Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1323South Africa
Van Dyk v Rhodes (A2024/076119) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1323 (24 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
24 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Van Dyk v Rhodes (A2024/076119) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1323 (24 December 2024)
Van Dyk v Rhodes (A2024/076119) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1323 (24 December 2024)
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sino date 24 December 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 24 February 2025
Case
No.
A2024-076119
In
the matter between:
FREDRICH
ERNST VAN DYK
First Appellant
CHRIS
AVRIL STUART
Second
Appellant
and
TERESA
MAY RHODES
Respondent
Summary
The common law doctrine
of nullity is not applicable to court orders, which derive their
validity from section 165 (5) of the Constitution,
1996. A court
order can no longer be ignored or rescinded merely upon proof that it
would have been regarded as a common law nullity.
The ordinary
principles of rescission or appeal will always apply to court orders
wrongly granted, no matter what error led to
their issuance.
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J (with whom CRUTCHFIELD J and NOKO J agree):
1
The central question in this appeal is whether a court order
can be rescinded merely upon proof that the common law would have
regarded
it as a nullity. We hold that, in light of section 165 (5)
of the Constitution, 1996, and of the decisions of the Constitutional
Court in
Department of Transport v Tasima
2017 (2) SA 622
(CC)
(“
Tasima
”) and
City of Ekurhuleni City v
Rohlandt Holdings CC
2025 (1) SA A (CC) (“
Rohlandt
”),
a court order can no longer be ignored or rescinded merely upon proof
that it would have been regarded as a common law
nullity. The
ordinary principles of rescission or appeal will always apply to
court orders wrongly granted, no matter what error
led to their
issuance.
The
dispute
2
The first appellant, Mr. van Dyk, met the respondent, Ms.
Rhodes, in 2010, while participating in an online poker tournament.
At
the time, Mr. van Dyk lived in South Africa and Ms. Rhodes lived
in the United Kingdom. A friendship blossomed online. Ms. Rhodes
referred to Mr. van Dyk in deeply affectionate terms. Adopting a
South African colloquialism, Ms. Rhodes referred to Mr. van Dyk
as
her “boytjie”, and to herself as Mr. van Dyk’s
“mom”. The emails that passed between them show
that Ms.
Rhodes was alienated from her family and friends in the UK, and that
she felt a closeness with Mr. van Dyk, even though
he lived on the
other side of the world.
3
Eventually, Ms. Rhodes visited Mr. van Dyk and his husband,
Mr. Stuart, who is the second appellant in these proceedings. Ms.
Rhodes
enjoyed her holidays with the appellants, and eventually
developed a plan to relocate to South Africa and to live with them on
a farm near Krugersdorp. To give effect to this plan, Ms. Rhodes
advanced the appellants money towards the purchase of a farm, which
was registered in the appellants’ names.
4
Between 2013 and 2019 Ms. Rhodes lived on the farm with the
appellants. However, she ultimately fell out with the appellants, and
decided to move back to the UK. Ms. Rhodes then sought the repayment
of what she said was a loan to the appellants to allow them
to buy
the Krugersdorp farm.
5
Initially, the appellants denied that Ms. Rhodes had loaned
them the money. They claimed the money was a gift. However, no doubt
partly as a result of assurances from Ms. Rhodes’ attorney, a
Mr. Badenhorst, that Ms. Rhodes intended to sue for the repayment
of
the money she advanced, the appellants signed an undertaking to pay
R1.735 million to Ms. Rhodes, plus interest, on the terms
and
conditions set out in a self-described “agreement of
settlement” entered into on 13 May 2019.
6
Clause 1 of the agreement records that the appellants had
“disputed [Ms. Rhodes’] right to be repaid in respect of
the
amounts of money advanced to them by [Ms. Rhodes]”, and
that, but for the agreement, Ms. Rhodes “was about to institute
action against” the appellants for the recovery of what she
claimed was a loan. Clause 2 of the agreement provided for payment
of
the capital amount due by no later than 31 May 2022, preferably, but
not necessarily, out of the proceeds of the sale
of the
Krugersdorp farm. Interest at the rate of 5% per annum on the capital
amount was to run from 1 June 2020, unless the appellants
defaulted,
in which case the legally prescribed rate of
mora
interest
would apply. Clause 4 of the agreement records the parties’
consent to have the agreement made an order of this
court.
7
On 27 June 2019, Ms. Rhodes instituted an application, on
notice to the appellants, to have the agreement made an order of
court.
Matsemela AJ made the settlement agreement an order of court
on 2 September 2019.
8
The appellants did not abide by the terms of the agreement.
Ms. Rhodes then applied to sequestrate them, which prompted the
appellants
to seek legal advice of their own. It was, however, not
until 14 August 2023, almost four years after Matsemela AJ made his
order,
that the appellants finally launched a rescission application.
In the rescission application, the appellants revived their
contention
that the money Ms. Rhodes advanced to them was a gift
rather than a loan. The appellants then advanced three grounds for
the rescission
of Matsemela AJ’s order, which were set out at
paragraph 41 of the appellants’ founding affidavit.
9
The first ground was that because Ms. Rhodes had never
actually issued summons claiming repayment of the loan she alleged,
Matsemela
AJ lacked the jurisdiction necessary to make the settlement
agreement an order of court. The second ground was that the claim for
repayment of the loan had prescribed by the time the settlement
agreement was signed. The appellants’ third ground was that
Mr.
Badenhorst had used his position as an attorney to unduly influence
them into signing the settlement agreement in circumstances
where
they had no idea what their rights really were.
The
judgment of the court below
10
The rescission application was opposed and in due course came
before Wright J in the court below. Wright J dismissed the
application
on 4 June 2024. He did so on the basis that the
appellants’ explanation for their four-year delay in bringing
the rescission
application was “hopelessly inadequate”.
Wright J also held that the defences the appellants said they had to
the application
to make the settlement agreement an order of court
were so “weak” that they could not “save the
[appellants]
on the question of condonation” (paragraph 8 of
the judgment
a quo
).
11
The appellants then sought, and Wright J granted, leave to
appeal to a Full Court of this division. The grounds of appeal
identified
in the notice of application for leave to appeal, and in
the notice of appeal itself, constituted a significant narrowing of
the
appellants’ case. On appeal, the appellants advanced only
one contention: that Matsemela AJ had no power to make the settlement
agreement an order of court because there was no litigation on the
settled issues between the parties at the time the agreement
was
made. The question of whether, to what extent, and with what level of
remissness or culpability the appellants had delayed
bringing the
rescission application was, the appellants said, entirely irrelevant.
The appellants contended that Matsemela AJ’s
order was a
nullity, and should be set aside on that basis alone.
12
Accordingly, we can safely determine the matter on the basis
that the appellants no longer persist in their undue influence and
prescription arguments. Nor do they seek to persuade us that their
delay in bringing the rescission application was excusable. The
appellants’ case is rather that Matsemela AJ’s order must
be set aside because, and only because, he had no power to
make it.
The
appeal
13
The narrow scope of the case on appeal means that there are
really only two questions before us. The first is whether Matsemela
AJ ought to have made the settlement agreement an order of court
notwithstanding the absence of preceding litigation. The second
is
whether, if Matsemela AJ ought not to have done so, the rescission of
his order must automatically follow.
The
power to make a settlement agreement an order of court
14
A court’s power to make a consent order was dealt with
comprehensively in
Eke v Parsons
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC) (“
Eke
”).
Eke
set three requirements for a valid consent order. The
first is that the order “relate directly or indirectly to an
issue
or
lis
between the parties. Parties contracting outside
of the context of litigation may not approach a court and ask that
their agreement
be made an order of court” (
Eke
,
paragraph 25). The second is that the terms of the order must be
consistent with the Constitution, the law and public policy,
and
capable of being practically implemented. The third is that the
settlement agreement must hold “some practical and legitimate
advantage” to at least one of the parties (
Eke
,
paragraph 26).
15
The appellants rely on the first of these requirements. They
say that for a settlement agreement to relate to a
lis
or
issue between the parties, there must have been preceding litigation
on the settled issues. The Constitutional Court would not
otherwise
have ruled out agreements made outside “the context of
litigation”.
16
This is also the approach taken in
Avnet South Africa (Pty)
Limited v Lesira Manufacturing (Pty) Limited
2019 (4) SA 541
(GJ)
(“
Avnet
”). In
Avnet,
the court held that it
could not make an acknowledgement of debt an order of court because
there was no litigation preceding the
agreement placed before it.
Indeed, it appears from the judgment in
Avnet
that there was
never a justiciable issue between the parties at all. There was a
debt, which the respondent acknowledged. There
was never any prospect
of contested litigation on whether the respondents in that case
really did owe the applicant a debt that
was due and payable.
17
I have given some thought to whether the appeal before us
might fall within a penumbra of cases in which a court could grant a
consent
order without litigation having been instituted. Such a power
might be available to settle a clearly defined justiciable dispute
between the parties on which, but for the settlement agreement,
litigation would be inevitable. However, like the court in
Avnet
,
and for the reasons given there, I do not think that the decision in
Eke
can reasonably be interpreted to allow a court to make a
consent order in the absence of preceding litigation.
18
Eke
draws a distinction between a “
lis
”
and an “issue” (see
Eke
paragraph 25).
Eke
holds that a consent order must relate either to an issue or to a
lis
. It was suggested in argument before us that this
distinction empowers a court to make a consent order relating to an
“issue”
that arises between parties not engaged in
litigation. I do not think that is correct.
Eke
uses the word
“
lis
” to refer to the lawsuit or litigation as
pleaded.
Eke
deploys the word “issue” to refer to
a dispute between litigating parties which may not relate directly to
the pleaded
case.
Eke
says that settlement agreements that
cover unpleaded issues can be made orders of court so long as the
settlement agreement disposes
of the main pleaded case - the “
lis
”.
The upshot is that an “issue” is a dispute between
parties already locked in litigation. It is not merely a
justiciable
dispute that has not yet been sued on.
19
Moreover, in
Road Accident Fund v Taylor
2023 (5) SA
147
(SCA), at paragraph 41, the Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed
that consent orders must relate to settled litigation: “an
agreement that is unrelated to litigation, should not be made an
order of court”. In
Rohlandt
at paragraph 50, the
Constitutional Court confirmed that, although the requirement that a
consent order relates to litigation should
be applied flexibly and
“generously”, a “legal agreement reached entirely
outside the context of litigation cannot
be made an order of court”.
20
It follows that consent orders should only be made where
litigation has been instituted. It is not enough that the parties
have
a justiciable dispute on which litigation is inevitable.
The
power to rescind an order wrongly granted
21
Accordingly, Matsemela AJ should not have made the settlement
agreement between the appellants and Ms. Rhodes an order of court,
because the agreement did not settle pending litigation. The
appellants argue that Matsemela AJ’s order is, as a result,
a
nullity, and that it should be rescinded on that ground alone.
22
The doctrine of nullity has traditionally been relied upon to
allow litigants to ignore an order that a court had no power to
grant.
The idea is that “a thing done contrary to a direct
prohibition of the law is void and of no force and effect”, and
can safely be ignored. There need be no pronouncement that an order
granted without jurisdiction or contrary to statute is void.
Nor need
such an order formally be set aside (see, for example,
Master of
the High Court v Motala
2012 (3) SA 325
(SCA), paragraphs 14 and
15, and the cases cited there).
23
However, in
Tasima
, a majority of the Constitutional
Court made clear that the doctrine of nullity no longer applies to
court orders. This is because
the Constitution gives court orders a
life of their own. Section 165 (5) of the Constitution, 1996, states
in unqualified terms
that “an order or decision issued by a
court binds all persons to whom and organs of state to which it
applies”. Accordingly,
a court order derives its validity from
the Constitution itself rather than from any specific antecedent
power to make it. The
Constitution provides that it is enough that
there was a court, and that the court issued an order. Once that is
established, any
order so issued is valid and binding until set
aside, even if it is grossly wrong (see
Tasima
, paragraphs 180
to 182 and 190 to 197).
24
In
Tasima
, the Constitutional Court recognised one
minor qualification to this rule. That qualification applies where a
court makes an order
enforcing an administrative decision which is
later set aside. When the administrative decision is set aside, the
court order enforcing
it also falls away, even though the court
setting aside the administrative decision might not also have
explicitly set aside the
earlier court order (
Tasima
,
paragraph 198). But that makes no difference to the general rule:
once a court order is made, it is binding unless and until another
court intervenes.
25
Of course, in this case, the appellants do not seek to
persuade us that the order of Matsemela AJ is a nullity in the sense
that
it can be completely disregarded. They say that it should be
rescinded as a nullity, because it was issued in circumstances where
the court had no power to make it.
26
The next question is accordingly whether, even though a court
order cannot be ignored as a nullity, a court order may nevertheless
be rescinded merely upon proof of the absence of a specific
antecedent power to make it. This seems to have been the approach in
Travelex Limited v Maloney
2016 JDR 1776 (SCA). In
Travelex
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal that held a court order granted without
jurisdiction should be rescinded rather than ignored, but
that “the
usual requirements for a rescission application” do not apply
to such an application, presumably because
mere proof of absence of
jurisdiction would be enough to set the order aside.
27
However, in
Rohlandt
, the Constitutional Court took a
different approach. The court held that “the fact that an
order may be incorrect or
in conflict with the Constitution is not,
on its own, a reason for its rescission” (
Rohlandt
,
paragraph 87). The ordinary requirements for a rescission of judgment
must be met. In a common law rescission application, that
generally
means that any delay in bringing the application must be explained
satisfactorily; that the application be brought in
good faith; that
any default of appearance must be explained; and that there be a
defence to the claim on which the order was issued
which stands some
prospect of success (
Chetty v Law Society, Transvaal
1985 (2)
SA 756
(A) at 765B-C). A weak explanation for being in default
of appearance can be “cancelled out” by a strong defence
on the merits (
Colyn v Tiger Food Industries Ltd t/a Meadow Feed
Mills (Cape)
2003 (6) SA 1
(SCA), paragraph 12). Moreover, even
where all the requirements for rescission are met, a court retains a
wide discretion to refuse
rescission “if justice and equity
demand it” (
Rohlandt
, paragraph 100).
28
It follows from all this that Matsemela AJ’s order need
not have been set aside purely on the basis of the absence of
antecedent
litigation between the parties, and that the court below
was correct to apply the ordinary requirements for a common law
rescission.
And because the appellants have chosen not to appeal
against the way that the court below applied those requirements,
there is
no basis on which we can second-guess the way the court
below did so. The question before us was limited to whether the order
of
Matsemela AJ ought to have been set aside merely upon proof of the
absence of antecedent litigation. I have held that the absence
of
such litigation was not enough, on its own, to justify the rescission
of Matsemela AJ’s order. The ordinary requirements
for
rescinding Matsemela AJ’s order still had to be met.
The
merits of the rescission application
29
Strictly speaking, that is the end of the appeal. However,
even if I were inclined to entertain the appeal on the basis that we
are entitled to consider the merits of the rescission application, I
would still have dismissed it, because the appellants had not
met the
ordinary requirements for the rescission of Matsemela AJ’s
order. The absence of pending litigation was not such
a strong
defence to the application to make the settlement agreement an order
of court as to make up for the four-year delay in
bringing the
rescission application. Nor would it have made up for the fact that
the appellants signed the agreement and then let
it be made an order
of court despite having had adequate notice of Ms. Rhodes’
intention to do so, and of the date on which
Matsemela AJ made the
order.
30
The absence of preceding litigation is, after all, a purely
technical defence to the application to have the settlement agreement
made an order of court. Even if it were not embodied in a consent
order, the settlement agreement would still have prevented further
litigation on the issue of whether the amount Ms. Rhodes advanced to
the appellants was a gift or a loan. Matsemela AJ’s
order in
itself made no difference to the nature of the appellants’
obligations to Ms. Rhodes (see
Cachalia v Harberer & Co
1905 AD 437
at 464). The consent order did change the manner in which
the appellants’ obligations under the settlement agreement
could
be enforced, but the appellants’ papers have nothing to
say about why enforcing the settlement agreement as a court order
would be inherently unfair or unlawful.
31
The other defences raised in the court below are very weak
indeed. The prescription argument is a red herring. Whether or not
Ms.
Rhodes’ claim prescribed, the agreement to repay the loan
embodied in the settlement agreement constitutes a separate and
free-standing basis on which the appellants are liable to her.
32
The undue influence point is likewise stillborn. The mere fact
that the appellants may subjectively have felt intimidated by Mr.
Badenhorst does not mean that they signed the agreement under undue
influence. Even if the appellants’ founding affidavit
is taken
at face value, it is clear that Mr. Badenhorst did not use his
position as an attorney to mislead the appellants or to
supplant
their decision-making power. He did what any attorney in his position
would have done: he told the appellants that Ms.
Rhodes would sue the
appellants if they did not settle on the terms embodied in the
agreement. The very generous terms as to interest
in the agreement
and the extended periods the appellants were given to meet their
obligations belie the suggestion that they were
improperly influenced
in any way. Ultimately, the appellants were always free to obtain
legal advice of their own.
33
The appellants did not rely on Rule 42 (1) (a) of the Uniform
Rules of Court in their founding papers, but I should point out that
the Rule would not, in any event, have helped them. Rule 42 (1) (a)
permits the rescission of an order “erroneously sought
or
erroneously granted in the absence of any party affected thereby”.
“Absent” for the purpose of the rule means
absent and
unaware that the matter is proceeding or in some other way precluded
from participating in the hearing. The rule does
not apply to parties
who, like the appellants in this case, were given notice of the
proceedings to make the settlement agreement
an order of court and
who then chose to be absent because they had consented to the order
(see
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
2021 (11) BCLR 1263
(CC),
paragraphs 60 and 61).
34
Finally, and even if the ordinary requirements for the
rescission of Matsemela AJ’s judgment had been met, I think
that this
would have been a proper case in which to exercise our
discretion to refuse rescission. The effect of rescinding Matsemela
AJ’s
order would be that the settlement agreement would then
have to be complied with or undone. The absence of any
reasonable
prospect that the underlying settlement agreement is open
to challenge means that it can only be complied with. Ultimately, the
rescission of Matsemela AJ’s order would make no difference to
the parties’ underlying obligations, but it may spawn
further
litigation to undo the agreement. On the facts before us, that
litigation would be a waste of time.
Order
35
For all these reasons, this appeal is dismissed with costs,
including the costs of counsel, which may be taxed on the “B”
scale.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
it to the
electronic file of this matter on Caselines, and by publication of
the judgment to the South African Legal Information
Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 24 February 2025.
HEARD
ON:
12 February 2025
DECIDED
ON:
24 February 2025
For
the Appellants:
A van Wyk
(Heads of argument drawn
by S McTurk)
Instructed by WA Opperman
Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
JW Kloek
Instructed by JJ
Badenhorst & Associates
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