.
[15]
Mr Mahlangu further argues that the Rule 30 notices somehow amount to
or disclose a defence. The argument is bad. Firstly,
the points taken
in the notices were never prosecuted to completion (or given effect
to) in accordance with Rule 30. For the purposes
of this application
(and perhaps for all others), the notices are therefore irrelevant.
Secondly, and in any event, nothing contained
in the notices begins
to establish defences to the claims against Mr Mahlangu. Thirdly, the
points taken in the notices are without
merit. The complaint about an
agreement that was not attached to the particulars of claim is
factually incorrect. Rule 18, furthermore,
does not require a
claimant to plead or attach evidence in or to the particulars of
claim. Mr Mahlangu made no other attempt to
satisfy the requirement
of good cause for the purposes of Rule 31(2)(b) and the common law
and has, therefore, failed to do so.
[16]
What remains is whether Mr Mahlangu has made out a case that the
order against him had been erroneously sought or granted
for purposes
of Rule 42(1)(a). In this regard, Mr Mahlangu asserts that the
applicants were not notified of the hearing of the
application for
default judgement. The assertion is, however, incorrect. The
applicants’ attorney received the application
for default
judgment and even filed a notice to oppose it. No suggestion is made
that he did so without instructions. The applicants
were,
furthermore, in fact notified of the date of the hearing of the
application by way of a notice of set down sent via email
to their
attorney. In fact, the applicants’ attorney had access to the
case on the court’s online digital filing system
7 days prior
to the hearing of the application for default judgment.
[17]
In the event, the application is dismissed with costs on scale A.
Nico van der Walt
Acting Judge, Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg.
Heard:
25 April
2024
Judgment:
26 September 2024
Appearances:
For the applicants
Heads of argument by Mr
M.V. Gwala
M.V. Gwala Inc
For the respondent:
Adv S. McTurk
Instructed by Uys Matyeka
Schwartz Attorneys
[1]
Hanson,
Tomkin and Finkelstein v DBN Investments (Pty) Ltd
1951 (3) SA 769
(N) 775H.
[2]
Hanson,
Tomkin and Finkelstein v DBN Investments (Pty) Ltd
1951 (3) SA 769
(N) 776F and
Joshua
v Joshua
1961 (1) SA 455
(GW) 457B.
[3]
First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Van Rensburg NO: in re First
National Bank of Southern Africa Ltd v Jurgens
1994 (1) SA 677
(T) 681B–G and
Money
Box Investments 268 (Pty) Ltd v Easy Greens Farming and Farm Produce
CC
2021
JDR 2405 (GP) par. 7.
[4]
Wahl
v Prinswall Beleggings (Edms) Bpk
1984 (1) SA 457
(T) 461H.
[5]
De
Wet v Western Bank Ltd
1979 (2) SA 1031
(A) 1042G and
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA) 9B–D.
[6]
De
Wet v Western Bank Ltd
1979 (2) SA 1031
(A) 1042F–1043A;
Chetty
v Law Society, Transvaal
1985 (2) SA 756
(A) 764J–765D;
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA
1
(SCA)
9D–F; and
Naidoo
v Matlala NO
2012 (1) SA 143
(GNP) 152H–153A.
[7]
Tshivhase
Royal Council and Another v Tshivhase and another; Tshivhase and
another v Tshivhase and another
1992 (4) SA 582
(A) 862J – 863A; and
Colyn
v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1 (SCA).
[8]
Cf
Williams
v Shackleton Credit Management (Pty) Ltd
2024 (3) SA 234
(WCC).
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