Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1191South Africa
Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Changing Tide Security Solution (Pty) Ltd (38292/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1191 (13 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
13 November 2024
Headnotes
by Van Zyl J, (writing for the full court) in Brangus Ranching (Pty) Ltd para [15][5] that:
Judgment
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## Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Changing Tide Security Solution (Pty) Ltd (38292/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1191 (13 November 2024)
Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa v Changing Tide Security Solution (Pty) Ltd (38292/2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1191 (13 November 2024)
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sino date 13 November 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG.
CASE
NO: 38292/2021
(1) REPORTABLE: YES
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
(3) REVISED: NO
13 November 2024
In
the matter between:
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
Applicant
and
CHANGING
TIDE SECURITY SOLUTION (PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KEKANA
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This in an application for rescission of a default judgment granted
in favour of the respondent on 14 March 2022. The
facts leading to
the application for rescission are that on or about 12 August 2021
the respondent served combined summons on the
applicant to which the
applicant failed to reply to and subsequently the respondent notified
the applicant of its application for
default judgment. The notice was
then served on the applicant on or about 07 March 2022 and later a
default judgment was obtained
by the respondent.
Background
[2]
The parties
entered into an agreement (Master Agreement) on 5 November 2010,
which was for a period of 12 (twelve) months.
[1]
The agreement was extended from time to time until 30 April 2020. All
invoices issued for services rendered during this period
were
required to be certified correct by both parties’ and all
invoices certified correct which were paid by the applicant.
The
respondent then submitted new antedated invoices with increased
amounts later after the contract was terminated which according
to it
were annual increments which were discussed between the parties and
accordingly due and payable.
Issues
[3] Central to the
issues for determination is whether the Applicant has made out a case
for the rescission of judgment in
terms of Rule 31(2)(b),
alternatively common law rescission in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) of the
Uniform Rules of this Court.
Submissions
and contentions by the parties
[4]
The applicant alleges inter alia in its application for rescission in
terms of Rule 31(2)(b), alternatively common law
rescission in terms
of Rule 42(1)(a) of the Uniform Rules of this Court that:
4.1
it
was not in wilful default;
4.2
that
the plaintiff’s particulars of claim fail to make any cause of
action and therefore excipiable;
4.3
the
respondent’s non-compliance with section 3 of the Act 40 of
2002;
4.4
the
majority of the claims forming the substance of claim one in the
particulars of claim has prescribed;
4.5
that
the summons were premature as the agreement between the parties makes
provision for arbitration.
[5]
The applicant further submits that there was no proper service as the
combined summons was served on the assistant HR
manager and not its
legal team, again, that the notice for the application for a default
judgment also was served on its driver
and not its legal team.
Furthermore, that the respondent by own admission is not suing for
breach of contract but rather it wants
to unilaterally adjust
invoices which were certified correct by both parties and paid for by
the applicant. Also, that it was not
in wilful default as the summons
was served during the period of Covid-19 where many of its employees
were not coming to office
and those testing positive had to be in
isolation and offices had to be closed for decontamination.
[6]
The applicant continues to submit that the respondent has failed to
refer the dispute to arbitration as preferred by the
terms of the
Master Agreement. That the invoices in dispute were surprisingly
brought once the contract between the applicant and
the respondent
was terminated and these increases were not reduced to in writing as
required by the Master Agreement. Also, that
the respondent’s
particulars of claim are excipiable in that they fail to comply with
Rule 18(6) of the Uniform Rules of
the Court as the agreement
referred to by the respondent was not attached.
[7]
In retort
the respondent contents that there was wilful default on the part of
the applicant in that it fails to explain what happened
with the
summons served on its assistant manager, again it failed to attend
Court after being notified of the default application.
That section 3
of Act 40 of 2002 was complied with and that non-compliance with Rule
18(6) does not render the Particulars of Claim
excipiable.
[2]
As regard failure by the respondent to refer the dispute to
arbitration, the respondent contends that the applicant had
acknowledged
liability and for that reason there was no dispute to
refer to arbitration.
The
respondent further contents that the order was not erroneously sought
or granted and as such Rule 42 is not applicable.
[3]
Legal
principle and analysis.
[8]
As regards the application for condonation as brought by the
applicant, I agree with Eksteen AJA in
Van
Heerden
at para [11]
[4]
where it is
stated that:
“
even peremptory
provisions of the rules may, in appropriate circumstances, be
condoned. The test, it seems to me, is whether any
potential
prejudice results to a party affected.”
[9]
Upon careful analysis of the entire case I am of the view that the
applicant’s explanation for late application
is reasonable and
further that the respondent may be prejudiced as the amount in
dispute is such that the applicant may suffer
a huge financial loss,
and it for this reason that I will respond in affirmative and condone
the application.
[10]
With regard the submission by the applicant that there was no proper
service of both the combined summons and the notice
for default
judgment, I disagree with counsel for the applicant who claims that
proper service could only be service to its legal
team. It was held
by Van Zyl J, (writing for the full court) in
Brangus
Ranching (Pty) Ltd
para [15]
[5]
that:
“
Service at the
registered office of a company, in the absence of a responsible
employee thereof, by delivery of the document to
be served to a
person at such address……willing to accept such service,
has been recognised as a good and proper service
which is preferable
to merely attaching the process, for instance, to the outer principal
door of the premises”.
[11]
The combined summons was served on an assistant manager of PRASA, who
considering the seniority of his position it is
expected of him to
have understood the seriousness of what he was signing when receiving
the summons and the concomitant obligation
to immediately notify and
avail the summons to the legal team. The notice of default
application was also served on the driver
employed by the PRASA,
drivers are foresters when it comes to ensuring delivery of items and
documents from one place to the other,
understands the importance of
making sure that the documents in their possession timeously reach
the intended recipient. The submission
by the applicant that there
was no proper service cannot be entertained. What can be entertained
is whether was the default wilful
or not.
[12]
The question that follows is whether the respondent was in wilful
default or not. While the applicant claims Covid-19,
it fails to show
and explain how the person who received summons was affected by
Covid-19. The reason why he did not alert the
legal team about the
summons nor what happened with those summonses. There is no affidavit
to that effect and therefore this explanation
cannot stand.
[13]
In the main the success of a Rule 42 application is whether the order
was erroneously sought or granted. In terms of
Rule 42(1)(a)
[6]
the Court must be satisfied that:
an order or judgment
erroneously sought or erroneously granted in the absence of any party
affected thereby
.
[14]
Generally, a judgment is erroneously granted if there existed at the
time of its issue a fact of which the court was
unaware, which would
have precluded the granting of the judgment and which would have
induced the court, if aware of it, not to
grant the judgment.
[7]
As such I had no option but to take a closer look at what was
presented before me and what was presented and relied upon by the
Court which granted the default judgment. Accordingly, a thorough
perusal of the Plaintiff’s Particulars of Claim was inviting.
The Plaintiff Particulars of Claim refer to services rendered, and
invoices issued which were not paid but nowhere does it refer
to what
was presented before me which is invoices issued were certified
correct by both parties and paid for by the Applicant.
[8]
[15]
My Sister Khampepe J in
Zuma
at para [57]
[9]
where she states
that:
A party must be
absent, and an error must have been committed by the court. At times
the party’s absence may be what leads
to the error being
committed. Naturally, this might occur because the absent party will
not be able to provide certain relevant
information which would have
an essential bearing on the court’s decision and, without
which, a court may reach a conclusion
that it would not have made but
for the absence of the information
.
[16]
In the case before me there are facts showing that respondent at the
time of seeking the default judgment consciously
decided not to
disclose to the Court that the invoices issued and certified correct
by both parties were paid. This to me is not
just the case of an
error which could have been corrected by the applicant’s
presence, but the respondent was duty bound
to disclose these facts
as they are the genesis of this dispute. Failure by the respondent to
disclose resulted in it completely
misleading the Court. I do not
think my Sister Khampepe J had in mind an instance where the court
was deliberately misled or where
information or facts were
deliberately withheld by the litigant seeking a default judgment when
she mentioned “conclusion
reached by a court that the court
would not have made but the absence of information.”
[17]
In my view if when hearing of the rescission application there
appears evidence and facts which the respondent had but
elected not
to place before Court granting the default judgment, which facts are
so material that if presented on their own even
in the absence of the
other party (defaulting party), default judgment would not have been
granted, the conclusion is strong that
the judgment was erroneously
sought or erroneously granted. Especially if those facts are so
central to the dispute.
[18]
I find it idiosyncratic that the respondent consciously decided not
to attach the aforesaid invoices it claims were due
and payable to
its Particulars of Claim allegedly due to the voluminous nature
thereof, it is my view that even if not all but
a few of those
invoices could have been attached to the Plaintiff’s
Particulars of Claim to enable the Court to ascertain
their validity
and authenticity, particularly as those invoices are fundamental and
crucial in this matter. As per the Master Agreement
the invoices
issued must be certified correct by both parties, it is only when
certified correct by both parties that a debt arises.
The respondent
withheld and decided not to attach invoices as they knew that the
aforesaid invoices were not certified correct
by both parties and
that those that were certified correct by both parties were settled.
[19]
In the circumstances I can conclude that the respondent was
meritoriously not entitled to the relief which it obtained
(the
default judgment). My conclusion is strong that the Court granting
the default judgement was not only unaware of facts, misled
and if
possessed with these facts even in the absence of the applicants
could have decided differently or at least it is my conclusion
that
the order was erroneously sought or granted as there exists facts
which the Court was not aware of.
[20]
I agree with the respondent and its authority that for the applicant
to succeed in a rescission application it must satisfy
the Court that
it has a bona fide defence to the Plaintiff’s Particulars of
Claim.
[10]
Eksteen AJA
[11]
held that:
An
applicant for rescission of judgment taken by default against him is
required to show good cause. Whilst the courts have consistently
refrained from circumscribing a precise meaning of the term ‘good
cause’, generally courts expect an applicant to show
‘good
cause’ (a) by giving a reasonable explanation of his default;
(b) by showing that his application is bona fide;
and (c) by showing
that he has a bona fide defence to the plaintiff’s claim which,
prima facie, has some prospect of success.
[21]
The absence of a written agreement authenticating the invoices
submitted by the respondent after the contract was terminated
as
required by the Master Agreement, opens a possibility for the
applicant to raise a defence and contest their validity. If the
respondent felt that it is entitled to the increases, it should have
submitted invoices reflecting those increases during that
time of the
periodic extensions. The respondent had multiple opportunities from
the month immediately after the lapse of the 12
months contract and
every month immediately thereafter to submit invoices reflecting the
aforesaid increments but chose not to
do so. These renders the
conduct of the respondent suspicious particularly as it continued not
include the aforesaid increments
for a period of three to four years
and only chose to raise the issue about price increases it claims to
be legally entitled to
only after the contract was terminated. I am
satisfied that the applicant has demonstrated a bona fide defence.
The applicant has
shown to the Court that he has a reasonable
prospect of success if he is allowed the opportunity to defend the
matter.
[22]
Furthermore, the applicant can argue that it was entitled to assume
that upon paying the invoices presented, which were
certified correct
by both parties there was no debt outstanding due to the Respondent.
I am of the view that the respondent’s
conduct of not issuing
increased invoices immediately after the lapse of the 12 months
contract deprived the applicant of the right
of choice to apply its
mind to the increases, the applicant could have if not happy with the
increments instantaneously exercised
the option it aways had to
terminate the contract. This accentuates the point I raised above
that the applicant has bona fide defence
to the respondent’s
claim.
[23]
As regards the submission by the applicant that the summons was
served prematurely in that the respondent failed to refer
the dispute
between it and PRASA to arbitration as required by the Master
Agreement. I find that this creates another lacuna in
the legitimacy
of respondent’s claim and the method it opted to use to resolve
the dispute between the parties. A complete
disregard of such a
clause in the agreement may in future render the inclusion of such
clauses in agreements expendable. An arbitration
clause in the Master
Agreement should be interpreted to mean and effectively to be a
one-stop shop to determine all the disputes
between the parties. I am
satisfied that the summons was served prematurely since arbitration
as the preferred dispute resolution
mechanism provided for in the
Master Agreement was not exhausted.
[24]
The applicant also submits that it intends to raise prescription as a
defence on the alleged antedated invoices, in this
regard the
applicant need not provide evidence to prove that it will be
successful in its defence of the matter but must only make
out a
prima facie defence to the plaintiff’s claim. Taking into
consideration the number of years that lapsed with the respondent
being silent about these increases is claiming now, there is the
possibility that the applicant may succeed in its defence of
prescription.
[25]
Lastly, the respondent contends that the applicant was or had the
willingness to enter into a negotiation, the willingness
to negotiate
is not per se an agreement as there are no terms to enforce unless
there is an agreement which as per the Master Agreement
must be
reduced in writing. Even with the willingness to negotiate, the fact
is that there was no specific percentage agreed yet
raises a question
of whether there is an existing ascertainable and quantifiable debt.
Consequently, there is a possibility that
the amount as granted in
the default judgment may or is likely to vary with what the parties
would agree to assuming an agreement
was to be reached out of these
negotiations.
Conclusion
[26]
I am satisfied that the applicant has made out a case for the
rescission of the judgment in terms of Rule 42(1)(a) in
that the
applicant was able to explain its absence and that the default
judgment was erroneously sought or granted. Again, the
applicant has
demonstrated a bona fide defence and prospects of success as such,
this application must succeed.
[27]
I grant the following order:
1.
The
default judgment of 14 March 2022 is rescinded.
2.
The
execution of the default judgment referred to above is stayed pending
the outcome of the main action.
3.
The
respondent to incur the costs of this application on scale B.
Kekana
ND
Acting
Judge of the High Court.
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg.
Counsel
for the applicant:
S
Kunene
Instructed
by:
Leepile
Attorneys Inc.
Counsel
the for respondent:
M
P Van der Merwe SC
Instructed
by:
Albert
Hibbert Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
21
October 2024
Date
of judgment:
13
November 2024
[1]
See
para 6 of the Applicant’s Heads of Arguments.
[2]
See
para of the Respondent’s Head of Arguments.
[3]
See p
ara
43 of the Respondent’s Head of Arguments.
[4]
Van
Heerden v Bronkhorst
(Case
no 846/19) [2020] ZASCA 147.
[5]
Brangus
Ranching (Pty) Ltd v Plaaskem (Pty) Ltd
2011 (3) SA 477
at 481 (KZP).
[6]
Uniforms
Rules of the Court.
[7]
Nyingwa
v Moolman NO
1993 (2) SA 508
(TK) at 510D-G;
Naidoo
and Another v Matlala NO and Others
2012 (1) SA 143
(GNP) at 153C.
[8]
See paras 6.1 to 6.3 of Plaintiffs Particulars of Claim.
[9]
Zuma v
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations of
State Capture, Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector
Including
Organs of State and Others
[2021] ZACC 28.
[10]
Grant
v Plumbers (Pty) Ltd
1949
(2) SA 470
(O) at 476-477.
[11]
Van
Heerden v Bronkhorst
(Case
no 846/19)
[2020] ZASCA 147
(13 November 2020)
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