Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1260South Africa
Majola and Another v Investage 183 (Pty) Limited and Another (2023/050639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1260 (6 December 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Majola and Another v Investage 183 (Pty) Limited and Another (2023/050639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1260 (6 December 2024)
Majola and Another v Investage 183 (Pty) Limited and Another (2023/050639) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1260 (6 December 2024)
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sino date 6 December 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023-050639
(1)
REPORTABLE:
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
(3)
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
THULANI
MAKHOSI MAJOLA
First
Applicant
LESEDI
TECHNICAL ENGINEERING (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
and
INVESTAGE
183 (PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
SHERIFF,
SANDTON NORTH
Second
Respondent
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
representatives via e-mail, by being uploaded
to CaseLines/Court
online and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 14h00 on 6 December 2024.
JUDGMENT
TODD, AJ:
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal
against the judgment that I handed down on 13 August 2024. The
Applicant in the application
for leave to appeal was the First
Applicant in the underlying application for rescission.
[2]
The application for leave to appeal was
brought out of time. In the affidavit in support of a condonation
application the Applicant
explains that neither he nor his legal
representatives were aware of or had received notification of the
judgment prior to a warrant
of execution being served on 30 September
2024. The explanation given for this is that the Applicant’s
attorneys of record
were experiencing IT difficulties and were
migrating between service providers and as a result experienced
disruptions to their
email service in consequence of which the email
attaching the judgment “
may have
been bounced or lost
”.
Confirmatory affidavits were provided by an IT specialist who oversaw
the migration and the Applicant’s attorney
of record.
[3]
Although the explanation given is not
entirely convincing, I accept that the Applicant acted expeditiously
once the judgment in
fact came to his attention. The explanation is
adequate, and the prospects of success warrant me dealing with the
application on
its merits. The late bringing of the application for
leave to appeal is therefore condoned.
[4]
On the merits, Mr Roux, who appeared for
the Applicant, submitted that the reasons given by the Applicant for
his absence from the
underlying proceedings, when default judgment
was granted, was a combination of a lack of funds to pay his
attorneys of record
and a misunderstanding on the Applicant’s
part about the consequence of not opposing the application for
default judgment
and focussing instead on his attempt to bring the
Second Applicant in the underlying proceedings out of liquidation.
These explanations,
Mr Roux submitted, take the matter outside the
ambit of the decision of the Constitutional Court in
Zuma
v Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry
into Allegations of State Capture
referred to in paragraph [23] of my judgment dated 13 August 2024.
[5]
Elaborating on this, Mr Roux submitted that
a distinction should be drawn between situations where a party (such
as Mr Zuma) deliberately
elected to be absent and where a party (such
as the present Applicant) mistakenly understood his legal position
and for that reason,
despite having been given notice of proceedings
and a sufficient opportunity to participate, elected not to do so
under the influence
of his misunderstanding of the likely or
potential consequences of this.
[6]
I have carefully considered this
submission. I do not agree that the distinction which Mr Roux sought
to draw can properly be made
and I can find no reasonable grounds to
treat the present facts differently or to conclude that the matter
falls outside the ambit
of what is stated in paragraph [61] of the
Constitutional Court’s decision in
Zuma
.
[7]
As a matter of fact the Applicant’s
contention that he did not have funds to pay his attorneys to enter a
plea is surprising
in circumstances in which, on his own explanation,
he was nevertheless able to bring and pursue proceedings to set aside
the liquidation
of the Second Applicant. His attorneys of record
remained on record. I do not think a distinction can properly be
drawn between
an Applicant who in these circumstances, according to
him, misunderstood the consequences of not opposing the application
for default
judgment and Mr Zuma, who either misunderstood or
objected to the consequences of not making an appearance when he had
been given
an opportunity to do so. As a matter of law the absence in
both instances is clearly a consequence of an election having been
made.
[8]
For that reason it seems to me that the
Applicant has little or no prospect of overcoming the first hurdle
that faces him, which
is to show that his application for rescission
fell within the ambit of rule 42(1)(a). In my view he does not have a
reasonable
prospect of persuading a court of appeal on that point.
That conclusion is by itself fatal to the application for leave to
appeal.
[9]
Even if that were not so, I do not consider
the Applicant to have reasonable prospects of success on the further
points in the rescission
application either. In this regard Mr Roux
submitted that on a proper construction of the underlying lease the
only damages remedy
available to the First Respondent (the landlord)
following a breach by the tenant of its obligations under the lease
was a claim
for a reasonable cancellation penalty, and that the First
Respondent had not been entitled to claim damages calculated on the
basis
of the rental payable for the outstanding period of the lease.
Damages of that kind were available, under the terms of the contract
(the lease), Mr Roux submitted, only in circumstances of holding
over.
[10]
Highprop
Investments Limited
(referred
to in paragraph [32] of my judgment dated 13 August 2024), Mr Roux
submitted, in fact involved a claim for damages of
this kind, for
holding over. That is indeed so, but the Court in
Highprop
nevertheless described in clear terms the approach to be adopted in a
claim for contractual damages following a breach of lease
as well,
with a view to explaining the relationship between such a claim and
one for damages for holding over. It did so with reference
to well
established authority, and in terms subsequently approved by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Monyetla
Property v IMM
[1]
(at
paragraphs [16] and [17]). I find no support for a contrary view in
the other authorities to which Mr Roux referred me.
[11]
I do not agree that there are reasonable
prospects that a court of appeal will conclude that the terms of the
lease, specifically
its paragraph 27, preclude or exclude a claim for
common law damages, or preclude those damages from being calculated
by reference
to the rentals that would have been payable for the
outstanding period of the lease. In this regard I agree with Mr
Stockwell,
who appeared for the First Respondent, that the First
Respondent was entitled to seek default judgment on the basis that it
had
a liquidated claim for damages in an amount equivalent to the
rental payable during the outstanding period of the lease.
[12]
For these reasons I am not satisfied that
the Applicant in the application for leave to appeal has reasonable
prospects of success.
As a result the application for leave to appeal
must fail.
[13]
Regarding costs, the parties agreed that
the employment of two counsel was warranted and that the appropriate
scale for an order
of costs, if one were to be made, was scale C.
[14]
In the circumstances I make the following
order:
1.
The Applicant is granted condonation for
the late delivery of the application for leave to appeal.
2.
The application for leave to appeal is
dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel, on the High
Court scale C.
C TODD
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
Date of
Hearing:
5 December 2024
Date of
Judgment:
6 December 2024
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for Applicant:
B
Roux SC
D
Combrink
Instructed
by:
Yakopi
Attorneys Inc
Counsel
for the First Respondent:
R
Stockwell SC
S
McTurk
Instructed
by:
Uys
Matyeka Schwartz Attorneys
[1]
2017
(2) SA 42
(SCA)
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