Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 87South Africa
Moodliyar & Bedhesi Attorneys v Madatt and Another (11188/15) [2023] ZAGPJHC 87 (6 February 2023)
Headnotes
the second special plea, resulting in the dismissal of the plaintiff’s claim against the defendants in their representative capacity as the guardians of their minor daughter, A.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Moodliyar & Bedhesi Attorneys v Madatt and Another (11188/15) [2023] ZAGPJHC 87 (6 February 2023)
Moodliyar & Bedhesi Attorneys v Madatt and Another (11188/15) [2023] ZAGPJHC 87 (6 February 2023)
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sino date 6 February 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
11188/15
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: NO
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and/or parties’ representatives by email and by
upload to
CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 16h00 on 6
February 2023.
In
the matter between:
MOODLIYAR
& BEDHESI ATTORNEYS
PLAINTIFF
and
YASINE
MADATT
FIRST
DEFENDANT
BERNADETTE
AUBREY MADATT
SECOND
DEFENDANT
APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
JUDGMENT
Olivier,
AJ:
1.
For
convenience, I shall refer to the parties as they were denoted in the
main judgment.
The plaintiff,
a firm of attorneys,
applies
for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal, alternatively,
the Full Bench of this Court, against part of the judgment
and order
handed down by me on 2 August 2022. The defendants,
former
clients of the plaintiff,
oppose the application for leave to appeal.
The parties are embroiled in a long-standing contractual dispute
about the payment of legal fees.
2.
The judgment appealed against emanates from
two special pleas of prescription raised by the defendants. I
dismissed the first special
plea – the effect was that the
plaintiff’s claim against the defendants in their personal
capacity would proceed. I
upheld the second special plea, resulting
in the dismissal of the plaintiff’s claim against the
defendants in their representative
capacity as the guardians of their
minor daughter, A.
3.
The plaintiff submits that the Court erred
in upholding the second special plea and dismissing the claim against
the defendants
in their representative capacity. They appeal against
that part of the judgment and order.
The test for a
successful leave to appeal application
4.
The test was formerly whether there was a
reasonable prospect that another court ‘might’ come to a
different conclusion
to that of the court of first instance.
Section
17(1)
(a) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
now provides that
leave to appeal may only be granted where the judge concerned is of
the opinion that ‘the appeal
would
have a reasonable prospect of success’
(s 17(1)(a)(i))
, or that
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting judgments on the matter under
consideration
(s
17(1)(a)(ii)).
0cm; line-height: 200%">
5.
In
what has become an oft-referenced judgment in applications for leave
to appeal, the Land Claims Court in
Mont
Chevaux Trust
held
obiter
that
the wording of this subsection raised the bar of the test that now
has to be applied to the merits of the proposed appeal before
leave
should be granted.
[1]
The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Notshokovu
confirmed this view:
[2]
It is clear that the
threshold for granting leave to appeal against the judgment of a High
Court has been raised in the new Act.
The former test whether leave
to appeal should be granted was a reasonable prospect that another
Court might come to a different
conclusion. The use of the word
‘
would'
in the new statute indicates a measure of
certainty that another Court will differ from the Court whose
judgment is sought to be
appealed against. (Footnotes omitted.)
6.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal has explained that the prospects of success
must not be remote, but there must exist a
reasonable
chance of succeeding
.
An applicant who applies for leave to appeal must show that there is
a
sound and rational basis
for the conclusion that there are prospects of success.
[3]
An applicant must convince the Court on
proper
grounds
that he has prospects of success on appeal and that those
prospects
are not remote
,
but have a
realistic
chance of succeeding
.
More is required than a
mere
possibility of success
,
or that the case is
arguable
on appeal
,
or that the case
cannot
be categorised as hopeless
.
[4]
(my emphasis)
7.
In
Kruger
v S
the
Supreme Court of Appeal emphasised the need for a lower court to act
as a filter in ensuring that the appeal court’s time
is spent
only on hearing appeals that are truly deserving of its attention and
that the test for the grant of leave to appeal should
thus be
scrupulously followed.
Submissions
8.
Essentially, the plaintiff seeks leave on
the grounds that this Court erred in finding that the claim against
the defendants in
their representative capacity as parents and
guardians of their minor child had prescribed. The Court should have
found instead
that the true debtors were the defendants, whether sued
in their personal or representative capacities, for purposes of
interrupting
prescription in terms of
s 15(1)
of the
Prescription Act
68 of 1969
. Furthermore, the Court ought to have found that the
running of prescription had been interrupted when the original
combined summons
was served on the respondents, which fell within the
prescriptive period of 3 years from the date on which the cause of
action
arose.
9.
In her heads of argument, plaintiff’s
counsel Ms Lapan introduced a further ground which was not listed in
the notice of leave
to appeal. Miss Docrat, counsel for the
defendants, strenuously objected on the basis that it was improper to
raise a new ground
in argument. She submitted that the plaintiff
should stand or fall by what is contained in the notice.
10.
On the day that the application was due to
be heard, defendants’ counsel argued that effectively she had
been taken by surprise
and could not address argument on this
supplementary point raised by the plaintiff. I stood the matter down
until the following
day to allow defendants’ counsel to file
supplementary heads of argument, which she did. I do not consider
there to have
been any prejudice to the defendants, as their counsel
was afforded sufficient time to respond to this new ground and
argument.
11.
Defendants’ counsel objected to
several other aspects of the notice, but I do not consider them to be
of sufficient merit
to decline to hear the leave application, or to
dismiss it out of hand.
12.
Some
background is required. The plaintiff had instituted action against
the defendants for payment of legal fees and disbursements.
The
plaintiff was mandated by the defendants to prosecute a medical
negligence claim against the Gauteng Provincial Government.
Their
daughter had suffered life-altering injuries during her birth at a
state hospital. The mandate was terminated by the defendants,
but no
payment was forthcoming from them. Action proceedings were launched
by the plaintiff. The original particulars of claim
did not specify
that the claim was against the parents in their personal and
representative capacities, resulting in an application
for amendment
of the particulars of claim, which was granted by Cele AJ.
[5]
The effect of the amendment was to insert a new paragraph that refers
to the defendants in their personal and representative capacities;
previously it made no reference to the defendants in their
representative capacity.
13.
The particulars of claim were amended more
than 3 years after service of the original summons on the defendants.
In my judgment
I found that the amendment had introduced a new
defendant, namely the defendants’ minor daughter, and that the
claim against
the defendants in their representative capacity had
prescribed.
14.
The
plaintiff argued that the amendment was irrelevant in determining
whether the claim had prescribed, as the cause of action remained
the
same as set out in the original summons, which was served on the
defendants within the prescriptive period of 3 years. Therefore,
I
ought to have found that the amended particulars of claim merely
corrected the description of the defendants. Plaintiff’s
counsel relied on
Blaauwberg
in support of this argument,
[6]
in which the Supreme Court of Appeal considered
s 15(1)
of the
Prescription Act, in
particular whether prescription is interrupted
by service of a summons in which the debtor is wrongly described but
which is rectified
after the prescriptive period. In my judgment I
found that
Blaauwberg
was distinguishable from the present case, as that case dealt with a
debtor who had been incorrectly named. In the present case,
a new
debtor was introduced when the amendment to the Particulars of Claim
was made. The defendants, in their representative capacity,
were
added only when the amendment was effected.
15.
I
was also referred to
Imperial
Bank Ltd
,
where the Court was called upon to consider whether or not
prescription was interrupted by service of the original summons in
light of a late amendment.
[7]
The Court stated that the substance rather than the form of the
previous process must be considered in determining whether or not
it
interrupted prescription.
[8]
However,
the case is not on point as it deals with whether the creditor was
properly described as the liquidators of a company.
16.
Cele AJ found pertinently in paragraph 19
of his judgment, as did I, that the amendment sought to introduce a
new party to the proceedings.
A claim against a minor, in whatever
way she is represented, is clearly distinct from a claim against her
guardians in their personal
capacity. The fact that summons in a
claim against the minor would be served on her guardians does not
merge her claim into that
of her guardians.
17.
Even though the original particulars of
claim described each of the first and second defendants without
indicating the capacities
in which they were being referred to, the
plaintiff submitted that the defendants are the true debtors, as they
had received notice
of the action by way of service of the original
summons. They were properly notified of the action and could
recognize the claim
that was being brought against them.
18.
The plaintiff submitted that the effect of
my judgment was that the defendants would have needed to be served
again following the
amendment, which the plaintiff argued was
unnecessary as the defendants knew who the plaintiff was and that the
claim related to
their liability to the plaintiff in terms of the
mandate concluded by them. The plaintiff now argues that the summons
was not amended,
only the particulars of claim, which means that it
would be unnecessary to serve it on the defendants again.
19.
The plaintiff submitted that Cele AJ held
that the same debt was claimed in the original summons and
particulars of claim as the
one introduced by the proposed amendment,
and that the claim had not prescribed. The plaintiff argued that I
came to the opposite
conclusion without finding that Cele AJ’s
finding was clearly wrong. I effectively overruled the finding of
Cele AJ, which
was wrong in law because I was bound by it in terms of
the doctrine of judicial precedent.
20.
Cele AJ found that there was one cause of
action from which a debt or debts could arise. The plaintiff submits
that I should have
found the same.
21.
The defendants’ argument was that I
was not required to make a positive finding of who the ‘true’
debtor was;
they supported the findings that the amendment introduced
a new party, and that the claim had prescribed. Miss Docrat argued
that
the amendment introduced a new claim against the minor, which is
different from the claim against the defendants in their personal
capacity. It was also submitted that I was not bound by the findings
of Cele AJ.
22.
The plaintiff submits that there are
reasonable prospects of success. During argument it emerged that the
plaintiff relies also
on
s 17(1)(a)(ii)
, submitting that there are
conflicting decisions which require consideration by a higher court.
The latter relates to the judicial
precedent argument, it would
appear.
23.
I have considered the submissions
and arguments of the plaintiff’s counsel and am of the view
that they are not sufficiently
persuasive to merit my granting leave
to appeal. Much of the argument presented in this application is the
same as those made by
the plaintiff’s counsel at the hearing of
the special pleas. The only significant new argument is that of
judicial precedent
and I do not consider it sufficiently meritorious
to justify granting leave on that ground. In my view Cele AJ was not
required
to pronounce on prescription and he certainly did not have
the benefit of comprehensive argument on the point. He was concerned
with whether or not he should grant an amendment to the particulars
of claim.
24.
The plaintiff’s case is no different
from that of many other cases that are not hopeless and might be
arguable on appeal.
However, this is not the test. The use of the
word ‘would’ in the new statute indicates a measure of
certainty that
another Court
will
differ from the Court whose judgment is sought to be appealed
against. I do not consider such certainty to be present in this case.
Furthermore, there are no other compelling reasons, including
conflicting judgments, to grant leave to appeal.
25.
There is no justification for costs to be
awarded on a punitive scale as argued by the defendants.
In the circumstances,
the following order is made:
The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
._____________________
M
Olivier
Acting
Judge of the High Court, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg
Date of hearing: 26
January 2023
Date
of judgment: 6 February
2023
Appearances:
On behalf of the
Plaintiff: Ms A.J.
Lapan
Instructed
by: Moodliyar
& Bedhesi Attorneys
On behalf of the
Defendants: Miss F.F. Docrat
Instructed
by: Ivan
Maitin Attorneys
[1]
The
Mont Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen
2014
JDR 2325 (LCC).
[2]
Notshokovu
v S
[2016] ZASCA 112
(7 September 2016).
[3]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another (
724/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021).
[4]
S
v Smith
2012 (1) SACR 567 (SCA).
[5]
Moodliyar
& Badhesi Attorneys v Madatt and another
Unreported, Case no 11188/2015 (7 June 2018).
[6]
Blaauwberg
Meat Wholesalers CC v Anglo Dutch Meats (Exports) Ltd
2004 (3) SA 160
(SCA).
[7]
Imperial
Bank Ltd v Barnard and Others NNO
2013 (5) SA 612 (SCA).
[8]
At para 9.
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