Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1165South Africa
P.C v Minister of Safety and Constitutional Development and Another (2013/33619) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1165 (19 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 November 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## P.C v Minister of Safety and Constitutional Development and Another (2013/33619) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1165 (19 November 2024)
P.C v Minister of Safety and Constitutional Development and Another (2013/33619) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1165 (19 November 2024)
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sino date 19 November 2024
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED. NO
…………
..………….............
SIGNATURE
DATE
19 November 2024
CASE
NO:
2013/33619
In the matter between:
P[…],
C[…]
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF SAFETY AND CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
First
Respondent
NATIONAL
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by email and by being uploaded
to CaseLines.
The date and time for hand down is deemed to be 19 November 2024.
MAHON
AJ:
[1]
This is an application for condonation under section 3(4) of the
Institution of Legal Proceedings Against Certain Organs
of State Act
40 of 2002 ("the Act"). The Applicant seeks to condone his
failure to comply with section 3(2)(a) of the
Act, which requires
notice of intended legal proceedings to be served on the relevant
organ of state within six months of the date
the debt becomes due.
[2]
The Respondents oppose this application, citing procedural
non-compliance, lack of good cause, and the prejudice they
allege
would result from condonation being granted.
[3]
The central issues for determination are:
[3.1]
Whether the Applicant has shown good cause for his non-compliance
with section 3(2)(a) of the Act.
[3.2]
Whether the Respondents would suffer unreasonable prejudice if
condonation is granted.
[3.3]
Whether the Applicant’s claim has prospects of success on the
merits.
[4]
The Applicant, a businessman and owner of A[…] L[…]
C[…]'s H[…], was arrested on 11 September
2009, on
charges relating to allegations of sexual assault of minors under his
care. The arrest occurred at the children’s
home despite his
offer to surrender himself at the police station.
[5]
The Applicant appeared in court on14 September 2009, and the matter
was postponed for further investigation. By October
2010, all of the
charges against the Applicant had been withdrawn.
[6]
The Applicant initiated a civil claim for damages on 10 September
2013, shortly before the debt was due to prescribe by
virtue of the
provisions of
section 11(d)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
. No
notice under section 3(2)(a) of the Act had been served.
[7]
Because the Respondents had failed to deliver their plea to the
Applicant’s particulars of claim, on 31 January
2014 the
Applicant delivered a notice of bar as contemplated in Uniform Rule
26, which required the Respondents to deliver their
plea within five
days after the day upon which the notice was delivered. That period
expired on 7 February 2014 without delivery
of the plea, with the
result that the Respondents were
ipso facto
barred from doing
so, unless the bar was uplifted.
[8]
Despite having been barred, on 17 February 2014 the Respondents
delivered a plea in which the Respondents raised a special
plea
regarding non-compliance with the Act.
[9]
No further procedural steps were taken by any of the parties until 21
February 2021, some 7 years later, when the Applicant
delivered a
notice of substitution of attorneys of record. Even then, no further
procedural steps were taken until August of 2021,
when the
Applicant
instructed his Attorney of Record to request the Respondents to
abandon their special plea. The Respondents, however,
declined the
proposal.
[10]
The request, however, seemingly prompted the
Respondents to shake the inertia which they had thus far shared with
the Applicant,
and they delivered an application for upliftment of
the bar on 7 September 2021, resulting in an upliftment of the bar by
order
of court dated 26 May 2022. In their founding affidavit in the
upliftment application, the Respondents foreshadowed an intended
amendment to their pleadings.
[11]
However, the amendment referred to was not
delivered. Curiously, the Applicant sat supine rather than following
up with the Respondents
in regard to the elusive amendment. The
Applicant could also have simply adopted the position that pleadings
had closed and progressed
the matter, but did not do so. This further
stagnation continued until March of the following year, that is, for
more than 9 months,
until the Applicant’s attorney wrote to the
Respondents proposing that the parties agree that pleadings were
closed. The
Respondents furnished their agreement on 27 March 2023.
[12]
Although the matter then seemed to gain a
semblance of impetus as discovery notices were delivered, the
Applicant still did nothing
to address its non-compliance with
section
3(2)(a) of the Act until it launched the present
application on 29 November 2023.
[13]
Against this background, it is evident that the present application
for condonation was launched:
[13.1] more than 9
years after the action was instituted;
[13.2] more than 9
years after the Applicant’s non-compliance with section 3(2)(a)
of the Act was raised by the Respondents
(albeit in a plea which was
irregular for having been delivered under bar);
[13.3] more than 2
years after the Respondents sought to uplift the bar; and
[13.4] a year and a
half after the bar had been uplifted (and the Applicant was able to
react to the Respondent’s regularised
special plea).
[14]
The Applicant argues that he meets the statutory requirements for
condonation in that:
[14.1] The claim
was initiated within the three-year prescription period.
[14.2] The
Applicant was unaware of the notice requirement due to lack of legal
advice and financial constraints, which delayed
his pursuit of legal
remedies; and
[14.3] The
Applicant contends that the Respondents have access to relevant
documents and witnesses and that the absence of
notice has not
impacted their ability to defend the claim.
[15]
Insofar as the substantive merits of his main claim are concerned,
the Applicant asserts that his arrest and prosecution
were
unwarranted and based on unreliable allegations, that the withdrawal
of the charges indicates the lack of a reasonable basis
for the
prosecution, and that he suffered reputational and financial harm,
including the collapse of his businesses, due to the
Respondents’
actions.
[16]
The Applicant contends that his claim has strong prospects of
success, supported by the lack of credible evidence for
his
prosecution and the Respondents’ failure to refute key aspects
of his case. He argues that the Respondents would not
suffer
significant prejudice if condonation is granted, as they have had
ample time and resources to prepare their defence. He
asserts that
timeous notice would not have materially altered their position.
[17]
Despite being legally represented throughout the proceedings, the
Applicant did not act to rectify the non-compliance
after the
Respondents raised their special plea in February 2014. Even if one
were to assume in the Applicant’s favour that
he was under no
obligation to react to the contents of the special plea until such
time as the bar had been uplifted, it must nonetheless
be borne in
mind that the Applicant must have considered that the bar would
ultimately be uplifted as he did not oppose the upliftment
application. He therefore had a number of years to anticipate the
upliftment of the bar and to deal with the special plea in the
form
of an application for condonation.
[18]
Despite this, he waited a further year and a half after the
upliftment was granted, before bringing the present application.
One
would have expected the Applicant, who by that stage had been waiting
for almost 9 years to have his day in court, would have
been anxious
to bring the proceedings to finality.
[19]
The Applicant has not provided a reasonable or detailed explanation
for the delay in bringing the condonation application.
[20]
The explanations offered (e.g., financial constraints and lack of
knowledge of legal requirements) are vague, unsupported
by evidence,
and fail to account for extended periods of inaction.
[21]
The Applicant has failed to demonstrate diligence or take prompt
steps to remedy his non-compliance after becoming aware
of it.
[22]
The Respondents argue that they would suffer unreasonable prejudice
if condonation is granted due to:
[22.1] The
significant passage of time, which has affected the availability of
witnesses and the preservation of evidence;
[22.2] The
challenges in reconstructing the facts and circumstances surrounding
the Applicant’s arrest and prosecution,
given the elapsed time;
and
[22.3] The fact
that the absence of notice deprived the Respondents of the
opportunity to investigate and preserve evidence
at an earlier stage.
[23]
Insofar as the prospects of success in the main action are concerned,
the Respondents argue that the Applicant’s
claim lacks
substantive merit as the arrest was executed pursuant to lawfully
issued warrants supported by sworn statements from
multiple
complainants.
[24]
The Respondents contend that their actions were conducted in good
faith, in accordance with their legal and constitutional
obligations.
[25] In my
assessment, the Applicant has failed to demonstrate good cause for
his delay. As a general principle, condonation
is not a mere
formality. In all cases, some acceptable explanation, not only of,
for example, the delay in instituting action,
but also, where this is
the case, any delay in seeking condonation, must be given. An
Applicant, whenever he realises that he has
not complied with a
statutory requirement for which condonation will be sought, must
apply for condonation as soon as possible.
[26]
This
principle has been consistently applied by our courts in numerous
different instances where condonation for non-compliance
with the
rules of court is sought.
[1]
I
see no reason why a different threshold should apply in circumstances
where one is dealing with condonation under section 3(4)
of the Act.
[27]
Furthermore,
an Applicant for condonation is required to give an explanation which
covers the entire period of delay.
[2]
This applies not only to the delay in instituting the action. It
applies also to the significant delay in seeking condonation itself.
[28]
The Applicant became aware of the charges against him being withdrawn
by October 2010. Under
section 3(2)(a)
of the
Institution of Legal
Proceedings Against Certain Organs of State Act 40 of 2002
, the
Applicant was required to provide notice to the Respondents within
six months. Despite this, no notice was served, and the
Applicant
only instituted legal proceedings in September 2013, nearly three
years after the charges were withdrawn.
[29]
While the Applicant narrowly avoided prescription of his claim, this
delay itself lacks a comprehensive and cogent explanation.
The mere
assertion of financial difficulties and ignorance of the legal
requirements does not suffice to meet the threshold set
by courts for
good cause.
[30]
Even more concerning is the delay in seeking condonation after the
Respondents raised their special plea of non-compliance
in February
2014. The Applicant took no steps to remedy the issue or address the
special plea for nearly a decade, only filing
the current application
for condonation in November 2023. The Applicant’s inaction
following the Respondents’
special plea in 2014 and even after
consulting attorneys in August 2021 demonstrates a lack of urgency
and diligence.
[31]
Even accepting the Applicant’s explanation that he became aware
of the need for condonation in August 2021, there
is no explanation
for the two-year delay between that time and the filing of the
condonation application in November 2023 or for
the period of 1 and a
half years between the upliftment of the bar and the launching of the
present application. Gaps in the timeline,
vague references to
financial constraints, and reliance on alleged attorney delays are
insufficient to justify the lack of action.
[32]
The Applicant’s delay undermines the very purpose of statutory
time bars, which are intended to ensure prompt resolution
of disputes
and to protect the interests of the Respondents. The Respondents have
argued that the passage of time has adversely
affected their ability
to defend the claim, with potential evidence being lost and witnesses
being unavailable. This prejudice
further underscores the importance
of prompt action when seeking condonation.
[33]
To grant condonation after an inordinate delay and in the absence of
a reasonable explanation under the circumstance
of this case would
undermine the principle of finality and would not be in the interests
of justice
[34]
In conclusion:
[34.1] In
considering the application for condonation, it is clear that the
Applicant has failed to satisfy the requirements
of section 3(4) of
the Act. The Applicant has not provided a satisfactory explanation
for either the delay in instituting the action
or the substantial
delay in seeking condonation. These delays, which span several years,
have not been adequately justified with
specific and credible
evidence.
[34.2] Condonation
is not a mere formality. It requires a full and acceptable
explanation for all periods of delay, a requirement
the Applicant has
failed to satisfy.
[34.3] The
Applicant’s inaction following the upliftment of the bar and
the subsequent failure to promptly pursue condonation
undermine his
case. The delay in launching the present application is particularly
egregious given the Applicant’s awareness
of the statutory
non-compliance and the need for remedial action as early as February
2014.
[34.4] The
prejudice to the Respondents is also significant, with the passage of
time affecting the availability of evidence
and the ability to mount
an effective defence. This is precisely the type of harm that
statutory time bars seek to prevent. Granting
condonation in such
circumstances would undermine the purpose of the Act and the
principle of finality in litigation.
[34.5] For these
reasons, the application for condonation must fail.
[35]
In regard to the question of costs, I am of
the view that scale B would be appropriate.
[36]
In the circumstances, the following order
is made:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs on
scale B.
D MAHON
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Johannesburg
Date of hearing: 20
August 2024
Date
of judgment: 19 November 2024
APPEARANCES
:
For
the Applicant:
Instructed
by:
RJ
de Beer SC
Arthur
Moore
For
the Respondent:
Instructed
by:
N
Matidza
State
Attorney Johannesburg
[1]
See,
for example,
Darries
v Sheriff, Magistrate's Court, Wynberg, and Another
1998 (3) SA
34
(SCA) at 40I – 41E and SA Express Ltd v Bagport (Pty)
Ltd 2020 (5) SA 404 (SCA).
[2]
Van Wyk v Unitas Hospital (Open Democratic Advice Centre as Amicus
Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC) at para
[22]
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