Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 46South Africa
Mogale City Local Municipality and Another v Gelita SA (Pty) Ltd (2021/18762) [2023] ZAGPJHC 46 (16 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
16 January 2023
Headnotes
manner with a view to it being completed as soon as possible."
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 46
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mogale City Local Municipality and Another v Gelita SA (Pty) Ltd (2021/18762) [2023] ZAGPJHC 46 (16 January 2023)
Mogale City Local Municipality and Another v Gelita SA (Pty) Ltd (2021/18762) [2023] ZAGPJHC 46 (16 January 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_46.html
sino date 16 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no. 2021/18762
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
16
January 2023
In
the matter between:
MOGALE
CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
First
Excipient
MUNICIPAL
MANAGER OF THE MOGALE CITY
LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
Second
Excipient
And
GELITA
SA (PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAZIBUKO
AJ
Introduction
1.
The excipients raised several exceptions against the respondent's
particulars
of claim in which it claims payment of various amounts
under five claims in respect of payments the respondent made to the
first
excipient.
2.
The excipients are defendants in the main action, whilst the
respondent is the
plaintiff. For the purposes of this judgment, the
parties shall be referred to as in the main action.
3.
The plaintiff extracts gelatine from cow hides at its facility in the
municipal
area of the first defendant. It discharges its water
effluent and other industrial effluents as an industrial client into
the Percy
Stewart Waste Water Treatment Works of the first defendant.
4.
The first defendant is the municipality in terms of section 1
[1]
of the Structures Act, read with section 151(1)
[2]
of the Constitution.
5.
The second defendant was cited as the administrative head and
accounting officer
of the municipality.
6.
The dispute is about payments made by the plaintiff to the first
defendant. The
plaintiff claims payment of various amounts under five
claims: (a) claim 1: R762 800, (b) claim 2: R3 474 601.28,
alternatively R10 855 606.81, (c) claim 3: R6 228 642.50,
alternatively R9 660 518.63, (d) claim
4: R2 882 004.16,
alternatively R8 899 826.83; alternatively R7 268 558.30,
(e) claim 5: R22 051 149.25,
and (f) Interest and costs.
Factual
background
7.
In April 2000, the plaintiff (then known as Leiner Davis Gelatin SA
(Pty) Ltd
and the defendants concluded various agreements, as
amended, in relation to the design and construction, maintenance, and
other
related matters for the pre-treatment facility to be used
exclusively for the handling and treatment of the plaintiff's
industrial
effluent.
8.
In 2006, the parties concluded an amended agreement to update the
names of the
parties and to incorporate charging the plaintiff for
additional operations and maintenance relating to the UASB Upgrade
roof and
burner. After the construction, the municipality did not
operate the inflatable roof and burner as required. In December 2006,
the plaintiff attempted to resolve the issues with the municipal
management but was unsuccessful.
9.
On 29 March 2021, the plaintiff dispatched what it referred to as its
notice
in terms of the Structures Act
[3]
and section 3
[4]
of the Legal
Proceedings Act.
10.
In April 2021, the summons was issued and served upon the defendants.
11.
On 4 May 2021, the
defendants filed their notice of intention to defend.
On 2 June 2021, a
notice of bar was served on the defendants. On 7 June 2021, the
defendant's notice of exception was served on
the plaintiff.
Issue
12.
Whether the particulars of claim set out a complete cause of action
that the defendants
can answer. Alternatively, whether any of the
grounds of exception have merit.
Law
13.
Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice
,
[5]
discussed exceptions:
"An
exception is a legal objection to the opponent's pleading. It
complains of a defect inherent in the pleading: admitting
for the
moment that all the allegations in a summons or plea are true, it
asserts that even with such admission, the pleading does
not disclose
either a cause of action or a defence, as the case may be. It follows
that where an exception is taken, the court
must look at the pleading
excepted to as it stands: no facts outside those stated in the
pleading can be brought into issue –
except in the case of
inconsistency – and no reference may be made to any other
document. ... In order to succeed an excipient
has the duty to
persuade the court that upon every interpretation which the pleading
in question, and in particular, the document
on which it is based,
can reasonably bear, no cause of action or defence is disclosed;
failing this, the exception ought not to
be upheld."
14.
Exceptions are regulated by Rule 23
[6]
.
Rule
23(1) "
Where any pleading is
vague and embarrassing or lacks averments which are necessary to
sustain an action or defence, as the case
may be, the opposing party
may, within the period allowed for filing any subsequent pleading,
deliver an exception thereto and
may apply to the registrar to set it
down for hearing within 15 days after the delivery of such
exception:…"
Rule
23(3) "
Wherever an exception is
taken to any pleading, the grounds upon
which
the exception is founded shall be clearly and concisely stated."
15.
Herbstein
and Van Winsen
[7]
deal
with the difference between a special plea and an exception as
follows:
"The
essential difference between a special plea and an exception is that
in the case of the latter, the excipient is confined
to the four
corners of the pleading. The defence raised on exception must appear
from the pleading itself; the excipient must accept
as correct the
factual allegations contained in it and may not introduce any fresh
matter.
Special
pleas, on the other hand, do not appear ex facie the pleading. If
they did, then the exception procedure would have to be
followed.
Special pleas have to be established by the introduction of fresh
facts from outside the circumference of the pleading,
and those facts
have to be established by evidence in the usual way. Thus, as a
general rule, the exception procedure is appropriate
when the defect
appears ex facie the pleading, whereas a special plea is appropriate
when it is necessary to place facts before
the court to show that
there is a defect. The defence of prescription appears to be an
exception to this rule, for it has been
held that that defence should
be raised by way of special plea even when it appears ex facie the
plaintiff's particulars of claim
that the claim has prescribed,
apparently because the plaintiff may wish to replicate a defence to
the claim of prescription, for
example, an interruption".
16.
In the matter of
Jowell
v Bramwell-Jones and Others
[8]
,
the court laid out the following general principles regarding
exceptions:
"(a)
minor blemishes are irrelevant;
(b)
pleadings must be read as a whole; no paragraph can be read in
isolation;
(c)
a distinction must be drawn between the facta probanda, or primary
factual allegations which every plaintiff must make, and
the facta
probantia, which are the secondary allegations upon which the
plaintiff will rely in support of his primary factual allegations.
Generally speaking, the latter are matters for particulars for trial
and, even then, are limited. For the rest, they are matters
for
evidence;
(d)
only facts need be pleaded; conclusions of law need not be pleaded;
(e)
bound up with the last-mentioned consideration is that certain
allegations expressly made may carry with them implied allegations,
and the pleading must be so read."
Discussion
17.
The defendants raised the following as their grounds of exception to
the plaintiff's particulars
of claim: Jurisdiction, misjoinder /
non-joinder of parties, prescription, non-compliance with Section 3
Notice of the State Liability
Act and that the particulars of claim
lack averments which are necessary to sustain a cause of action.
Jurisdiction
18.
The first exception raised referred to this court's jurisdiction. It
was submitted on behalf
of the defendant that
this
court does not have jurisdiction to adjudicate the issues raised by
the plaintiff as the parties contractually agreed to refer
any
disputes arising from the agreements or interpretation of same to
arbitration.
19.
The relevant clause the defendants complain about is in the Finance
agreement
(Annexure
"A" to the particulars of claim)
in paragraph 8.1. which reads:
"Any
dispute arising out of this agreement or the interpretation thereof,
both while in force and after its termination, shall
be submitted to
and determined by arbitration. Such arbitration shall be held in
Krugersdorp unless otherwise agreed to and shall
be held in summary
manner with a view to it being completed as soon as possible."
20.
The plaintiff, through its counsel, argued that the issue of
jurisdiction is for pleading,
not exception, as exception is a
procedural matter.
21.
In
Zhongji
Development Construction Engineering Company Limited vs Kamoto Copper
Company SARL
[9]
,
it was held that "
when
a party raises a challenge to the jurisdiction of a court, this issue
must necessarily be resolved before any other issues
in the
proceedings. This was so that if the court lacked jurisdiction, it is
precluded from dealing with the merits of the matter
brought to it."
22.
The defendants had correctly pointed out that the plaintiff failed to
plead the basis upon
which this court had the requisite jurisdiction
to adjudicate the matter or that the parties have agreed to side-step
the explicit
provisions of the agreements, which reflects their
common intentions on entering same. However, jurisdiction is
determined by the
court and not the parties. Once this issue is
raised, whether based on it not being pleaded or lack thereof, as a
preliminary point,
it is for the court to make a determination.….
See
Foize
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Foize Beheer BV and Others.
[10]
23.
Friedman J held as follows in
Yorigami
Maritime Construction Co Ltd v Nissho-lwai Co Ltd:
[11]
"As
an arbitration clause in a contract does not preclude the
jurisdiction of the
court,
it is incumbent on a defendant, who seeks to rely on such a clause,
to file a special plea and ask that the action instituted
by the
plaintiff be stayed pending the determination of the dispute by
arbitration. What this court has to decide is whether any
grounds
exist upon which the court's jurisdiction is ousted. The fact that
grounds exist on which a trial court would probably
order a stay of
proceedings does not mean that the court has no jurisdiction in the
action which Nissho has instituted."
24.
In the matter of
PCL
Consulting (PTY) Ltd t/a Phillips Consulting SA v Tresso Trading 119
(Pty) Ltd,
[12]
the Supreme Court of Appeal reiterated that:
"The
mere existence of an arbitration agreement does not mean that the
court proceedings are incompetent. Instead, if court
proceedings are
instituted despite the existence of the arbitration agreement, the
other party may either apply for a stay of proceedings
under the
Arbitration Act or raise a special plea for stay of the proceedings."
25.
The defendant's argument that this court has no jurisdiction to
adjudicate the matter due
to the arbitration clause in the finance
agreement concluded between the parties lacks merit. The existence of
the arbitration
clause in the agreement does not mean this court's
jurisdiction is ousted. This ground for an exception relating to
jurisdiction
cannot be upheld due to lack of merit.
Misjoinder
/ Non-joinder of parties
26.
The defendant contended that the plaintiff had failed to cite the
Minister or the member
of the executive council responsible for the
department concerned, and that amounted to a non-joinder of a party
in the proceedings.
27.
The plaintiff's particulars of claim concerning this complaint reads:
"4.
The second defendant is the MUNICIPAL MANAGER OF THE MOGALE CITY
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY in his official
capacity as the head of
administration of the municipality in accordance with section 55 of
the Municipal Systems Act, 32 of 2000,
with his principal place of
business situated at the Civic Centre, corner Commissioner and Market
Streets, Krugersdorp."
28.
This exception refers to
the
plaintiff's citation of the second defendant as a misjoinder of the
party in that no proper factual or legal basis has been
set out for
the citation of the second defendant in a nominal or official
capacity.
29.
The plaintiff, through its counsel, argued that non-joinder is not a
matter of exception.
It is a substantive matter that has to
be raised in a plea
or
mero
motu
by a
court. Further, the misjoinder contended for by the defendants
constitutes a joinder of convenience. Also, the applicable
Act is not
the State Liability Act but
section 55(2)
of the
Local Government:
Municipal Systems Act, 32 of 2000
. The State Liability Act applies to
national and provincial spheres of government and not to municipal
spheres of government.
30.
Section
2,
[13]
of the "Municipal
Systems Act expressly states:
"A
municipality is an organ of state within the local sphere of
government exercising legislative and executive authority within
an
area determined in terms of the
Local Government: Municipal
Demarcation Act, 1998
."
Section
55(2)
,
[14]
provides:
"As
accounting officer of the municipality, the municipal manager is
responsible and accountable for-
(a)
all income and expenditure of the municipality.
(b)
all assets and the discharge of all liabilities of the municipality;
and
(c)
proper and diligent compliance with the Municipal Finance Management
Act".
31.
Section 151
[15]
of the
Constitution provides:
"
(1)
The local sphere of government consists of municipalities, which must
be established for the whole of the territory of the Republic.
(2)
The executive and legislative authority of a municipality is vested
in its Municipal Council."
Section
239
[16]
defines an
'organ
of state
'
as follows:
"(
a)
Any department of state or administration in the national, provincial
or local sphere of government; or
(b)
Any other functionary or institution -
(i)
Exercising a power or performing a function in terms of the
Constitution or a provincial
constitution; or
(ii)
Exercising a public power or performing a
public function in terms of any legislation,
but
does not include a court or a judicial officer."
32.
Section 82
[17]
of the
Structures Act provides:
"
A
municipal council must appoint—
(a)
a municipal manager who is the head of administration and also the
accounting officer for the municipality: and
(b)
when necessary, an acting municipal manager."
33.
Section 1
[18]
of the Legal
Proceedings Act defines an
'organ
of state' to mean the following:
"(a)
any national or provincial department.
(b)
a municipality contemplated in section 151 of the Constitution."
34.
Section 2
[19]
of the State
Liability Act provides: "(
1)
In
any action or other proceedings instituted against a department, the
executive authority of the department concerned must be
cited as
nominal defendant or respondent."
35.
Before I make a determination whether there is merit on the
non-joinder ground, I will briefly
look at the status of the
municipality in terms of the Constitution to determine which office
of government needs to be nominally
cited in the proceedings against
the municipality.
36.
In terms of Section 151
[20]
of
the Constitution, the legislative and executive authority of a
municipality is vested in its own Municipal Council. The Municipal
Council appoints the Municipal Manager, an accounting officer and the
head of administration. In other organs of state, the accounting
officer is appointed by the Minister responsible for that public
entity through the recommendation of the Board of Directors or
such
controlling body.
37.
The Board of Directors or such controlling body is the accounting
authority to regulate
financial management in the national and
provincial government and public entities. Where the public entity
does not have
a
controlling body, the chief executive officer or the person in charge
of the public entity is the accounting authority for that
public
entity unless specific legislation applicable to that public entity
designates another person as the accounting authority.
See section
49
[21]
of the PFMA.
38.
The position differs from the municipalities due to their status as
envisaged in the Constitution.
In terms of the Constitution,
the
municipality's executive and legislative authority are vested in its
Municipal Council. The Municipal Council has executive
and
legislative authority over the matters set out in Part B of Schedules
4 and 5 of the Constitution, subject to national and
provincial
legislation, as provided for in the Constitution.
39.
In terms of sections 60 and 93
[22]
of the MFMA read with the Municipal Systems Act
22
,
the municipal manager is an accounting officer and not an accounting
authority, as there exists a controlling body for the municipality.
Nor is he the executive authority in terms of the State Liability
Act, as the executive and legislative authority is vested in
the
Municipal Council, unlike other organs of state where such authority
is vested in the Minister.
40.
In
Municipal
Manager: OR Tambo District Municipality and Another v Ndabeni
[23]
,
though the misjoinder and non-joinder were not an issue for the
Constitutional court to determine, the Constitutional court
confirmed
that Ms Ndabeni had a claim against the municipality and the
municipal manager. In
casu,
the municipal manager, the accounting officer, was cited as a nominal
defendant, not the executive authority of the municipality.
41.
In
determining
whether there is merit in the non-joinder ground.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal sets out the test for non-joinder
in
Absa
Bank Ltd v Naude NO,
[24]
as follows: "[10]
The
test whether there has been non-joinder is whether a party has a
direct and substantial interest in the subject matter of the
litigation which may prejudice the party that has not been joined."
42.
In
Judicial
Service Commission and Another v Cape Bar Council and another
[25]
,
the court held that: "[12] It has by now become settled law that
the joinder of a party is only required as a matter of necessity
–
as opposed to a matter of convenience – if that party has a
direct and substantial interest which may be affected
prejudicially
by the judgment of the court in the proceedings concerned (see, e.g.
Bowring NO v Vrededorp Properties CC
2007 (5) SA 391
(SCA) para 21).
The mere fact that a party may have an interest in the outcome of the
litigation does not warrant a non-joinder
plea. The right of a party
to validly raise the objection that other parties should have been
joined to the proceedings has thus
been held to be a limited one."
43.
Applying the above test, in the present matter, I believe that the
point raised by the respondent
bears no merit. There are no facts
supporting the contention that it was necessary to join the Minister,
the executive Council
member, or the municipal council as the party
in these proceedings. Except for the fact that the State Liability
Act provides that
the executive authority must be cited as a nominal
defendant. Whereas with the municipalities, the executive authority
lies with
the municipal council, as already discussed above.
44.
Though the Municipal Council might have an interest in the outcome of
the matter. No cogent
facts were placed before this court that due to
the plaintiff's omission,
if any
, of not citing the executive
authority as a nominal defendant, the council will be prejudiced by
the court's judgment as a result
of its non-participation in the
proceedings. In my respectful view, the joinder of the executive
authority will be a matter of
convenience as opposed to necessity.
Therefore, the defendant's ground of exception on non-joinder and
misjoinder cannot succeed
due to lack of merit.
Prescription
45.
The defendant argues that the plaintiff's alleged claims have
prescribed in terms of Section
11 of the Prescription Act and,
accordingly, should be dismissed.
46.
The evidence is that the written contract was concluded in April 2000
and subsequently amended
on 22 June 2006 and 11 August 2006. The
plaintiff's summons was delivered on 15 April 2021.
47.
An exception is a complaint concerning the manner in which a pleading
is drafted, not its
legal validity. The prescription
defence
should be raised by way of a special plea even when it appears
ex
facie
the plaintiff's particulars of claim that the claim has prescribed,
as the plaintiff may wish to replicate a defence to the claim
of
prescription, for example, an interruption. See
Herbstein
and Van Winsen.
[26]
This
ground for prescription exceptions cannot be upheld due to lack of
merit.
Section
3 Notice
48.
The defendant raised an exception that the plaintiff's Section 3
of the Legal Proceedings Act notice was defective and that the
plaintiff's claim against the defendants is unenforceable and falls
to be dismissed.
49.
The defendant argued, through its counsel, that the plaintiff has
failed to serve the defendants
the statutory notice timeously and to
serve the notice upon the Minister or the member of the executive
council responsible for
the municipality. The defendants have not
consented to the institution of such legal proceedings without the
requisite proper notice
being served on them timeously or at all.
Also, it failed to launch any application to condone its
non-compliance with the notice
requirements of the Legal Proceedings
Act, nor has the above Honourable Court granted the plaintiff leave
to institute these legal
proceedings against the defendants.
50.
The evidence is that the notice was delivered on 29 March 2021, and
the plaintiff launched
legal proceedings against the defendants on 15
April 2021.
51.
Section 3
[27]
of the Legal
Proceedings Act provides:
"(1)
No legal proceedings for the recovery of a debt may be instituted
against an organ of state unless-
(a)
the creditor has given the organ of state in question notice in
writing of his or her or its intention to institute the legal
proceedings in question.
(b)
the organ of state in question has consented in writing to the
institution of that legal proceedings-
(i)
without such notice; or
ii)
upon receipt of a notice which does not comply with all the
requirements set out in subsection (2)."
"(2)
A notice must -
(a)
within six months from the date on which the debt became due, be
served on the organ of state in accordance with section 4(1);
and
(b)
briefly set out-
(i)
the facts giving rise to the debt; and
(il)
such particulars of such debt as are within the knowledge of the
creditor."
52.
Section 5(2) of the Legal Proceedings Act provides that "
litigation
may not commence against an organ of state before the expiry of 30
days after the section 3 notice was served. In casu,
the plaintiff
commenced legal proceedings within 13 court days of delivering the
Section 3 Notice on the Defendants."
53.
Section 3(4) of the Legal Proceedings Act provides as follows:
"(
4)
(a) If an organ of state relies on a creditor's failure to serve a
notice in terms of subsection (2)(a), the creditor may apply
to a
court having jurisdiction for condonation of such failure. The court
may grant an application referred to in paragraph (a)
if it is
satisfied that- the debt has not been extinguished by prescription.
(b) good cause exists for the failure by the creditor,
and the organ
of state was not unreasonably prejudiced by the failure. (c) If an
application is granted in terms of paragraph (b),
the court may grant
leave to institute the legal proceedings in question on such
conditions regarding notice to the organ of state
as the court may
deem appropriate."
54.
Non-compliance with section 3 of the Legal Proceedings Act
should
be raised by way of a special plea like prescription. Where the
plaintiff meets certain requirements; for instance, that
the claim is
not extinguished,
condonation
may be sought even after the institution of proceedings. This ground
is a matter which should be raised in a plea and
does not form the
basis of an exception. This ground of exception is not justified to
succeed due to a lack of merit.
Cause
of action
55.
The defendant argues that the plaintiff's particulars of claim are
excipiable for not properly
setting out a cause of action;
alternatively, it lacks essential elements necessary to sustain any
cause of action, as it is unclear
what case the defendants must meet.
56.
It was argued on behalf of the defendant that
the
plaintiff could not quantify or qualify the amounts for the alleged
overcharges it claims. The plaintiff seeks to employ a unique
method
of calculating its damages. However, it has failed to allege any
facts upon which it may be concluded that the method of
computing is
appropriate in this instance and that the plaintiff has suffered
actual and quantifiable damage. The plaintiff has
failed to allege
any facts upon which it may be concluded that the defendant's alleged
conduct factually and legally caused the
alleged damages.
57.
The plaintiff, through its counsel, contended that the information
required to determine
the amounts owing to the plaintiff finally
falls within the knowledge of the first defendant. During the
discovery process, such
information will come to the fore and will
enable the plaintiff to verify its claims in respect of the amounts
owed to it and to
make an amendment to such amounts if necessary to
correctly and accurately quantify its quantum.
58.
The plaintiff argued that its claims are for overpayments and
unnecessary payments, which
are damages flowing naturally and
generally from the breach committed by the first defendant.
59.
I agree with the submission that the proof of payment will be
discovered during the discovery
and the trial stage of the
proceedings. It is not necessary for purposes of pleading. If
evidence can be led to disclose a cause
of action alleged in the
pleadings, that particular pleading is not excipiable. A pleading
will be excipiable where no possible
evidence shown on the pleadings
can disclose a cause of action.
Pleadings
must be lucid, logical, and intelligible; the cause of action must
appear clearly from the factual allegations.
See Harms Civil
Procedure in the Supreme Court at 263-4.
No
basis was laid or referenced by the defendant that the particulars of
claim contain mutually destructive and contradictory pleadings.
60.
It is true that the plaintiff did not plead where the contract was
concluded. Rule 18(6)
of the Uniform Rules of Court provides that a
plaintiff who relies on a contract has to allege where such contract
was concluded.
Rule 18(12) provides:
"If a party fails to
comply with any of the provisions of this rule, such pleading shall
be deemed to be an irregular step,
and the opposite party shall be
entitled to act in accordance with rule 30."
In my view, the
procedure to be followed is that contained in rule 30. It is not a
ground of exception but that of an irregular
step.
61.
In my view, the allegations in the paragraphs referred to by the
defendants do not amount
to grounds for an exception. There is no
merit in the exceptions, and the exceptions ought to be dismissed
with costs.
62.
Accordingly, the following order is granted.
Order:
1.
The exceptions are dismissed.
2.
The defendants are to bear the costs of
this application.
N.
Mazibuko
Acting
Judge of the High Court of South Africa
Gauteng,
Pretoria
This
judgment is digitally submitted by uploading it onto Caselines and
emailing it to the parties.
Representation
Plaintiff's
Counsel:
Mr
J W Steyn
Instructed
by:
Swart
Redelinghuys Nel Attorneys
Defendant's
Counsel:
Mr
J Govender
Instructed
by:
Smith van
der Watt Inc
Date
of hearing:
26
October 2022
Judgment
delivered on:
16
January 2023
[1]
of the Local Government: Municipal Structures Act, Act 117 of 1998
(The Structures Act)
[2]
Act 108 of 1996
[3]
Number 1, supra
[4]
The Institution of Legal Proceedings against certain Organs of State
Act, Act 40 of 2002 (The Legal Proceedings Act)
[5]
Erasmus, Superior Court Practice Volume 2 D1-293-294 (Service 13,
2020)
[6]
of the Uniform Rules of Court
[7]
The Civil Practice of the Superior Courts of South Africa, pages 599
to 600
[8]
(543/97)(2000) ZASCA;(2000)2 ALL SA 161(A)(28 March 2000) at 899F-G
[9]
421/13)
[2014] ZASCA 160
(1 October
2014); (2014) JOL 32421
(SCA),
at para 50
[10]
752/2011) [2012] ZASCA 123; [2012] 4 All SA 387 (SCA); 2013 (3) SA
91 (SCA)
[11]
1977(4) SA 682(C) at 692H
[12]
2009 (4) SA 68
(SCA)
[13]
of the
Local Government: Municipal Systems Act, Act
32 of 2000 (The
Municipal Systems Act)
[14]
Number 13, supra
[15]
Number 2, supra
[16]
Number 2, supra
[17]
Number 1, supra
[18]
Number 4, supra
[19]
of the State Liability Act, Act 20 of 1957
[20]
Number 2, supra
[21]
the Public Finance Management Act, Act 1 of 1999 (The PFMA)
[22]
of the Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act, Act 56 of
2003
[23]
(CCT 45/21)
(2022) ZACC 3
;
(2022) 5 BLLR 393
(CC)); (2022) 43 ILJ
1019 (CC); 2022(10) BCLR 1254 (CC) (14 February 2022)
[24]
(20264/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 97
(1 June 2015).
[25]
2013 (1) SA 170
(SCA) at paragraph 12
[26]
Number 7, supra
[27]
Number 4, supra
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Mogale City Local Municipality and Another v Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Limited (2022/002958) [2022] ZAGPJHC 998 (8 December 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 998High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Mogale City Local Municipality v Chamdor Training Group NPC and Others (2022/7132) [2022] ZAGPJHC 142 (14 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 142High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Mogale and Another v Thela and Another (19110 / 2021) [2024] ZAGPJHC 34 (17 January 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 34High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Mogano v Passenger Rail Agency Of South Africa (2013/43052) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1069 (26 September 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1069High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Mogomotsi v Mogale City Local Municipality (A2024-140407) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1218 (24 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1218High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar